Religion Dispatches
December 15, 2011
 
Five Social Media Trends that are Reshaping  Religion 
By _Elizabeth  Drescher_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/contributors/elizabethdrescher/) 
 
Over the past couple years, religionistas of all sorts have  attempted to 
navigate a new media landscape in which old constructions of  religious 
authority, identity, and practice are changing almost by the minute.  This 
surely 
marks the beginning something of a Second Coming of religion in  
digitally-integrated form. 
As we wait and watch this holiday season for, among other things, news of 
the  much-anticipated _Facebook IPO_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/facebook-preparing-for-ipo-will-hire-thousands-of-new-employees/2011/12/02/gI
QAbdILMO_story.html) —perhaps the only miracle story compelling enough  to 
capture our attention in these economic dark times—it seems worthwhile to  
take a look at some trends in social media (ordered pretty much as they came  
into my head) that are reshaping religion and spirituality: 
1. Social Prayer 
Throughout 2011, the “Jesus Daily” Facebook page has outranked soccer  
superpowers and celebrity superstars like Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber as the “
_most engaging_ 
(http://www.allfacebook.com/facebook-engaging-page-jesusdaily-2011-11) ” locale 
on Facebook. But it’s hardly spiritually  lonely at the 
top for the inspiration and prayer page started by weight-loss  doctor Aaron 
Tabor. The “Dios Es Bueno” (God is Good), “The Bible,” and “Joyce  Mercer 
Ministries” pages all hang out in the top ten, and five more religious  
pages
fill out the bottom half of the top twenty. In all, more than half of the  
top twenty most engaging pages—pages that move beyond mere broadcast 
messaging  to share content that inspires participants to interact with one 
another—
are  religious.  
While tracking Twitter trends is somewhat trickier, hashtagged memes like  
#prayer, #spirituality, #bible, #Jesus, #Buddha, #Allah, and so on are  
consistently robust, and event-related hashtags like #haroldcamping, #rapture,  
and _#LDSconf_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/dispatches/joannabrooks/4465/#ldsconf_leads_twitter_trend)
  mark Twitter as no less significant a site 
for  religious expression, exploration, and engagement than Facebook. 
Indeed,  religious participation on Twitter is sufficient to have captured the 
attention  of Claire Diaz Ortiz, the network’s manager of “social innovation,”
 who is  courting religious tweeters to encourage greater Twitter-specific 
social  networking involvement. 
All this highlights social networking spaces as vibrant locales for 
religious  formation, spiritual care, witness, and advocacy. But, though most 
religious  organizations now have some version of a Facebook page and more are 
joining  Twitter every day, expect to see the most vigorous engagement on 
pages created  by believers and seekers themselves on the basis of their 
spiritual interests  and developing practices. 
Word to religious leaders: just as the local religious building is _no 
longer the normative_ 
(http://blog.newmediaprojectatunion.org/2011/10/listen-to-millenials-please.html)
  site for religious practice, neither  is your 
church, synagogue, or mosque Facebook page or Twitter feed likely to be.  Click 
on over to where the people are if you really want to connect. 
2. Ministers-On-The-Go 
The location based service (LBS) Foursquare reached a milestone over the  
summer, topping _10 million users_ 
(http://searchenginewatch.com/article/2081107/Foursquare-Hits-10-Million-Users-Yeah-Thats-1000-Annual-Growth)
 —a 
10,000 percent increase over its member  base in 2009. While there are 
questions 
about whether all those members are  active, and bigger ones about whether 
Foursquare will be able to hold its own  against LBS applications now offered 
by Facebook (which just acquired LBS  competitor Gowalla) and Google, it’s 
clear that the social practice of “checking  in” wherever you are is taking 
hold across social media platforms. 
This has had no small appeal among many lay and ordained ministry leaders,  
who use LBS to make visible the range of their ministry practice and to 
alert  community members that they’re available for conversation at a nearby 
coffee  shop or brewpub. 
Jerry Whirtley, pastor of First English Evangelical Church in Victoria,  
Texas, sees LBS check-ins as digitally incarnational ministry: 
I check in everywhere I go… If I can interact with somebody because they  
know where I am, or they can find me more easily because I’m on Twitter or  
where I check in on Foursquare, then I think I need to do that simply because 
 it allows me to be more accessible to everyone else who might be looking 
for  me or ask me something.
As the reality of part-time, bi-vocational, and otherwise  
extra-congregational lay and ordained ministry continues to grow, believers and 
 seekers 
shaped by digital culture increasingly expect mobile accessibility to  
everything. So, expect to see an uptick in LBS for ministry. 
3. O Holy App 
With more than half a million apps now available for the iPhone or iPad, 
and  maybe _232_ 
(http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/01/mystery-how-many-android-tablet-apps/)
  for the Android, it’s clear that the number of  
religiously-themed apps is growing. Apps are available for adherents to just  
about any religious group you can think of (including _Pastafarians_ 
(http://www.thebestappleapps.info/2011/07/app-for-all-pastafarians.html) ), and 
have 
been developed for a large number of  congregations, dioceses, and other 
religious organizations (though it’s hard to  know what one is meant to do with 
most of them). 
_Prayer book apps_ 
(http://pbsusa.org/the-liturgy/7-the-book-of-common-prayer/194-iphone-app-of-1662-bcp-daily-prayer-now-available.html)
 , those for 
_on-the-go spiritual practices_ 
(http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/buddhist-meditation/id382193648?mt=8) , and 
_other tools_ 
(http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/islamic-compass-prayer-times/id321378482?mt=8)  
that integrate spirituality 
into everyday life  have been most popular. Others, like the now notorious 
_Confession_ 
(http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/atheologies/4237/confession_fail:_iphone_app_controversy_muddies_the_sacramental_waters/)
  app, 
which kicked off the year with as much fanfare  and as theological confusion 
over whether one can be absolved through an  app-based confession (per il 
papa: _ix-ney_ (http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ixnay)  on the  
orgiveness-fey), highlight the importance of creating apps that support 
personal  
reflection and provide information that can be carried into face-to-face  
relationships. 
If the folks at _Nielsen_ (http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/?p=28237)  
are correct, smartphones will continue to overtake,  uh, dumb phones, making 
app-based connection and information-sharing a  continuing growth area. 
Religiously-themed apps are certain to be an important  part of that, but 
unless 
they grasp the digital trinity of social engagement,  spiritual meaning, 
and incarnational potential that makes such apps truly  worthwhile for 
believers and seekers. They’ll likely find their apps among the  thousands 
ignored 
each year. 
4. Curate as Curator 
As social networking sites grow as prime destinations for day-to-day  
distraction (with more than half of all adults in the U.S. visiting social  
networking sites “for no particular reason,” according to a recent _survey_ 
(http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2011/Internet-as-diversion.aspx) ), 
engaging 
content will have increasing  significance. 
It’s important to remember that “engaging” doesn’t mean ‘shiny’ or ‘loud.
’  Rather, it means content that appeals to or productively challenges the  
interests of those in one’s networks, invites conversation, and encourages  
sharing across networks. If it inspires and enriches face-to-face 
connection,  all the better. Here, another recent _survey_ 
(http://www.pewinternet.org/Media-Mentions/2011/Survey-Most-Use-Social-Media-To-Keep-In-Touch-Not-To-Fo
llow-Celebrities-Or-Find-Dates.aspx)  is also telling: most Americans join 
social networks so  that they can stay in touch with family, friends, other 
community members. That  is, even when they’re aimlessly trolling around on 
Facebook or Twitter, people  use social media socially. 
Religionistas who can curate content that facilitates online and offline  
connection will earn more stars in the digital book of everyday life than 
those  who continue to focus on broadcasting their latest deep thought or (oh, 
sweet  mother of mercy, please make it stop!) their latest sermon. 
5. A Few New Commandments 
In 2009, the Episcopal _Diocese of Connecticut_ 
(http://www.adamjcopeland.com/2010/11/09/where-are-the-church-social-media-policies/)
  was among the 
first to offer social  media guidelines. Like the few that were beginning to 
become available at the  time, they blend what amount to public relations 
rules (e.g., when and how to  use church logos) with guidance on appropriate 
ministry behavior with  minors. 
More recently, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishop published  
social media guidelines. The _USCCB guidelines_ 
(http://www.usccb.org/about/communications/social-media-guidelines.cfm)  have a 
similar tone to those 
from the Diocese  of Connecticut, with charming definitions of things like “web 
2.0” and “blogs.”  The USCCB guidelines also naively assume that social 
media engagement will  unfold primarily on websites and social networking 
pages controlled by church  authorities at one level or another. While 
_Congregation Etz Chaim_ 
(http://www.congetzchaim.org/article.aspx?id=8589936093) , 
in Lombard, Illinois, has a more  sophisticated understanding of the 
distributed nature of social media  communication and engagement, their policy 
does 
not address the protection of  minors that is clearly a concern among other 
religious groups. 
_Adam Copeland_ 
(http://www.adamjcopeland.com/2010/11/09/where-are-the-church-social-media-policies/)
  has blogged periodically about the dearth of  
such guidelines and the thinness of those that are being developed. But,  
attention is beginning to turn more actively to this concern. A Google search  
for “social media guidelines for churches” yields more than 27 million 
results.  In the past year, I’ve regularly been contacted by individual 
congregations, by  regional and national judicatories, and religious school 
administrators for  advice on such policies. I would expect, on the one hand, 
that 
this work will  continue, but, on the other would not be surprised if real 
energy were fired by  what, alas, too often spurs religious groups to 
internally-focused ethical  action: litigation.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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