Spirituality and Social Media

Gavin RichardsonOver the past month, we’ve taken an in depth look at the relationship between ‘spirituality and social media’. Gavin has taken us on a technological and theological journey – giving us a lot to think about as we continue on our paths toward enlightenment. In this week’s final installment of the series, Gavin discusses society’s dependency on the web, and how spiritual communities are failing to utilize social media to it’s maximum potential. Be sure to visit Gavin on the web at www.gavoweb.com and follow him on twitter: @gavoweb

Developing dependency for technology

As Matt has mentioned, I love South Park. In all its raunchiness I feel its social commentary is spot on. One of my favorite episodes is from season 12 called “Over Logging” and it deals with the loss of the Internet.

The episode goes something like this: The whole world is without the Internet and people don’t know what to do. There is no news. Towns become deserted wastelands. People do not know what day of the week or month it is. Eventually Stan’s dad (Randy) takes the family ‘out west’ to Silicon Valley which still has “limited inventory” -  Eventually the family finds themselves into a displacement camp for people who are seeking Internet. The problem is that there is only enough Internet for people to have 10 seconds or so to be online. It is a telling episode on how we rely on the Internet for so much of our human conditions.

One of the other crisis’ is Stan’s sister (Shelley) has an online boyfriend whom she cannot talk to through all this. She pines and whines throughout the episode. Poignant, maybe prophetic, is a moment towards the end when Shelley runs into her boyfriend in real life in the displacement camp. They have this awkward moment where they have no idea how to communicate with each other in real life.

‘The old becomes the content for the new’

Marshal McLuhan, considered by many to be the most prophetic voice during the new media age of television in the 60’s and 70’s, would say that that, with the advent of a new medium the old medium becomes the content for the new medium. This is true for many practices of  today’s religious institutions. I am even guilty of it myself.

If you do a particular search through iTunes for a preacher, church, denomination, or faith expression (Christianity especially) what you will find is an abundance of ‘sermon podcasts.’ Now, podcasting is or was not developed with the idea of sermon delivering. It was more the creation of using RSS and audio development technologies into crafting radio type shows, which even then is using an old medium content. But the religious players said, ‘Hey what do we have that makes for good audio? Sermons!” What do I think about sermon podcasts? I think they are lame. They are lame, not because you’re putting out some of your institutions created content, but because you are not going far enough. They are not search-able (no transcripts). They are not attractive to people outside of your own congregation, and if they are, its probably because you have a popular pastor who has written books or something that people have already conjured up an invested relationship toward and a podcast is just another outlet to continue that relationship.

It’s not limited to just podcasts. Early church or institutional websites were more an extension of the paper church newsletter. Churches are now starting to use videos and modern technologies to convey announcements. Twitter, Facebook, Myspace and other web 2.0 sites are utilized not for cultivating conversations, but to direct traffic to a main website which, again, looks like the newsletter. I am not saying all this is bad, but what I am saying is that we in the faith community need to name what we are doing for what it is. This isn’t an outreach but more a communication to our own people with the same old stuff that they stopped listening too. No wonder people still ask me what this or that events are.

Your doing it all wrong!God's still a social media 'noob'

I see two problematic paths that faith communities are going down with the increased use of social media. One, is that faith communities still continue to fail to see the true value of the social networking to promote conversations, develop extensions of relationship, and to reach out to people who are seeking answers/meaning/understanding/and so on. More often what we do is take these tools and repopulate them with our standard old medium messages that are speaking out to people and not with people.

Two, coming back to our South Park displacement camp, I feel that our faith institutions and individuals are spending so much energy in the realm of social media, speaking out to perceived audiences,  that in the off chance they do happen to encounter someone in real life they’ll be at a loss for how to communicate. We’re starting to witness people becoming TOO engrossed and dependent on technology. I see this already in our youth culture who is willing to pour their heart out over the Internet and via text messages, but if we were sitting in a small group or chatting in a coffee house face to face, they bottle up and become much less transparent.

For many of us who grew up before a digital native was born we know what it is like to ask hard face to face questions, dive into ourselves and identify hurts and joys so we have the ability to lead them. However, if we have lose ourselves and fall victim to advancing technology, we lose a part of communication that is absolutely critical to the pursuit of faith and development. Technology is an invaluable tool, that if used correctly, can expand our influence and reach to virtually limitless boundaries.

Where do you see our dependency on tech heading from here? How can spiritual affiliations and groups use social media tools to benefit their cause and reach their communities?

Gavin RichardsonMeet Gavin Richardson: Youth Minister, lover of South Park, Renaissance man. Last week, Gavin discussed the power blogging can have at bringing people together, and the connection in can bridge between a spiritual leader and their followers. This week, in the third installment of the ‘Spirituality and Social Media’ series, Gavin discusses ‘virtual communities’, the development of faith within the realm of ‘Second Life’, and how the web can be an inviting, non judgmental alternative for those pursuing religious awareness. Visit Gavin on the web at www.gavoweb.com and follow him on twitter @gavoweb

Is community possible…virtually?

A number of years back there was a collaborative experiment to do a ‘virtual church’ called “the church of fools.” The experiment wanted to know if people could worship and live the spiritual life within a virtual environment. As I mentioned in our first posting, a spiritual life is meant to be done within a community of people. So can a virtual environment provide a community of people? And a community of people to live into faith with?

Shane Hipps, one of our better thinkers on technology and faith, says in an interview that he does not believe you can have ‘virtual’ community. From his perspective he’s probably right. But I would disagree with him, to a point. He puts forth that community needs a few elements; shared history, permanence, proximity, and shared imagination of the future. Being someone who has participated in long standing social media communities I have been a permanent fixture as well as many of the people I commune with. We have a shared history of stories, actual meet ups, and an imagination for the future. We might not have proximity, but that is relative in how we feel proximate with the tools (phone, video chat, letters) that enable us to be closer and up to date on people through an expanse of distance.

Second Life = A better life?

One of the more unique spiritual communities I have participated in over the last few years is the various church communities in Second Life . Second Life, for those that do not know, is an avatar based user created virtual world. You can be whomever you wish (I happen to be a monk with a spiked mo-hawk), live in exotic places, buy and sell just about anything, work as whatever you like, and more. There are some 1.5 million people that log into SL regularly and some 15 million registered users. The Christian church, and other faith expressions have seen it as a place to reach people with their message and build community.

Gavin (Gavin Tellig) Worshipping Virtually in Second Life

This is a pretty fascinating phenomenon to me. LifeChurch.tv (which is a rather progressive church in using Internet media for its message) has their own island ‘campus’ where they have people there to meet you and live stream their worship services onto screens in their ‘sanctuary.’ Check out this little video for a tour if you like. The Anglican church has their own island with sanctuary, regular services, labyrinth, coffee house & other conversation areas, even has a memorial garden. The Anglican community connects itself through its ‘out of world’ blog posting service times and other discussion that can happen in a less ‘real time’ chat form. You will also find the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, as well as many New Age, Pagan, Wiccan, and other faith expressions ‘in world.’

One of the more fascinating practices of spiritual life I’ve been a part of within Second Life is to become a member of communities/churches that are homes to the GBLT community. I hang at two churches, one is Koinonia which is a church plant loosely affiliated with the United Churches of Christ and the GBLT Church.

A ‘safe’ place for worship without judgment

What is fascinating is that Second Life has enabled individuals who have been hurt or are scared to enter a church building out of fear of the stereotype that Christians are not welcoming, even hostile, to the GBLT community (there is truth to every stereotype) to explore. For many, this is a safe place to come in, be accepted, worship, share stories, and develop relationships. They are faithful attenders ‘teleporting’ in for the start of service then doing meet ups at homes after services or going back to their real world life. A safe place to worship is something I can only say is a good thing, regardless of medium. I do believe that people need a physical element to their spiritual life, being able to touch and be touched with hugs and see the faces of empathy and joy. However, from my experiences, a virtual community can be just as impactful in allowing people to make honest change in their lives.

Some of the remarkable stories that I have been around for. I have had a lady in my prayers whom I met in SL and was abused by a church staff person. One man would come to church and was in obvious need of some ‘real world’ spiritual counseling. He lived in Ireland and it just so happened someone in the group collective knew a pastor in his town, passed along info, he began counseling & was eventually baptized into the faith. A friend of mine has done pastoral counseling for a wife who was having an affair, virtually in physicality but real in mind & spirit. Through some of the counseling she made decisions to breakup with her virtual affair and work on her real world marriage. I’ve met off and on with an older gay teenager who has been a great conversation for me in understanding the life of a gay teen. I’ve had some amazing conversations with the Wiccans and other non-Christian’s getting some glimpse into what they are feeling, what they believe, and some of their story.

Can you live your faith on the web?

In my experience, a virtual community, whether that be a message-board or an amped up virtual reality world, can happen but it is not a complete community experience. There is a need for that hug or personal acknowledgment which comes with a physical presence. But a virtual community effort will make a place, to those committed to being there, for people to feel a part of community. It becomes a tool to find common ground, dispel fears, and might even provide some skills to help someone enter into a real world community; which I believe is the ultimate desire and need for any individual.

If you want to try all this out, you can give a shot to Second Life. Look for me, I’m ‘Gavin Tellig’ in SL. You can also visit the 2nd version of the Church of Fools, aptly called Saint Pixels.

Community response: What are your thoughts on establishing faith whithin a ‘virtual’ community’. Can someone pursue religion solely online? What does a person turning to an online community due to a fear of judgment say about our society? Share your thoughts and insight in the comments below.

Spirituality and Social Media: Blogging Towards Enlightenment

Gavin RichardsonMeet Gavin Richardson: Youth Minister, lover of South Park, Renaissance man. Last week, Gavin introduced us to the relationship between spirituality and social media, and how modern technology is bringing us back to the basics. This week, with the second post in the series, Gavin talks a little about his own roots, and discusses the power blogging can have in bringing people together and in building relationships between pastor and community. Visit Gavin on the web at www.gavoweb.com and follow him on twitter @gavoweb

While you were playing Nintendo, I was designing websites

I have been designing websites since 1998 when I first learned HTML code and script. In those early days creating a website was an interesting venture, from a church perspective (which is a bit behind in most cases), you wanted to get your message out there for the masses to discover. For a church, a progressive website probably consisted of photos or notes from a pastor’s sermon to go along with your worship, time listings, and ministry opportunities. Strangely though, the most visited single page on a church website was (and is) the staff, or more specifically, the pastors bio page. Why?

A number of years later, when blogging came onto the scene I was an early adopting observer. Having heard about them and even read some I remember when my friend Jay Voorhees (what a name) showed me his first blog and how he could post thoughts and people could comment (embedding photos/graphics was still quite a process in those days of blogging). I still watched for quite a few months, and then threw my voice into the blogosphere back in 2004 with the obligatory first ‘I’m here posting‘. I started my blog calling it ‘Hit the Back Button to Move Fwd’ because I was immersed in monastic practices (still am) and felt there was value that could be brought from the past and used to help discern the future shift of post modernism & technology. So I began speaking and, at that time, about 16 people were listening.

A journal for the masses

What’s great about blogging is that in spirit, its journaling software. Journaling has long been considered a spiritual practice. You are able to write down feelings, thoughts, prayers, ideas, rants, and so on. The public nature of this journaling then throws your vulnerability out for the world to see and engage. Two entities in my early days of blogging that captured my imagination and attention were ‘Real Life Preacher’ and the community surrounding the ‘Emergent Church’.

The brilliance of ‘Real Live Preacher‘ is the exact keywords that hit the values of an entire generation of people surrounded and consumed by the transformation of technology. People are brought in by authentic-ism (real), it breaks down the walls of protection put up to hide what one feels is shameful. Being real allow us to see that WE are like THEM. It opens peoples minds to think, “maybe we aren’t weird after all”. The outlet of the blog allows for a conversation and a direct line to the individual person. Conversation can happen and thus this relationship becomes a ‘live’ entity. Intimate connections can and are formed between speaker and community. Preachers generally have answers we seek, so the brilliance of naming, and being a ‘real live preacher’ was/is fascinating to me.

The Emergent Church took on a groundswell voice when it started to use the medium of blogging for church & theological conversations to reshape the evangelical (and eventually mainline/protestant/catholic) churches. People were heard from a global scale, from a tall skinny kiwi, to an alt worship guru, and a denominational deconstructionist, to name a few. The blogging social medium opened a door to share thoughts, frustrations, ideas on church doctrine & practice at a level never before seen. In a great example of ‘the world being flat‘ the Wikipedia page on Emergent Church had listed some 200 blogs as ‘experts’ –  everyone had an opportunity to be heard and part of a larger conversation.

Building relationships + establishing connections, one believer at a time

Back to my, and your, church websites. Why do people visit the pastor’s bio page more often than any other single page? It’s simple, people want to get to know more about them; they want that connection; they want to know the man (or woman) behind the wisdom they receive. Long before blogging made it accessible, people were already looking to establish some connection with a spiritual guide. As with everything, in both faith and business, it comes down to establishing a connection. The development of social media, starting with blogging, now moving to Facebook or Twitter, brings a more authentic glimpse into the life of those spiritual guides to connect with. Our need now is to share our spiritual lives with others. Today, wherever people are, there is an opportunity to connect in conversation and relationship.

Where do you see the relationship between theology and blogging going from here? Gavin makes an amazing point when he says ‘the Internet allows us to open up. It allows us to feel like maybe we aren’t that weird are different, and that maybe in our differences we can find many similarities’. How does the web enable us to be more real and genuine? Is the Internet a good outlet for discussions on faith and religion, or is your faith a more personal experience that need not be shared with the world? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Spirituality and Social Media

Gavin RichardsonMeet Gavin Richardson: Youth Minister, servant of the Lord, lover of South Park, Renaissance man. Gavin and I first crossed paths a couple months ago at Podcamp Nashville – where he gave a lecture discussing the topic of Spirituality and Social Media. I was skeptical at first, wondering how the two could go hand in hand – but Gavin ‘opened my mind’ to a whole new world of possibilities and opportunities that modern-day social networking outlets like blogging, facebooking, and twittering could bring to the table of religion and faith. Wanting to learn more, I got in touch with him shortly thereafter, and with that, Gavin graciously offered to enlighten not only me, but the Life Without Pants community. Every Wednesday in April we’ll go deeper into the rabbit hole, examining the concept of Spirituality and Social Media: The two are one in the same at their core – both ‘tools’ used to connect with both individuals and the masses – it seems only logical that the two go hand-in-hand. Ask questions. Engage. Interact. And Enjoy!

Getting to Know Me

Greetings & salutations everyone at Life Without Pants.Thanks to Matt for thinking highly enough about me to join in with you all for the next few weeks exploring how our human spirituality intersects with social media. I am a veteran youth pastor within the united Methodist church who considers himself a social media participatory anthropologist with some hack theologian thrown in there. Before all that I serve a creative God & live life with my great wife Erin, two farting dogs Coe & Crimson, and anticipating ‘pellet’, our first child in the fall. To go any deeper, like “Where are you from?”, encompasses some long stories and you will be rethinking why you asked in a few minutes; so we will leave that stuff alone for now. You can find many of my grand pontifications (or the latest on South Park, the most recent posting as of this writing) at my blog home “Hit the back button to move fwd” or on Twitter @gavoweb. So where to begin?

‘Social Spirituality’ – It’s a return to beginnings

Many people of faith, my christian faith especially, seem to forget how original faith was practiced in the days they nostalgically hold onto. For many years in my youth people would say that you needed to read the bible in its original Hebrew or Greek to understand its real meaning. This was in part because people constantly swore by the King James bible, a middle century english translation that has been around for 400 some years. What people forget in all this, is the insinuation that dwelling on God’s word is about you and your individual experiences. In fact, if you wanted to get back to learning from the early days of your faith, language isn’t the biggest change. You need to go to the town square or the temple (whatever you have) and trade stories about God, your ancestry, prophets, and make sacrifices. Maybe then you’d get lucky that the one sacred book maybe Psalms or Exodus would be brought out for all to hear a reading. You see, technologically, the greatest item to change the way we’ve lived out our faith is not PowerPoint or video, guitars or keytars, Twitter or voting, but that modern 1400′s invention of the printing press.

Yes, you can blame the printing press. It seems silly does it not? But this technological advancement some 600 years ago has done more to reshape our spiritual lives than any technology since then. As mentioned before, if you wanted to hear from a sacred reading you had to go to the community center, which might be the parish church/temple or town square. Now, as print could go into mass production people could afford their own copies of said sacred texts. So now we start to introduce individualism and take away some of the context of living & discerning texts in communities of people. The now premium on individual reading would bring out the emphasis on critical reflection, or a ‘systematic theology.’ This did not start with printed word, but rest assured it was reinforced through the linear practice of reading and writing.

Damn you printing press! So where do we find ourselves now?

I might put forth some of the argument that the rising of social media/web 2.0 and the continued interweavings & collision of people on the Internet could turn a reversal to actual some similar experiences of hearing, conversing, teaching, and living out ones faith expression as was done before the technological advance of the printing press. This could be a perfect partner or a fabulous enemy to faith.

Think about where you meet people now. I might say Twitter & Facebook could be your daily trip to temple or town green to meet people, find out how they are living their lives, and entertain a teaching or question. Blogging could be your Quaker style preaching, listening/reading a message and taking an opportunity to challenge & question. Blogging & video are ways to hear testimonies, stories of faith that you might never have received before because you were at home doing your own study and own reflections.

So as I’ve come to look at it all, and will reflecting on during this series of guest posts, how do we hark-en back to the origins of how our faith was practiced with mediums that could never have been conceived of back in the day? (I know my Jesus was pretty amazing, but I don’t think he imagined an Internet. Only His church & the Kingdom of God).

Please drop some questions or critiques. if you have some specific idea that you would like this misfits thoughts on, just ask. Consider this an open forum of discussion.