Thursday, February 17, 2011
Is Facebook killing the church?
Richard Beck thinks so; here's an excerpt of his argument:
The difference between Generations X and Y isn't in their views of the church. It's about those cellphones. It's about relationships and connectivity. Most Gen X'ers didn't have cell phones, text messaging or Facebook. These things were creeping in during their college years but the explosive onset of mobile devices and social computing had yet to truly take off.
So why has mobile social computing affected church attendance? Well, if church has always been kind of lame and irritating why did people go in the first place? Easy, social relationships. Church has always been about social affiliation. You met your friends, discussed your week, talked football, shared information about good schools, talked local politics, got the scoop, and made social plans ("Let's get together for dinner this week!"). Even if you hated church you could feel lonely without it. . . .
But Millennials are in a different social situation. They don't need physical locations for social affiliation. They can make dinner plans via text, cell phone call or Facebook. In short, the thing that kept young people going to church, despite their irritations, has been effectively replaced. You don't need to go to church to stay connected or in touch. You have an iPhone.
Sure, Millennials will report that the "reason" they are leaving the church is due to its perceived hypocrisy or shallowness. My argument is that while this might be the proximate cause the more distal cause is social computing. Already connected Millennials have the luxury to kick the church to the curb. This is the position of strength that other generations did not have. We fussed about the church but, at the end of the day, you went to stay connected. For us, church was Facebook!
To the extent that this argument has merit, I'm guessing it holds more truth for Protestants than for Catholics. In general, my experience of Protestant churches is that the churchgoing experience is more social, especially for young people, than the experience at most Catholic churches, where the experience is more centered on the individual, and where folks tend to flee as soon as Mass is finished (or sooner, in many cases). In any event, it's an intriguing thesis.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2011/02/is-facebook-killing-the-church.html
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Quite interesting. We have dropped the ball, but not when it comes to social networking. The purpose of Mass is NOT, I repeat NOT, connecting with people. It isn't about "us." The Mass is the re-presentation of the sacrifice of Christ on the cross in an unbloody manner. It is about HIM. When we focus on the most Holy Trinity in our worship it is efficacious. However, when we focus on ourselves then it ceases to be worship. It is only for us in the sense that we need to worship, we are created for it. I constantly remind the youth that Mass is not meant to be entertaining or "fun" it is far more then that. We should not cheapen Mass, but we have over the last few decades. We should use the new translations as an opportunity to teach people how to worship again. I suggest the book Liturgy and Personality by Von Hildebrand.