Billy Graham on Technology & Faith

I’ve been thinking a bit about the futility of the design profession lately. I’m talking real design—problem solving design, not decoration or art.

We’re never really solving the root problems, rather we’re just putting band-aids on the tangible issues because only God can fix what’s wrong with the world and what’s wrong with us. Billy Graham gave this talk at TED eleven years ago on technology and faith. It’s still completely relevant.

Work and Worship

I’ve noticed I make poor design decisions when I don’t listen to my gut. Either I’m too lazy to plough through the added iterations or I’m too proud to take a cue from someone who shouldn’t know what they’re talking about because they aren’t The Designer™.

In Luke 5:4-9, Simon is asked by Jesus to drop his nets on the other side of the boat. He responds, “Master, we toiled all night and took nothing! But at your word I will let down the nets.” For better or for worse, I read some sarcasm in his response. “Okay – if you say so, Master.” I think I read it that way because I tend to have a bitchy attitude about seemingly silly requests.

After the men haul in a huge load of fish, Simon falls on his knees saying, “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord.” On reading this, I am ashamed. I think many times the “gut feeling” I have about a design is the Holy Spirit nudging me toward being better. That difficult client request, if nothing else, is a chance to ask God (The Designer) for help.

I’ve always thought about worship at work as a Tuesday morning Bible study or a (mostly) daily prayer time. Only now am I beginning to realize that God knows how to do my job infinitely better than I do. Not only can I come to him for help with my laziness and pride, I can ask him for help choosing colors, developing grid systems, solving interface problems, designing for accessibility, and the list goes on.

If I ask him for help, believing that he listens and trusting that he knows better than I do, I’m more aptly ready to praise him in the successes and run to him in the failures. In the end, I think that’s all that really matters.