I thought that our recent discussion in class about churches and technology was fascinating. Christians have taken advantage of new technologies for centuries to further their mission, but some churches take it to a whole new level.
So many churches around the country have their own apps to download now, which feature things like videos of sermons, more information, mission statements and even a page to give offering. I was looking around on a website of a megachurch back home, and found that you can even "text to give" instead of putting a few dollars in the offering plate when it comes around. I thought that in particular was really interesting, since offering has always been so engrained into the Christian worship service for most denominations. If everybody is texting to give and watching the sermon on their phone, do churches still really have to exist or are they on their way to becoming entirely online?
So many other things in life that are supposed to be based on relationships and face to face contact now happen online. Online dating, online classes -- they are both things that people thought necessitated someone to be there in person, but both programs have enjoyed great online success. Are churches headed that way too? In a society that has already lost interpersonal skills, face to face conversation and attention span, could an online church be the perfect answer for everybody who is already glued to their phone and computer 24/7? It's interesting and a little terrifying to think about where this all might lead in another decade or two.
Thursday, May 12, 2016
Closed
The blog is now closed. Comments posted after this will not impact one's participation grade.
Best,
Lynn
$haddy
Since we were on the topic of megachuches this week, I was curious and wondered what the pastor at one of the megachurches near my house makes for his salary. Apparently, he would not reveal his net worth, but is building a house that costs over $1,000,000. I think that's way to much for a pastor to be making. What do you guys think?
http://www.christianpost.com/news/pastor-steven-furtick-says-jesus-wouldnt-want-him-to-reveal-how-much-money-he-makes-149835/
http://www.christianpost.com/news/pastor-steven-furtick-says-jesus-wouldnt-want-him-to-reveal-how-much-money-he-makes-149835/
Religion and Social Media
On Tuesday, we talked about religion and how it is shown in media. I thought that it was so interesting that 1 in 5 Americans share their faith online once a week and nearly half of all Americans see faith shared online once a week. Because I am friends with several Christians on Facebook, both at Elon and back home, and follow a lot of Christians on Instagram, I see a lot of posts every week with various Bible verses, bits of testimonies and messages to God thanking Him for different things.
As a Christian, I also sometimes post little bits of encouraging Bible verses or refer to people in pictures I post as my "sisters in Christ" -- the thing is, do these posts really have any effect on my followers? Just because I put my faith on show every once in a while, does that mean that the people who see them will really be affected by it? Maybe.
I have definitely seen my fair share of Instagram and Facebook posts that I just roll my eyes at -- posts that feel so fake or "holier-than-thou" that it turns even me, a Christian, off of Christianity. While it's great to share your faith or other beliefs with others online, I think that it's important to remember that these social media platforms were created to make our lives appear more perfect and airbrushed than they really are. Something that I hear all the time is how faith is messy and imperfect, so it's interesting to juxtapose that with the perfection and pressure that comes with social media.
This topic also brings to mind the idea of Christian tourism and poverty photography -- so many people go on mission trips and end up taking a million pictures of themselves with impoverished children and orphans to post on Facebook. Matthew 6:3 talks about humility and acting in such a way that not even your left hand knows what your right hand is doing when giving to the needy. If everything is posted online, is that humility really in effect? Just some things to think about the next time you post something about your faith or other beliefs or the next time you see a post about faith.
Wednesday, May 11, 2016
Baptismal imagery in "The River" by Manchester Orchestra
I have wanted to talk for some time about the baptismal imagery in one of my favorite songs The River by Manchester Orchestra. It is such a favorite of mine in fact, that I have plans to get lyrics tattooed. The lead of the band is openly Christian and biblical themes frequently slide subtlety into his music. The chorus is as follows:
Oh god I need it
So let me see again
Take me to the river
And let me see again
Oh my god
Let me see again
Oh my god
Let me see again
Let me see again
These lines are, to me, calling out to God. The singer asks: "let me see again" a possible reference to the story of Jesus restoring sight to the blind. He then asks "take me to the river" a reference to the tradition of baptism by river submerging. Near the end of the song the meaning becomes even more overt the final lyrics calling:
Oh god I need it
Well I was wrong again
Take me to the river
And make me clean again
Oh my god
Make me clean again
And oh my god
Let me see again
The author asks God to "make him clean again" asking to be washed of sin in the river. This is further illustrated if you prefer the lyrics the singer uses in live shows (and the lyrics I would want tattooed). In this version the final "Oh God I need it." is replaced by: "Oh God I'm sorry." He asks forgiveness as he is baptized.
Lucy patron saint of punk?
How Megachurches utilize technology
One of the SURF presentations I presented on was on how Megachurches spread their message in a digital age. It's really interesting and ties in perfectly with yesterdays lesson.
http://www.elonpendulum.com/article/2016/04/session-2-communications-surf
http://www.elonpendulum.com/article/2016/04/session-2-communications-surf
Tuesday, May 10, 2016
Virtual Church
After today's class I was curious to find out just how easy it is to attend a virtual church service. I googled "virtual church," and the first result is a website actually called virtualchurch.com (link). It's been established since 2004, so this really isn't a new thing! Until today's class I was unaware of just how common it may be to use the Internet for practicing one's faith. I clicked on the "Start Service" button, and an entire service downloaded to my computer! The more that I familiarize myself with this concept of practicing religion online, the more accepting I am becoming of it!
You guys should check out this website and comment what you think/find!
You guys should check out this website and comment what you think/find!
Evangelizing with the Internet
After today's class, we learned that Evangelical Christianity uses the media, such as the radio and television, to spread this religion's message and beliefs. Evangelical Christians have a call to evangelize, so they try to use any means available to spread the word. Because of this, evangelizers take advantage of the cultural trends in society to enhance this movement. These people use technology and the media because individuals who are unfamiliar with the faith use these tools in their everyday lives, so they can relate to them. Evangelizers make use of the accessible and prominent tool of technology so that others can adopt and accept these beliefs more easily because they understand technology. This movement becomes more powerful when it utilizes social norms to connect a large amount of people. Also, using media and technology enables this message to spread quickly and expansively, which strengthens Christianity since a large amount of people are hearing the beliefs. Although there are many positive effects of evangelizers using the Internet to reach numerous people, are there any downsides of technology that can hamper the movement?
May 10 Class Notes--- Christianity in a Digital Age
Church in the Digital Age
84% of Adults in the US use the Internet
-
There are some use differences based upon class,
race, age, education level. But gaps is narrowing in the case of race
-
Gender parity is the norm in internet usage
-
Today 2/3 (64%) of adults in the US have a
smartphone. This is up form 11% in 2011
A little historical
context
-
The Christina church has often been shaped by
the adoption of new media
o
Dominican public preaching (13th
century) – altering the power of the clergy
o
Printing Press (1440)- Protestant Reformation
(1517)
§
Sola scriptura “by scripture alone”
o
Radio (early 20th cent) – evangelical
Christianity
o
Television (mid-late 20th century) –
evangelical Christianity
Billy Graham- The New
Media Pioneer
-
Born 1918
-
Ordained Southern Baptist
-
1947: Starts his “crusades”
o
Over 400 in his lifetime
o
185 countries
o
6 continents
o
Many televised
-
1949: Raises o media prominence as an evangelist
with circus tent revivals in LA
-
1950-54: Hour of Decision Radio show
-
1951: Stars World Wide Pictures
o
Over 130 Christian Films
-
1956 Starts a magazine, Christianity Today
-
2012: Billy Graham Evangelistic Association
shifts its focus to online evangelism. In 2014 BEGA reached 7.5 million through
their websites.
-
An audience of 2.2 billion people worldwide over
his lifetime
Vatican II: Making a
Way for Online Religion
-
1962-65
-
Sought to articulate the relationship between
the Catholic Church and the modern world
-
One of the most notable changes from Latin to
the vernacular
-
Celebration of Mass facing the congregation
-
More acceptances of modern styles of music, art,
ect.
-
Emphasis on the importance of knowing
Scripture.
Religion Online v. Online
Religion
-
Providing information
about religion v opportunity to participate in religious activity
-
Reference to offline
activities v religious activities that take place online
Religion and Social
Media
-
According to a 2014 Pew Survey on Religion and
social media
o
One in five individuals share their faith on
social media every week
o
Nearly half of American adults see someone share
their faith online every week
Does all this mean
that people aren’t going to church
-
Online religion does not mean a decline in
participation in face to race religion
So, who is using this
stuff?
-White evangelical s and black Protestants are more likely
than other groups o engage in some form of electronic religious activity.
Monday, May 9, 2016
Religion vs. Jesus
*Disclaimer: I'm a Christian, so if the following sounds preachy, I'm sorry! I thought the video was really interesting and wanted to share/provide my own context for it. Thanks :) *
Is White Jesus Oppressive?
Hi everyone! I stumbled upon an article that talks about a perspective on the color of Christ that I don't think we've talked about in our class discussion too much. In a Youtube video, a young woman explains why she thinks that imagining Christ as white is not only historically-inaccurate, but it is oppressive and wrong. I found this interesting because in class we have talked about how a black Jesus can be viewed as liberating, but not how the direct contrast of this would be that a white Jesus would then be oppressive. I think that in this case it is as if the woman is saying that the depiction of a white Jesus and a black one are like two opposing forces.
What do you guys think of this? Are her arguments valid?
The link to the Huffington Post article that contains the video is here.
What do you guys think of this? Are her arguments valid?
The link to the Huffington Post article that contains the video is here.
Selma
So I was going through our list of films and saw that Selma was a film listed. I'd already been wanting to see that movie so I watched it last night, and wow. It was incredibly impactful and emotional. I also noticed a few similarities in the movie to what we've been learning.
Selma, somewhat like Passion of the Christ, uses some pretty violent and horrific images to evoke a response from the crowd. I almost screamed at some of the injustices shown, and to think these things happened!
Martin Luther King Jr. is often seen as a Christ figure, and he was indeed a unique and effective leader in history, but Selma shows that King was also human, making mistakes like everyone else. He cheated on his wife...A LOT. He was also a habitual smoker. King's actions were Jesus-like in their message and approach, but his personal life was a lot different.
Selma emphasized King's humanity but also draws a lot of parallels between MLK and Jesus. King is the leader of a peaceful movement unpopular with public officials. At one point someone refers to his followers as disciples. And speaking of disciples, King, like Jesus, is depicted with a loyal group of followers with him, effective but lesser than King and extremely loyal. King leads a humble life for the sake of his cause just like Jesus.
I knew people liked to compare King and Jesus, but I don't think I really got it till I saw this movie. King indeed has many similarities to the Messiah, but the film also shows how flawed he was. It's an interesting balance.
Selma, somewhat like Passion of the Christ, uses some pretty violent and horrific images to evoke a response from the crowd. I almost screamed at some of the injustices shown, and to think these things happened!
Martin Luther King Jr. is often seen as a Christ figure, and he was indeed a unique and effective leader in history, but Selma shows that King was also human, making mistakes like everyone else. He cheated on his wife...A LOT. He was also a habitual smoker. King's actions were Jesus-like in their message and approach, but his personal life was a lot different.
Selma emphasized King's humanity but also draws a lot of parallels between MLK and Jesus. King is the leader of a peaceful movement unpopular with public officials. At one point someone refers to his followers as disciples. And speaking of disciples, King, like Jesus, is depicted with a loyal group of followers with him, effective but lesser than King and extremely loyal. King leads a humble life for the sake of his cause just like Jesus.
I knew people liked to compare King and Jesus, but I don't think I really got it till I saw this movie. King indeed has many similarities to the Messiah, but the film also shows how flawed he was. It's an interesting balance.
Recently, I happened upon the list of movies for this class and saw that Monty Python and the Holy Grail was listed. Since I am quite the Monty Python fan, I could not let the semester go by without writing about this uniquely hilarious movie. It takes religious themes and turns them on the viewer, making them question certain parts of their faith at times. The Holy Grail is not for everyone; you either love it or you hate it. Essentially, it follows King Arthur as he ventures on a quest to find the Holy Grail. He believes he has been assigned this quest by God and assembles a team of other knights to help him. There are a few religious themes throughout the movie.
First, of course, is the Holy Grail itself, which is believed to be the chalice Jesus passed around at the Last Supper. Legend says Joseph of Arimathea had it, brought it to Great Britain, and that it has never been found since. I don't want to give away the ending or anything (it might be the funniest, most ridiculous part in my opinion), but they never exactly encounter the Grail.
One religious scene is that of the Holy Hand Grenade, in which the knights observe a prescribed ritual before throwing a hand grenade at a ferocious bunny.
God also appears in the film, except in animated cartoon form. He is seen having a conversation with the knights and yelling at them for kneeling down and apologizing so much.
The Pythons, as they are known, have produced other religiously satirical films and skits, most notably Life of Brian. In this movie, people mistake a man named Brian for the Messiah and proceed to follow him despite him adamantly telling them not to. While it does not directly attack Jesus or any of his teachings, it parallels Jesus' life. Brian tells people they need to think for themselves rather than listen to everything someone says. In interviews about the movie, the Pythons remind people of this same theme. People should think for themselves and make their own decisions, especially about religion.
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Strange Fruit by J. Kwest
"It was Jesus on the lynching tree, strange fruit."
During The Ripple Conference in February, J. Kwest, a Christian rapper and friend of Joel Harter (our Associate Chaplain for Protestant Life), came to speak about his prophetic art, including his video "Strange Fruit" which won an Emmy Award. I think it fits well into our discussion of The Color of Christ as it brings up many of the things we've discussed over the course of the semester.
It is about ten minutes long and very powerful. Watch HERE.
How is narrative functioning in this piece? How does the artist parallel biblical texts with the story of Thomas Shipp, Abram Smith, and James Cameron?
For reference, J. Kwest uses the following texts(phrased differently in his script):
"And out of the ground made the LORD God to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil." (Genesis 2:9)
"Pilate said, "Take him yourselves and judge him by your own law" "But we have no right to execute anyone," they objected." (John 18:31)
"Then the angel showed me the river of the water of life, as clear as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb down the middle of the great street of the city. On each side of the river stood the tree of life, bearing twelve crops of fruit, yielding its fruit every month. And the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations." (Revelation 22:1-2)
How does race function visually in the text(video)?
How does the artist use ideas of truth, power, age/innocence, and progress?
How is this an example of liberation theology?
"Each and every one of us is made in the image of that boy, of that singer, of the one who flips the script."
Saturday, May 7, 2016
White Jesus
Last Sunday, I went to the United Methodist Church in Burlington. I would like to share an image with you all of a painting that was hung in the hallway of the church. I think it's interesting to note that Jesus and his disciples are all portrayed as white. (On a side note, I think it is neat how they portrayed Judas with his back toward Christ). However, in other paintings such as Da Vinci's last supper, some disciples are rather racially ambiguous. Why is it that Judas is depicted as having the darkest skin color out of all of the disciples in this painting? What does this say?
Friday, May 6, 2016
Megyn Kelly on White Jesus/ Santa
Here's the video referenced in the first prompt:
A New Jesus Movie
A new Jesus movie is coming out. There's an interesting piece in the NYT about it. Check it out HERE.
Tuesday, May 3, 2016
Easter in May?
Here's an article I found about how the date of Easter is determined. The basic idea is that Easter is to be on the first full moon after the Spring Equinox because that was when the Bible says Jesus was killed and resurrected. But this article is really interesting because it talks about the trouble historically with dating Easter and some things that can pop up in the future. Apparently Easter will be in May 300 years from now...
http://www.timeanddate.com/calendar/determining-easter-date.html
http://www.timeanddate.com/calendar/determining-easter-date.html
5/3 Notes Drew
Class
Notes 5/3: Thinking about Liturgy and Worship in the US
Pentecostalism
& the Society of Friends
Liturgy
·
Originally Greek word (composite of laos
(people/public) and ergo (work)) suggesting an act was a public duty
·
Today we use it to describe a pattern or
form of worship or the ritual performed
·
Denominations and individual congregations
vary in their adherence to prescribed liturgy, although even churches that
describe themselves as “non-liturgical” follow their own “liturgical logic”
·
Denominations and individual congregations
may vary in the formality of liturgical style
·
Some protestant churches will follow
liturgical calendar, but not necessarily a mass
·
Some masses don’t always have to be
formal, sometimes informal, still follows mass
·
Differing views on note taking during
worship service
Factors
That Shape Liturgy
·
Denominational Affiliation
·
Congregational History
·
Congregational Character
·
Temporal Factors: Season/Day/Time
·
Spatial Factors
·
Financial Factors
·
What happens during liturgy often tells us
about what the congregation values
Pentecostalism
·
Evangelical Christian movement growing out
of camp meetings and holiness movements of 19th-20th
centuries
·
Beliefs include:
·
Inerrancy of Bible
·
Gifts of Holy Spirit (speaking in tongues)
·
Faith Healing
·
God’s imminent return and rapture of
church
·
Generally conservative on social/moral
issues
·
Grows out of early African-American
worship practices
·
Holy Spirit guiding liturgy
(unstructured/guided holy spirit)
·
Hundreds of denominations and
non-denominational congregations: Assemblies of God, Church of God in Christ,
Universal Church of the Kingdom of God
·
One of the fastest growing traditions in
the world, esp. global south. One quarter of world’s Christians identify as
Pentecostal
·
Growing in Latin America
Quakers
·
Movement emerges in 17th
century England by George Fox
·
Everyone has Inner Light and following
this light leads to spiritual development
·
Focus on a lifestyle of plainness and
simplicity
·
Belief in radical equality leads to
suppression in England, many came to Pennsylvania/RI
·
A variety of sects of Friends, ranging
from more traditionally protestants to
non-theists/Universalists
·
360,000 Quakers worldwide, largest
concentration in Kenya, 85,000-90,000 Quakers in the US
·
Devoted to Peace, Quakers practice
conscientious objection, many were abolitionists
·
20th century: 2 kinds of Quakerism in US: liberal
and evangelical
·
Liberal Quakers often advocate for
progressive social causes, including disarmament, racial and social justice,
and care for the environment
·
Liberal Quakers, which make up 11% of Quakers in general practice of “waiting
worship”
Notes from 5/3
Housekeeping things
*FINAL DUE 5/12
@9AM*
Also meeting for the
"final" at 9:00am rather than 8:00am
Remember to properly
cite in-text- No bibliography needed
Liturgy
- Greek word (leitourgema) a composite of laos (people) and ergo (work), suggesting an act that was a public duty
- Describes form or pattern of workshop or ritual performed
- Denominations and individual congregations vary in their "liturgy," although even churches that describe themselves as "non-liturgical" may follow a liturgical logic
- Catholic for instance "prescribed experience", universal
- Protestants vary more in liturgical ceremonial experience
- Vary in formality from denomination to denomination
Liturgical calendar
based on (birth, death, life, resurrection) calendar of events
Over three years,
you are hearing all the prescribed texts
We can think about
liturgy and worship patterns in 'spectrum'
PRESCRIBED
I
I
I
I
FORMAL
I I I I I I I I I I I I I INFORMAL
I
I
I
I
NOT
PRESCRIBED
Prescribed means
HIGHER order not just congregational historical order
Factors Shaping the Liturgy
- Denominational affiliation
- Congregational history
- Congregational character
- Temporal factors: season/day/time
- Spatial factors
- Financial factors
- Others?
- Children
- Gender assumptions
- Size of congregation
What happens during
the liturgy often tells us about congregational values *
Worship in Two Christian Traditions
Pentecostalism
An evangelical
Christian movement, growing out of the American Camp Meeting and the Holiness
movements of the 19-20th centuries
- Sharing and converting
- Importance of "born again"
What does Vondey
tell us about emergence of Pentecostal tradition?
- Influenced by early African American worship practices and slave worship, although multi-racial today
- Holy Spirit guiding the liturgy
- Unstructured ***but also embodied worship
Beliefs:
- Inerrancy of the Bible
- Gifts of the Holy Spirit (glossolalia) spiritual languages
- Faith healing (as a sign of devotion and faithfulness)
- God's imminent return and the rapture of the Church
- Generally conservative on social/moral issues
*Aimee Semple
McPherson- founder of the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel
Growth of Pentecostalism
- Hundreds of denominations and non-denominational congregations: Assemblies of God, Church of God in Christ, Universal Church of the Kinddom of God
- One of the fastest growing traditions in the world, especially in the Global South
- 2006 Pew Study concluded that 1/4 of world's Christians identify as Pentecostal or charismatic
- Pentecostalism is growing rapidly in Latin America (90% Catholic in 1960's, now only 69%, while 65% Pentecostal or charismatic)
Check out
Pentecostal worship videos on Youtube!
- Enthusiasm
- Crying
- Healing
- Physical contact
- Repetitive
{EXTREME EMOTION}
Importance placed on
egalitarianism
Evangelical identity
- Not ashamed
- What we do here impacts what is happening outside
- Boundary between sacred and profane is permeable
Quakers (Society of Friends)
Movement emerges in
the 17th century in England under George Fox
- Has a direct call from God
- Teachings about Inner light and inner voice regardless
- Following the light leads to spiritual development and perfection
Focus on a lifestyle
plainness and simplicity
God's continued
revelation
Belief in radical
and many came to RI and that PA seeking sanctuary
A variety of sects
of Friends
- Ranging from more traditionally Protestant to Non-theists/Universalists
In 2010 there were
about 360,000 Quakers worldwide, with the largest concentration in Kenya. There are 85,000-90,000 Quakers in the US
Devoted to peace
- Conscientious objection
- Abolition of slavery
20th century, two
types of Quakerism (liberal and evangelical)
Liberal Quakers
(11%)
- Progressive social causes )disarmament, racial and social justice, care for the environment)
- Waiting worship (listening, shaking hands)
***MEETING****
Why would I put Pentecostalism and Quakerism in the
same class lecture?
- Holy spirit focused- listening for God from different directions
Important
theological differences, although similar
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