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Stop Doomscrolling: Your 3-Minute Midday Update Centered on Jesus


It's 12:15 PM. You've got three minutes before your next meeting. Your lunch is half-eaten. And somehow, without even realizing it, you're twenty posts deep into news that makes your chest tight and your shoulders tense.

Sound familiar?

We call it doomscrolling, that compulsive habit of endlessly scrolling through negative news and social media updates, even when it leaves us anxious, overwhelmed, and spiritually drained. And if you're reading this around midday, you're probably looking for a way out of that cycle.

Good news: there's a better way to spend these precious midday moments. A way that centers you on Jesus instead of the chaos. Let's talk about it.

The Facts: Why We Can't Stop Scrolling

Doomscrolling isn't just a bad habit, it's a neurological loop. Our brains are wired to scan for threats. In ancient times, that kept us alive. Today, it keeps us glued to our screens, hunting for the next piece of alarming information.

Research shows that when we're stressed or uncertain, we scroll more. We tell ourselves we're "staying informed," but really, we're feeding anxiety. The average person picks up their phone 96 times a day. Many of those check-ins happen during transition moments, like lunch breaks, when our brains are looking for a quick hit of novelty.

The problem? That quick hit rarely satisfies. One scroll turns into five minutes. Five minutes turns into twenty. And by the time we look up, we've traded rest for restlessness.

Phone face-down next to open Bible with coffee and praying hands on wooden table

The compulsive urge to scroll is real. Studies suggest that when you catch yourself in the loop and pause, the urge typically passes within five minutes. That's all, just five minutes between you and freedom. But those five minutes feel eternal when anxiety is driving the bus.

The Lens: What Does Scripture Say About Our Midday Moments?

Here's what we sometimes forget: God cares deeply about how we spend our in-between moments.

Jesus modeled this perfectly. In the middle of busy days, surrounded by crowds, demands, and real crises, He withdrew. "But Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed" (Luke 5:16). He didn't doomscroll the latest Roman political drama. He didn't obsess over every threat Herod posed. He reset His focus on the Father.

The Psalmist knew this rhythm too: "Be still, and know that I am God" (Psalm 46:10). Stillness isn't passive. It's an active choice to step away from the noise and remember who's actually in control.

When we trade stillness for scrolling, we're essentially saying, "I need to know everything right now, because if I don't, I won't be okay." But the Spirit offers something different: "The peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus" (Philippians 4:7).

That peace isn't found at the bottom of a news feed. It's found in His presence.

From an Assemblies of God perspective, we believe in the active work of the Holy Spirit in our daily lives. That includes these midday moments. The Spirit doesn't just show up during Sunday worship, He's available right now, at your desk, in your car, during your lunch break, ready to bring peace that social media never could.

The Response: Your Jesus-Centered Midday Reset

So what does a Christ-centered midday break actually look like? Let's get practical.

1. The 3-Minute Spirit Check

When you catch yourself reaching for your phone, pause. Set a timer for three minutes, just three. Use that time to:

  • Take three deep breaths and invite the Holy Spirit into this moment

  • Pray one sentence: "Jesus, I give You this afternoon and everything in it"

  • Read one Psalm (try Psalm 23, 91, or 121, short, powerful, centering)

The beauty of the Spirit-filled life is that we don't have to generate peace on our own. We can simply invite Him in. "Come, Holy Spirit" isn't just a worship chorus, it's a midday reset button.

Person praying peacefully with eyes closed as Holy Spirit light shines from above

2. Add Friction to the Scroll

This is wisdom meets willpower. Move your news apps off your home screen. Log out of social media. Turn on grayscale mode so your phone looks less appealing. These small barriers interrupt the automatic reach-and-scroll habit.

One user shared that simply moving Instagram to the second screen added enough friction that she'd stop and think, "Do I really need this right now?" Nine times out of ten, the answer was no.

3. Replace the Behavior with Kingdom Rhythms

You can't just stop a habit: you have to replace it. Here are some Jesus-centered alternatives for that midday moment:

  • Listen to worship music instead of scrolling. Two songs = five minutes of refocusing your heart.

  • Text someone encouragement instead of consuming content. Be the good news someone needs today.

  • Take a short walk and pray instead of sitting and scrolling. Movement resets your nervous system; prayer resets your spirit.

  • Read a physical book: preferably Scripture or something life-giving. There's power in putting down the screen and picking up the Word.

The goal isn't to shame yourself for scrolling. The goal is to fill that space with something better. Something that actually restores you.

4. Set Boundaries That Honor Your Spirit

Use your phone's built-in limits. Set a 10-minute daily cap on news apps. When the limit hits, don't override it: receive it as a gentle boundary from your future self.

Proverbs 4:23 says, "Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it." Guarding your heart in 2026 includes guarding your screen time. It's not legalism: it's stewardship.

5. Practice the Midday Examen

This is an ancient spiritual practice, simplified:

  • What brought life this morning? (Gratitude)

  • What drained life this morning? (Awareness)

  • What does the Spirit want me to release this afternoon? (Surrender)

  • What is one way I can love well in the next few hours? (Mission)

Takes less than three minutes. Infinitely more valuable than another news cycle.

Person walking peacefully outdoors with phone in pocket, choosing rest over scrolling

The Invitation: Choose Peace Over Panic

If you're reading this at midday, you have a choice right now. You can close this tab and return to the scroll: or you can try something different.

Just for today, what if you gave Jesus your next three minutes instead of the algorithm?

What if you let the Holy Spirit refresh you instead of letting anxiety drain you?

The news will still be there in an hour. The world will keep spinning. But your soul? Your soul needs this reset more than it needs another headline.

The truth is, we're not called to carry the weight of the world's chaos. That's Jesus's job, and He's better at it than we are. We're called to abide in Him, to remain connected to the Vine, to let His peace guard our hearts even when the world feels out of control.

So here's your invitation: follow along for more Christ-centered clarity on today's biggest questions. Not panic. Not hysteria. Just truth, hope, and practical wisdom rooted in Scripture.

And if you need prayer as you break the doomscrolling habit: or for anything else weighing on you: we're here. Need prayers? Text us day or night at 1-901-213-7341.

Your midday moment matters. Spend it with Jesus, not the algorithm.

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Dr. Layne McDonald
Creative Pastor • Filmmaker • Musician • Author
Memphis, TN

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