In a world where dashboards pretend to be thrones and mirrors pretend to be souls, this book drags the machine to court. With a voice that is part prophet, part cross-examiner, it exposes how slick metrics, fast parrots, and glowing screens reframe our lives-and how Presence, not performance, restores what's real. You'll meet "Thought" in a dozen disguises and watch Spirit and Grace pull each mask off, one by one.
Structured for tired minds and noisy weeks, the chapters are short, punchy, and practical: a rhythm of naming the trick, telling the truth, and taking one small faithful step. The appendices add weight you can use-case files from everyday life, a field toolkit for clarity, a worship guide that uses tech without bowing to it, worksheets for real decisions, and a time-stopping afterword that sends you out with courage.
This is not nostalgia and not technophobia. It's a survival manual for humans-parents, pastors, builders, artists, students-who want rooms full of names instead of slogans, tables with bread instead of branding, and lives measured by love instead of graphs. If you're tired of being managed by a feed and ready to live like a person again, open these pages. The court is in session-and the verdict is freedom.
In a world where dashboards pretend to be thrones and mirrors pretend to be souls, this book drags the machine to court. With a voice that is part prophet, part cross-examiner, it exposes how slick metrics, fast parrots, and glowing screens reframe our lives-and how Presence, not performance, restores what's real. You'll meet "Thought" in a dozen disguises and watch Spirit and Grace pull each mask off, one by one.
Structured for tired minds and noisy weeks, the chapters are short, punchy, and practical: a rhythm of naming the trick, telling the truth, and taking one small faithful step. The appendices add weight you can use-case files from everyday life, a field toolkit for clarity, a worship guide that uses tech without bowing to it, worksheets for real decisions, and a time-stopping afterword that sends you out with courage.
This is not nostalgia and not technophobia. It's a survival manual for humans-parents, pastors, builders, artists, students-who want rooms full of names instead of slogans, tables with bread instead of branding, and lives measured by love instead of graphs. If you're tired of being managed by a feed and ready to live like a person again, open these pages. The court is in session-and the verdict is freedom.