Ichooselife
@Ichooselife
just a sojourner chasing after God
Posts by Ichooselife
Ichooselife
reshared
TECH AND MY FAITH: SURVIVING IN BABYLON
Episode 1: Understanding Babylon in Our Age
Babylon is not merely a location in ancient history. It is a system. A spiritual architecture. A pattern of thought, desire, influence, and control that has found expression across generations. From the tower in Genesis to the prophetic unveiling in Revelation, Babylon has always represented man organized without God, yet appearing powerful, intelligent, and desirable.
In our age, Babylon has evolved. It now breathes through systems of technology, media, innovation, and digital ecosystems. It is no longer confined to stone structures. It lives in code, platforms, algorithms, and the invisible architectures that shape how men think, desire, and behave.
This is why understanding Babylon is not optional for the believer. If you do not discern it, you will be discipled by it.
Babylon as a System of Influence
When you study Daniel, you realize something striking. Babylon did not first try to destroy Daniel. It tried to reshape him.
“They taught them the language and literature of the Chaldeans…”
This is the strategy of Babylon. Not immediate destruction, but gradual reformation. A re-education. A reprogramming.
In today’s world, this happens through:
• Content consumption
• Social media patterns
• Digital culture
• Intellectual frameworks that subtly remove God from the center
Babylon does not ask you to deny God loudly. It teaches you to forget Him quietly.
The War for Affection and Attention
1 John speaks with piercing clarity:
“Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world…”
This is not a call to hatred of creation, but a warning against a system that competes with God for your affection.
In the digital age, attention is currency. And Babylon is bidding aggressively for it.
Every scroll
Every notification
Every piece of content
is shaping your desires.
This is where the battle truly is. Not first in actions, but in affections.
Who has your heart?
Intelligence Without God
Babylon is not foolish. It is deeply intelligent.
In fact, one of its greatest strengths is its brilliance. Innovation. Advancement. Beauty. Order.
But all of it is centered on man, not God.
This is why it is dangerous.
Because it does not look evil.
It looks impressive.
It produces results.
It rewards participation.
Yet beneath it is a system that slowly removes dependence on God and replaces it with confidence in self, systems, and structures.
This is the same spirit that said, “Let us build…”
The Subtlety of Modern Babylon
In Revelation 17, Babylon is described not just as powerful, but as seductive.
This is important.
Babylon does not force. It attracts.
It uses:
• Beauty
• Convenience
• Speed
• Influence
• Validation
And in our time, technology amplifies all of these.
You are not just using platforms. Platforms are forming you.
The Call to Discernment
This is why the believer must awaken.
The question is not:
“Is technology bad?”
The question is:
“What spirit is shaping how I engage it?”
Daniel was in Babylon, but Babylon was not in Daniel.
That is the difference.
And that difference begins with discernment.
Seeing beyond the surface.
Understanding the spirit behind systems.
Recognizing that not everything progressive is aligned with God’s purpose.
Christ at the Center
The answer is not withdrawal.
The answer is Christ.
Jesus Christ did not call us out of the world, but He prayed that we would be kept from its evil.
This means:
presence without corruption
engagement without compromise
influence without assimilation
The goal is not escape.
It is formation.
Conclusion: A Generation That Sees
We are in a time where Babylon is advancing rapidly.
Through technology
Through systems
Through culture
But God is also raising a people who see.
Who discern.
Who refuse to be shaped unconsciously.
Who carry another life within them.
This is where the journey begins.
Not with fear.
But with sight.
Babylon is not merely a location in ancient history. It is a system. A spiritual architecture. A pattern of thought, desire, influence, and control that has found expression across generations. From the tower in Genesis to the prophetic unveiling in Revelation, Babylon has always represented man organized without God, yet appearing powerful, intelligent, and desirable.
In our age, Babylon has evolved. It now breathes through systems of technology, media, innovation, and digital ecosystems. It is no longer confined to stone structures. It lives in code, platforms, algorithms, and the invisible architectures that shape how men think, desire, and behave.
This is why understanding Babylon is not optional for the believer. If you do not discern it, you will be discipled by it.
Babylon as a System of Influence
When you study Daniel, you realize something striking. Babylon did not first try to destroy Daniel. It tried to reshape him.
“They taught them the language and literature of the Chaldeans…”
This is the strategy of Babylon. Not immediate destruction, but gradual reformation. A re-education. A reprogramming.
In today’s world, this happens through:
• Content consumption
• Social media patterns
• Digital culture
• Intellectual frameworks that subtly remove God from the center
Babylon does not ask you to deny God loudly. It teaches you to forget Him quietly.
The War for Affection and Attention
1 John speaks with piercing clarity:
“Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world…”
This is not a call to hatred of creation, but a warning against a system that competes with God for your affection.
In the digital age, attention is currency. And Babylon is bidding aggressively for it.
Every scroll
Every notification
Every piece of content
is shaping your desires.
This is where the battle truly is. Not first in actions, but in affections.
Who has your heart?
Intelligence Without God
Babylon is not foolish. It is deeply intelligent.
In fact, one of its greatest strengths is its brilliance. Innovation. Advancement. Beauty. Order.
But all of it is centered on man, not God.
This is why it is dangerous.
Because it does not look evil.
It looks impressive.
It produces results.
It rewards participation.
Yet beneath it is a system that slowly removes dependence on God and replaces it with confidence in self, systems, and structures.
This is the same spirit that said, “Let us build…”
The Subtlety of Modern Babylon
In Revelation 17, Babylon is described not just as powerful, but as seductive.
This is important.
Babylon does not force. It attracts.
It uses:
• Beauty
• Convenience
• Speed
• Influence
• Validation
And in our time, technology amplifies all of these.
You are not just using platforms. Platforms are forming you.
The Call to Discernment
This is why the believer must awaken.
The question is not:
“Is technology bad?”
The question is:
“What spirit is shaping how I engage it?”
Daniel was in Babylon, but Babylon was not in Daniel.
That is the difference.
And that difference begins with discernment.
Seeing beyond the surface.
Understanding the spirit behind systems.
Recognizing that not everything progressive is aligned with God’s purpose.
Christ at the Center
The answer is not withdrawal.
The answer is Christ.
Jesus Christ did not call us out of the world, but He prayed that we would be kept from its evil.
This means:
presence without corruption
engagement without compromise
influence without assimilation
The goal is not escape.
It is formation.
Conclusion: A Generation That Sees
We are in a time where Babylon is advancing rapidly.
Through technology
Through systems
Through culture
But God is also raising a people who see.
Who discern.
Who refuse to be shaped unconsciously.
Who carry another life within them.
This is where the journey begins.
Not with fear.
But with sight.
Ichooselife
reshared
TECH AND MY FAITH: SURVIVING IN BABYLON
Episode 2: Separation Without Isolation
The tension of the believer has never been merely between sin and righteousness. It is deeper than that. It is the tension between presence and preservation.
How do you remain within a system without becoming a product of it?
This is the question Babylon asks every man who desires to walk with God.
The Error of Escape
When corruption becomes obvious, the natural instinct is withdrawal. To run. To disconnect. To build distance as a form of safety.
But that is not the pattern of God.
God did not remove Daniel from Babylon. He left him there deliberately. This alone corrects many assumptions about spiritual safety.
Christ Himself prayed, not that we should be taken out of the world, but that we should be kept from its evil. That means the design of God is not escape, but preservation within engagement.
God is not only interested in taking you to heaven. He is interested in expressing Himself through you on earth, even within hostile systems.
The Danger of Assimilation
If escape is one extreme, assimilation is the other.
This is the more dangerous path because it is subtle.
It happens slowly
Quietly
Unnoticed
You begin to adopt the values of the system
You measure success the way Babylon measures it
You pursue relevance the way Babylon defines it
Until there is no clear distinction between you and the system you are meant to shine within.
The issue is not where you are. It is what has entered you.
A man can be far from the world physically and still be ruled by it inwardly. Another can stand in the center of it and remain untouched.
The Mystery of True Separation
Separation in the kingdom is not first external. It is internal.
It is a condition of the heart that produces a pattern of life.
To be unspotted does not mean to avoid contact. It means to resist imprint.
It means you pass through systems, but systems do not pass into you.
You engage culture, but culture does not redefine you.
This is the mystery many miss.
True separation is not distance. It is distinction.
The Secret of Daniel
The strength of Daniel was not in what he avoided. It was in what he had already decided.
Daniel purposed in his heart.
Before the pressure
Before the negotiation
Before the expectations of Babylon
There was already a conclusion within him.
This is where most believers fail. They wait until they are in the moment of pressure before deciding. But survival in Babylon is not determined in public moments. It is determined in private resolutions.
If the heart is not settled, the system will settle it for you.
Formation Before Exposure
God does not send a man into Babylon without first working on his inner life.
There must be:
conviction before confrontation
alignment before assignment
formation before exposure
If not, Babylon will not fight you, it will absorb you.
This is why inner work is not optional. It is survival.
Living in Two Realities
Every believer must come into the consciousness of two realities.
You are in the visible world, but you are sourced from the invisible.
You operate in time, but you are governed by eternity.
When this awareness becomes real:
pressure loses its weight
systems lose their authority over your soul
approval loses its grip
Because your life is no longer defined by what surrounds you, but by what sustains you.
Consecration in a Digital Age
Babylon today is not just ancient kingdoms. It is systems of influence powered by technology.
It is in what you scroll
What you watch
What you admire
What you normalize
Separation now looks like discipline in unseen places.
Guarding your attention
Filtering your intake
Rejecting subtle compromises
Choosing truth over convenience
This is not dramatic. It is consistent.
And consistency is what forms a man.
The Narrow Balance
The life God calls us to is precise.
Not isolation
Not assimilation
But consecration
To be present, yet preserved
Engaged, yet governed by truth
Active, yet inwardly aligned
This is the narrow path.
Christ the Pattern
The measure of separation is not rules. It is likeness.
Christ walked among men, engaged systems, spoke into culture, yet remained perfectly aligned with the Father.
He was present without corruption
Engaged without compromise
Active without losing alignment
That is the pattern.
Conclusion: The Hidden Strength
The strength of a believer in Babylon is not loud resistance.
It is quiet alignment.
A life that has been settled before pressure arrives
A heart that has chosen truth before compromise is presented
Such a man cannot be easily shaped, because he has already been formed.
This is how you survive Babylon.
Not by running from it
Not by blending into it
But by carrying another life within it.
The tension of the believer has never been merely between sin and righteousness. It is deeper than that. It is the tension between presence and preservation.
How do you remain within a system without becoming a product of it?
This is the question Babylon asks every man who desires to walk with God.
The Error of Escape
When corruption becomes obvious, the natural instinct is withdrawal. To run. To disconnect. To build distance as a form of safety.
But that is not the pattern of God.
God did not remove Daniel from Babylon. He left him there deliberately. This alone corrects many assumptions about spiritual safety.
Christ Himself prayed, not that we should be taken out of the world, but that we should be kept from its evil. That means the design of God is not escape, but preservation within engagement.
God is not only interested in taking you to heaven. He is interested in expressing Himself through you on earth, even within hostile systems.
The Danger of Assimilation
If escape is one extreme, assimilation is the other.
This is the more dangerous path because it is subtle.
It happens slowly
Quietly
Unnoticed
You begin to adopt the values of the system
You measure success the way Babylon measures it
You pursue relevance the way Babylon defines it
Until there is no clear distinction between you and the system you are meant to shine within.
The issue is not where you are. It is what has entered you.
A man can be far from the world physically and still be ruled by it inwardly. Another can stand in the center of it and remain untouched.
The Mystery of True Separation
Separation in the kingdom is not first external. It is internal.
It is a condition of the heart that produces a pattern of life.
To be unspotted does not mean to avoid contact. It means to resist imprint.
It means you pass through systems, but systems do not pass into you.
You engage culture, but culture does not redefine you.
This is the mystery many miss.
True separation is not distance. It is distinction.
The Secret of Daniel
The strength of Daniel was not in what he avoided. It was in what he had already decided.
Daniel purposed in his heart.
Before the pressure
Before the negotiation
Before the expectations of Babylon
There was already a conclusion within him.
This is where most believers fail. They wait until they are in the moment of pressure before deciding. But survival in Babylon is not determined in public moments. It is determined in private resolutions.
If the heart is not settled, the system will settle it for you.
Formation Before Exposure
God does not send a man into Babylon without first working on his inner life.
There must be:
conviction before confrontation
alignment before assignment
formation before exposure
If not, Babylon will not fight you, it will absorb you.
This is why inner work is not optional. It is survival.
Living in Two Realities
Every believer must come into the consciousness of two realities.
You are in the visible world, but you are sourced from the invisible.
You operate in time, but you are governed by eternity.
When this awareness becomes real:
pressure loses its weight
systems lose their authority over your soul
approval loses its grip
Because your life is no longer defined by what surrounds you, but by what sustains you.
Consecration in a Digital Age
Babylon today is not just ancient kingdoms. It is systems of influence powered by technology.
It is in what you scroll
What you watch
What you admire
What you normalize
Separation now looks like discipline in unseen places.
Guarding your attention
Filtering your intake
Rejecting subtle compromises
Choosing truth over convenience
This is not dramatic. It is consistent.
And consistency is what forms a man.
The Narrow Balance
The life God calls us to is precise.
Not isolation
Not assimilation
But consecration
To be present, yet preserved
Engaged, yet governed by truth
Active, yet inwardly aligned
This is the narrow path.
Christ the Pattern
The measure of separation is not rules. It is likeness.
Christ walked among men, engaged systems, spoke into culture, yet remained perfectly aligned with the Father.
He was present without corruption
Engaged without compromise
Active without losing alignment
That is the pattern.
Conclusion: The Hidden Strength
The strength of a believer in Babylon is not loud resistance.
It is quiet alignment.
A life that has been settled before pressure arrives
A heart that has chosen truth before compromise is presented
Such a man cannot be easily shaped, because he has already been formed.
This is how you survive Babylon.
Not by running from it
Not by blending into it
But by carrying another life within it.