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The True Cost of the Churchgoing Bust (The Atlantic 4.12.2024)

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Mac Johnson
04/24/24 04:09:32PM @mac-johnson:

The True Cost of the Churchgoing BustMany American seem to have found no alternative method to build a sense of community.”

…Maybe religion, for all of its faults, works a bit like a retaining wall to hold back the destabilizing pressure of American hyper-individualism, which threatens to swell and spill over in its absence…

Many people, having lost the scaffolding of organized religion, seem to have found no alternative method to build a sense of community

And America didn’t simply lose its religion without finding a communal replacement.  Just as America’s churches were depopulated, Americans developed a new relationship with a technology that, in many ways, is the diabolical opposite of a religious ritual:  the smartphone.  As the social psychologist Jonathan Haidt writes in his new book, The Anxious Generation, to stare into a piece of glass in our hands is to be removed from our bodies, to float placelessly in a content cosmos, to skim our attention from one piece of ephemera to the next.  The internet is timeless in the best and worst of ways — an everything store with no opening or closing times.  “In the virtual world, there is no daily, weekly, or annual calendar that structures when people can and cannot do things,”  Haidt writes.  In other words, digital life is disembodied, asynchronous, shallow, and solitary.

Religious rituals are the opposite in almost every respect. They put us in our body, Haidt writes, many of them requiring “some kind of movement that marks the activity as devotional.” Christians kneel, Muslims prostrate, and Jews daven.  Religious ritual also fixes us in time, forcing us to set aside an hour or day for prayer, reflection, or separation from daily habit.

(It’s no surprise that people describe a scheduled break from their digital devices as a “Sabbath.”)  Finally, religious ritual often requires that we make contact with the sacred in the presence of other people, whether in a church, mosque, synagogue, or over a dinner-table prayer.  In other words, the religious ritual is typically embodied, synchronous, deep, and collective….

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