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Roundtable explores churches role in Internet technology use
From
Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date
Thu, 13 May 2010 20:15:43 -0400
Roundtable explores churches role in Internet technology use
Written by Andy Lang
May 13, 2010
Churches are among the few institutions in American life where different
generations meet, says the Rev. Deirdre Hainsworth of Pittsburgh Theological
Seminary. In a society increasingly Balkanized by technology, faith communities
may have a unique contribution to make when building community on the Internet.
Hainsworth, an ordained UCC minister, spoke April 30 at the 2010 Ecumenical
Roundtable on Faith, Science and Technology at the UCC's Church House in
Cleveland. Her paper focused on the value of
"inquiry" as a method both for science and the church as it tackles social and
scientific issues.
"Inquiry is basic to Christian understandings of human life in relationship with
God," she said.
As more and more people become dependent on search engines for self-education,
news gathering and academic research, members of congregations can help each
other learn the tools they need to evaluate critically whatever they encounter
in cyberspace.
"Information technologies have immense potential to connect us with others, with new
ideas, and with the fruit of human exploration and thought," Hainsworth said. But
technology itself does not provide an interpretive framework that allows the user to
judge the quality of information. Search engines tends to flatten out results, providing
easy access to websites that appear to be relevant to the search, but ignoring the
ideological presuppositions that may control the owner's perspective ? especially on
controversial issues like evolution, abortion, euthanasia and stem-cell research.
Faith communities can help guide their members through the thicket of truth-claims on the
Internet, said Hainsworth. "We can help our members consider critically what they
encounter online and help them identify reliable resources on the Internet. Without
imposing our own perspective, we need to take the initiative to explain why and how
faithful people can differ on issues."
Many congregations have members who are experienced users of information technologies,
and can draw on their expertise to help the community develop critical skills. Churches
can make an important contribution because they are among "the few remaining 'public
spaces' that have potential cross-generational interaction."
More than a tool
While most churches have developed an Internet presence, Hainsworth said, faith
communities still approach the technology as a "tool" rather than a formative
experience of relationship, especially for youth and young adults.
"We have largely viewed these technologies as isolated tools?either as threats to virtue or as mechanisms for continued relevance," she said.
"Yet the streams of information technology have become increasingly intertwined and formative for how we describe and analyze the world around us."
And while social networks tend to isolate users into communities separated by
age, class or belief, churches can find in Facebook and other media a place
where real ministry is possible.
"Research by the Rev. Doodle Harris, a Presbyterian youth minister, shows that social
networks are becoming places where youth can share grief and experience solace in times of
tragedy," she said. "Especially for youth, the death of a friend is a shattering
experience.
"Harris took a close look at 'memorial pages' on Facebook created by friends when a
classmate dies, where they can work through the sense of loss that will last longer than
a few days or weeks," Hainsworth said.
The study showed that memorial pages helped "when feelings of grief were repeatedly triggered
every time members of that class reached a milestone: a sports victory, college entrance test,
senior prom, graduation." It isn't unusual, Hainsworth said, for classmates to post messages
on the memorial page to the friend who had died as a way of preserving a sense of connection.
"These pages have become a means of faith expression, and even a place where the parents of a
deceased child could find comfort."
The Ecumenical Roundtable on Faith, Science and Technology included
representatives from the Episcopal Church, Presbyterian Church (USA),
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the UCC. The UCC's Science and
Technology Network hosted this year's meeting. More information is available at
http://ucc.org/science .
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