On the secular importance of churchgoing – Austin Weekly News
When the Pew Research Center conducted its most recent Religious Landscape Study back in 2014, it found that while 76% of adults in the Chicago metro area considered religion at least somewhat important in their lives, only 29% reported attending a religious service at least once a week.
Pew discovered that while the percentages of adults who say they believe in God, pray daily, and attend religious services regularly declined only modestly in recent years, this modest decline was driven significantly by the nones.
The nones are the growing minority of Americans, particularly in the Millennial generation, who say they do not belong to any organized faith.
The nones accounted for 23% of the adult population in the U.S. in 2014, up from 16% in 2007, according to Pew.
And, as the nones have grown in size, they also have become even less observant than they were when the original Religious Landscape Study was conducted in 2007, Pew officials wrote. The growth of the nones as a share of the population, coupled with their declining levels of religious observance, is tugging down the nations overall rates of religious belief and practice.
That decline in religious observance has meant a shift in the Catholic landscape in Oak Park, with all four of the villages parishes undergoing readjustments meant to confront declining church attendance and the many challenges that decline brings.
I approach this social reality from the standpoint of the narrator in Philip Larkins 1954 poem Church Going, who can never resist the impulse to stop inside of an empty house of worship and wonder when churches will fall completely out of use, what we shall turn them into.
When churches become obsolete, we should all worry regardless of what, or whether, we believe. Thats because religious spaces (and Ill reference the Christian church, in particular, since thats the one Im most familiar with) are actually important binding agents in the civic glue that holds together our secular society. At their best, churches, the Black church in particular, helped build American democracy.
As the political scientist Robert D. Putnam wrote 20 years ago in his famous book Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community, churches are one of those places that help build social capital, which Putnam defines as the connections among individuals social networks and the norms of reciprocity and trustworthiness that arise from them.
In Change: How to Make Big Things Happen, the communications scholar Damon Centola disputes some of the received opinions weve come to have about social networks in the age of Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube. While social networking is dominant, actual social networks are fraying.
As Centola writes, social networks are basically the totality of peoples relationships, which may and may not be (more likely not) the same as Facebook friendships.
Networks include everyone we talk to, collaborate with, live near, and seek out, Centola writes. Our personal network makes up our social world.
If we want to do more than make a dance go viral on TikTok, if we want to create a movement to protect voting rights, for instance, we need to rely on what Centola calls strong-tie networks, as opposed to weak-tie networks.
The geometry of weak-tie networks looks a lot like a fireworks display, the author writes. Each person is at the epicenter of their own explosion, and their weak ties reach out randomly in every direction. Each tie jumps to a different, sometimes faraway place. There is very little social redundancy in weak ties. These people tend not to be connected to one anothers friends.
The geometry of strong-tie networks looks more like a fishing net, he adds. These networks have the appearance of an interlocking sequence of triangles and rectangles. This pattern, often referred to as network clustering, is distinctive for its abundance of social redundancy. People are connected to one anothers friends.
The Black church, working in tandem with other civic binding agents like the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) are what created the strong-tie networks responsible for the Civil Rights Movement.
Rosa Parks was effective because she was not alone, Centola writes, echoing Putnam. She was part of a massive social network of citizens who coordinated their efforts to protest segregation in the American South.
For instance, before she became famous for sitting on a bus (an act that ultimately paved the way for the massive misconception of Parks as a mere domestic servant with tired feet who was passively foisted into history), she was one of the NAACPs best sexual assault investigators.
Twelve years before the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott, Parks worked to investigate instances of Black men falsely accused of rape a common pretext for lynching and Black people sexually assaulted by whites.
The historian Danielle L. McGuire documents this overlooked aspect of Parks biography in At the Dark End of the Street: Black Women, Rape, and Resistance A New History of the Civil Rights Movement from Rosa Parks to the Rise of Black Power.
Too often, when we learn about historical figures and successful people, their social networks get obscured. We tend to see them as if they sprang fully formed into the world. But this isnt how change works in reality, Centola argues.
Social networks are the coordinating sinews that allow large numbers of regular people from many different walks of life to act together, he writes. When people act as a coordinated whole, then any one persons action that of Rosa Parks, for example carries with it a mass of anonymous people. That is how revolutions are sparked.
So, as Centola explains, if we want to see how change really works, the first step is to stop looking for the special people in the network and instead start looking for the special places.
Places like Holt Street Baptist Church, where King and other local leaders at the time met to strategize and stage the Montgomery bus boycott. Today the historic church, sadly, sits abandoned.
When I think of our present crisis of churchgoing, I think of my own church, a Baptist congregation in Maywood going through its own challenges.
Like the Catholic parishes in Oak Park, membership is down. Our pastor of some five decades died a few years ago. Next weekend, well be tasked with selecting his permanent successor. I dont attend services very regularly, so Ive decided to recuse myself from the voting (well pick one candidate among five finalists).
I still, however, consider myself a member. This church, after all, was where I grew up, was nurtured, and where I developed.
Sundays were a production, from morning until late in the evening, when Id often fall asleep on the pews, often under the sound of relatives preaching (my grandfather, stepfather, grandmother and a great-aunt were all ministers, assigned based on a rotating schedule, to deliver a sermonette on any given evening).
Before those late-night Vespers services, as they were called, a small group of us would gather for what was called Baptist Training Union or BTU, for short. This was roughly an hour in a room picking through Bible scriptures before convening to sing hymns and share testimonies.
The experience, much like Sunday school some 10 hours earlier, has stayed with me. I realize now that it helped build character, provided reading and comprehension lessons, and wove around me a strong-tie network that I dont think I could have gotten anywhere else.
One of my Sunday school teachers was Don Williams, who was also a minister at my church. Williams, the father of Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough, was the second Black mayor of Maywood (Maywoods first Black mayor, Joe Freelon, was the longtime chairman of our churchs deacon board).
Williams was also once the leader of the Maywood branch of the NAACP, where he discovered a bright, charming and enthusiastic young student-leader and decided to appoint the teenage boy to be the civil rights organizations local youth leader. That boy was Fred Hampton.
Various institutional nodes, whether churches or civic organizations like the NAACP, often interconnect, creating amplifying effects. Don Williams, Joe Freelon, Fred Hampton. I feel their cumulative influence intimately within me and that sense of history and tradition feeds my own sense of purpose.
Its a powerful thing knowing that you arent alone in the world, that youre part of a community of people who have been before you; who live, struggle and have their being beside you; and who will come after you.
What happens, as Larkin asked many years ago, when these binding institutions wither and die (a shape less recognizable each week, a purpose more obscure)?
I trust Larkins answer. Humans will be compelled to recreate them, since someone will forever be surprising a hunger in himself to be more serious.
Whether or not its possible, in our lonely TikTok and Twitter age, to create alternative institutions that are as effective at weaving social networks strong enough to spark the moral revolutions the world desperately needs right now is another question.
CONTACT: michael@oakpark.com
Follow this link:
On the secular importance of churchgoing - Austin Weekly News
- Longitudinal associations between informal caring, social network, and psychological distress among adolescents and young adults: modelling... - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- Climate misinformation is rife on social media and poised to get worse - Colorado Newsline - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- Social Media Rejoices As TikTok Is Reinstated In The US - Rap-Up - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- In China, social media apps are changing how people buy and read books selling more than physical bookshops do - The Conversation Indonesia - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- The Supreme Court Upheld the US TikTok Ban. Now What? - NYU News - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- Lost and found: a mother and daughter on surviving teenage mental breakdown in the social media age - The Guardian - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- 'Twitter Quitters' Help Boost Bluesky to More Than 27 Million Users - CNET - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- Flipboards new app Surf adds its own video feed, too - TechCrunch - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- RedNote Market Share Soars As Americans Brace For TikTok Ban: Everything We Know About The Chinese Social Media App - AfroTech - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- What Is RedNote? Why This Social App Has Knocked TikTok Down the Download Charts - Investopedia - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- What is Xiaohongshu or RedNote, the Chinese social media platform that US TikTok refugees are flocking to? - The Indian Express - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- "He would have doubled that" - Scottie Pippen thinks Michael Jordan would have easily topped Cristiano Ronaldo's following on social media -... - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- Social media as it should be - The Jakarta Post - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- European Commission demands internal documents of X as part of investigation into social networks recommendation algorithm - Mezha.Media - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- Mark Cuban is ready to fund a TikTok alternative built on Blueskys AT Protocol - TechCrunch - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- Wondering where to go if TikTok is banned? Here are 10 alternatives gaining traction - USA TODAY - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- SurgeOn social media app for surgeons launches in the UK to enhance patient care - The Mirror - January 22nd, 2025 [January 22nd, 2025]
- In the merging of sports, video and social media, VCU alum Kam Black is a top player - VCU News - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Fact-Checking Was Too Good for Facebook - The Atlantic - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Social Media Algorithms and Teen Addiction: Neurophysiological Impact and Ethical Considerations - Cureus - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Meta to End Fact-Checking on Facebook, Instagram Ahead of Trump Term: Live Updates - The New York Times - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Metas changes to policing will lead to clash with EU and UK, say experts - The Guardian - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- In the social media wars, Bluesky is destroying Truth Social - Fast Company - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- How influencers are impacting journalism - NPR - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Is it still 'social media' if it's overrun by AI? - Yahoo Canada Finance - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Which Social Media Stock Will Outperform in 2025: Meta Platforms, Snap, or Pinterest? - The Motley Fool - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Facebook's parent company Meta has a new vision: characters powered by artificial intelligence existing alongside actual friends and family. But some... - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Front Porch Forum is Vermonts most popular social network. Could its neighbor-focused model succeed elsewhere? - The Boston Globe - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- Users health information sharing behavior in social media: an integrated model - Nature.com - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- What is Bluesky's AT Protocol and How Can It Improve Social Media - How-To Geek - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- Bluesky: The new social media platform taking on X and Threads - TechHQ - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- "He might have won more titles" - Steve Kerr claims Michael Jordan would've been more dominant if he played in the social media era -... - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- As journalists think of leaving X for Bluesky and Threads, media experts see pros and cons - Poynter - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- The impact of social media on the selection of dentists based on their social media presence among residents of Vojvodina, Serbia: a cross-sectional... - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- History of TikTok: key points, curiosities, and evolution of the social network everyone wants to imitate - Marketing 4 eCommerce - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- Addicted to social media? Heres how to start your digital detox regimen with apps and gadgets - The Indian Express - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- Social networks face an unprecedented wave of regulation - Voz Media - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- Bitter Americans React to UnitedHealthcare CEOs Murder: My Empathy Is Out of Network - Gizmodo - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- Growing Demand and Trends of Decentralized Social Network - openPR - December 5th, 2024 [December 5th, 2024]
- Australian social media ban started with call to act by politician's wife - Reuters - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- Bluesky engagement seems to be punching way above its weight - Sherwood News - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- How Social Media is Robbing You of Your Time and Your Money Social networking in the present-day - Medium - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- Social media ban for kids other countries likely to follow - 9to5Mac - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- Australia Passes 'World-Leading' Social Media Ban for Kids Under 16 with an Aim to Protect Their Mental and Physical Health - AOL - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- Social Networking App Market 2024 Opportunity Assessment, Production Analysis, Growth Rate And Forecast To 2033 - openPR - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- Meet The Influencers In One Billion Users, The Social Media Card Game - Techdirt - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- School bullies have moved online. But is banning all under-16s from social media really the answer? - CNN - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- Australias House of Representatives passes bill that would ban young children from social media - The Hindu - November 30th, 2024 [November 30th, 2024]
- Australia Wants to Ban Kids From Social Media. Will It Work? - TIME - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Leaving X for bluer pastures? What to know about Bluesky's owners and policies. - Mashable - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Weekend poll: What Twitter-like social networks are you using and why? - Android Police - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Bill Simmons claps back at LeBron James citing negativity for his social media hiatus: "The only thing that has been added are player... - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- The social networks that vanished - Domus - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Australians wont have to hand over ID when using social media, communications minister vows - The Guardian - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- A place of joy: why scientists are joining the rush to Bluesky - Nature.com - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Young people get health advice from social media. But can they tell good information from bad? - CBC.ca - November 26th, 2024 [November 26th, 2024]
- Explaining the right: Why they hate liberals fleeing to Bluesky - Daily Kos - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- The Bluesky hype explained how it compares to Twitter and the best ways to switch - TechRadar - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- The social experiences we have online have important health consequences. - Psychology Today - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Social media users probably wont read beyond this headline, researchers say - Penn State University - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Bluesky Explained: Luke Skywalker and 21 Million Others Are Here, Should You Join? - CNET - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Traffic on Bluesky, an X competitor, is up 500% since the election. How will it handle the surge? - NPR - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Sharing without clicking on news in social media - Nature.com - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Investors Appear to Think Bluesky Crypto Firm Is the Bluesky Social Network - Gizmodo - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- I tried replacing Twitter with Bluesky, Threads, and Mastodon: Here's what I found - ZDNet - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Emmanuel Acho doesn't understand why LeBron James had to announce his break from social media: "Nobody is that important" - Basketball... - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Taking a cue from X, Threads tests AI-powered summaries of trending topics - TechCrunch - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- In Australia, children will be able to use PlayStation Network without restrictions, despite the ban on social networks under 16 - gagadget.com - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- This Bluesky Tool Makes It Easy to Find Accounts You'll Want to Follow - Lifehacker - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Investors in flailing social network X might snatch victory from the jaws of defeat - Sherwood News - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Mastodon sees a boost from the X exodus, too, founder says - TechCrunch - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Rise of Web3 Social Media: Platforms to Watch in 2024 - Analytics Insight - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- People are fleeing Elon Musks X in droves. Whats happening on Threads and Bluesky? - The Independent - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- How Bluesky, Alternative to X and Facebook, Is Handling Explosive Growth - The New York Times - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- What is Bluesky, the fast-growing social platform welcoming fleeing X users? - KARE11.com - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Trump's social media group in talks to buy Bakkt, FT reports - Reuters - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- The Worlds Most Popular Social Media Platforms Topped by YouTube and Facebook - OnFocus - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Millions of Social Media Users Flock to Bluesky During Massive Departure From X - SUCCESS Magazine - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Straight Outta Stealth: Connyct Builds Social Media for the Next Generation - PYMNTS.com - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- 8 things to know about Bluesky, social media platform that rivals Elon Musks X and Instagrams Threads - The Times of India - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]