Social Media and the Future of Community

Inviting CommunityEditor’s note: The following excerpt of the full essay by Matthew Kobs is taken from Inviting Community, a collection of essays on the challenge of inviting Christian community in today’s world. You can purchase the book here, and download a free study guide here.

When the height of technology was a letter sent through the post or a telegraph or even a tinny telephone, basing community on shared space was a given. Technology was just not good enough to convey the wide range of communication that occurs between human beings. But with innovations like instant messaging—complete with emoticons and now emoji [1]—social media, online gaming, and video chat, technology is coming to a place where we can have deep relationships, deep community, without ever being in the same room. We are close to making it happen. Even if we are not quite there yet, we as a society are moving that way, moving to transcend the need for physical presence in forming community.

Certainly those who would make such an argument have a point. Technology today allows communication to happen instantly. It provides a platform for keeping up with what is happening in any number of our friends’ lives at a glance. It gives us new worlds in which to play and interact. It incorporates more and more senses into our communication. Technology allows us to transcend those limits of space and time to build and maintain relationships more effectively. For the sake of argument, let’s look at how far some of these technological innovations have brought us.

Instant messaging and texting make communication immediate. By having our messages carried on the backs of electrons, the vital information we wish to send can arrive almost at the speed of light. What is more, thanks to the nature of these text-only mediums, our messages can be short and to-the-point, bypassing the small talk that one has to engage in when communicating in a more personal way. “Where are you?” “Can you pick up eggs on the way home?” “Movie is at 9.”  These brief bursts of communication are light, nimble, unobtrusive, and speedy.

Social networks also provide instant data but to a different end; they provide a rich media window into the lives of our friends and acquaintances. Updated around the clock, any worthwhile social network will inform you of what your friends have been up to, show you exciting and engaging pictures and videos of where they have been, link you to the fascinating sites they have been visiting, and allow you to comment on all of it. Looking through the social media window, we see relationships form and crumble (“it’s complicated”), trends come and go, and games won and lost. Why wait until you run into someone at the grocery store to find out how she has been? All that information and more is instantly available for you and the rest of your hundreds—no, thousands!—of friends.

Online gaming likewise offers new ways of interacting with people. Not only can gamers play together across the globe; they can go places and do things with each other that would have been impossible in the offline world. Flying starships, raiding dungeons, battling monsters—nothing is outside the realm of possibility. And, of course, these new interactions offer new opportunities for bonding, fellowship, and camaraderie. Whether the trials were real or fictional, you faced them together.

For those more inclined toward realism, advancement in video chatting now offers high-fidelity images of people from anywhere in the world. While text lacks the intonation of voice and audio lacks the nonverbal cues of body language, video chat provides more nuanced communication. Better picture quality in our cameras and higher bandwidth to transmit those images means that we can more faithfully replicate the sight and sound of someone being right there with us. Until technology is able to incorporate our sense of smell or produce the three-dimensional hologram projections of science fiction, it is the closest we can get to being there—but it is not being there.

All of these technologies—and many more left unmentioned—have advanced communication in amazing ways, but they still fall short. What is more, we instinctively know they fall short. Text messages omit nuance, and all the emoticons in the world cannot convey the quality of an individual’s smile. Social networks inundate us with information, and in so doing make that information less valuable because of its volume. All the “liking” and “commenting” and “favorite-ing” in the world cannot shake the feeling that much of our social media interactions are unidirectional. Gaming takes people together to new horizons, but the real world is always waiting when the fiction ends. Video chat can show us our friends’ faces in high definition, but video from a screen and audio from a speaker cannot reproduce the experience of actually being there. Without sharing the same space, without being able to reach out and touch another person, it is just not the same. [2] Technological communication is amazing, but it cannot duplicate (or improve upon) the experience of personal presence. At best, it can serve only as an approximation….

Endnotes

[1] “Emoticons” are representations, generally of a face, created by text characters and used to convey emotions. Nearly everyone by now is familiar with at least the smiley [:-)] and wink [;-)] emoticons, but as the internet has expanded in use, more complex emoticons have come into general use. “Emoji” are graphical characters sent as part of a text message on supported (mostly Japanese) phones. Like emoticons, they convey emotion, but with images rather than text characters.

[2] Consider the Facebook “poke.” The intention was to replicate the flirty action of poking someone in a playful way. When a button with the word “Poke” replaced the physical action though, it came off as creepy far more often than it did flirty.

Related posts

Theological Symposium – Call for Papers

Theological Symposium - Call for Papers


Theological Symposium - Call for Papers

The Theological Symposium committee invites proposals for open sectionals for the 34th Annual Theological Symposium, September 17-18, 2024, at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis. The title this year is “Technology and the Church: Promise and Peril.” Major technological advances are not for...

Lutheran Theology: Kill Your Passions

Lutheran Theology: Kill Your Passions


Lutheran Theology: Kill Your Passions

This is part four in a series of posts by Dr. David Maxwell. The first was "What Should You Do With Anger and Desire?" The second was "Gregory of Nyssa: Direct the Passions." The third was "Cyril of Alexandria: Lull Your Passions to Sleep." My sense is that Lutheran spirituality leans more in...

Cyril of Alexandria: Lull Your Passions to Sleep

Cyril of Alexandria: Lull Your Passions to Sleep


Cyril of Alexandria: Lull Your Passions to Sleep

This is part three in a series of posts by Dr. David Maxwell. The first was "What Should You Do With Anger and Desire?"The second was "Gregory of Nyssa: Direct the Passions." Cyril of Alexandria is a good example of a Christian appropriation of the Stoic view of the passions. The goal is not...

3 Comments

  1. MV Castle March 3, 2014
    Reply

    It’s a cop-out to say technology has shortcomings and “it’s just not there yet.” The train has left the station so waffling will not help readers of this otherwise good article. Churches can’t wait. They need to be where people are; today that is online.

    • Steve Saxe March 4, 2014

      I wish that I could agree. God so loved the world that He became incarnatus est, and did NOT send a “tweet!” The Holy Trinity reveals that God is a community of Persons, and the faith calls us to be in community “person to person.” Electronics media in all it’s forms is deficient in the vital personal dimension of the communion of saints. Churches do not need electronic media though they may well use it prudently.

  2. Lio_d March 9, 2014
    Reply

    This post was actually touching me. Yes there is a big difference between being there, really listen, hug, being really sincere- and communicating via social networks. It would never be the same, and this “cold” technological communication is one of the most frightening things about the modern-‘technologied’- future we are going toward.
    Without underestimating that, I think there are some social network platforms that try to bring back the community-sense, being a tool of the small society = community (like neighborhoods) and not replacing it. Search for local social networks. My neighborhood is using Meetey.com (and there are many other examples) and we found that it makes us a little more close to each other in the real world- and not in the virtual one.

Leave a comment