A lot of people are hesitant to enter brick and mortar houses of worship these days. They’re tired of the rigid rules that define one place of worship from other places, and they’re fed up with being told what to think.
The real problem is this: people walk away, still hungry for spirituality.
Until social networks, attending traditional churches, mosques, or synagogues was the only place people could explore their spirituality. But many of us leave these traditional places of worship feeling like:
• It’s a club where everyone thinks, believes, and prays the same thing
• If you don’t agree with the rules of the club, you’re not part of it
• There is no place to talk intelligently about spiritual issues that are important to us
Social media is changing the way we find God and explore our spirituality. Why? It is one of the few places that people can be anonymous and speak freely about their faith—or lack of it. Social media provides safe places where we can engage in real conservations about our doubts, fears, and desires. There is no worry about church, synagogue, or mosque leaders looking over our shoulders and criticizing us because we haven’t interpreted the Holy Book to their liking or listened to their religious teachings.
Social networks provide a place where people can find others who think and feel the same way about important issues in their life. Shouldn’t that also include God?
Shut Down By Their Own Communities
We often do not speak out in the communities in which we live because we’re afraid of being censored by peers or leaders.
As a former FBI counterintelligence agent, my job was to recruit Russian spies trying to steal economic and military secrets from the U.S. I found that one of the biggest obstacles to communicating with the foreign spy was their fear of censor—that somehow their actions would be observed by others and misinterpreted—and then they would be judged, before given the opportunity to explain the situation.
The attraction of using social networks for spiritual conversations is that it doesn’t matter which faith tradition a person comes from, or what area of the world, or background. It provides a forum outside their church, synagogue, or mosque and gives them permission to explore beyond the confines of their own religious experience.
The real problem is this: people walk away, still hungry for spirituality.
Until social networks, attending traditional churches, mosques, or synagogues was the only place people could explore their spirituality. But many of us leave these traditional places of worship feeling like:
• It’s a club where everyone thinks, believes, and prays the same thing
• If you don’t agree with the rules of the club, you’re not part of it
• There is no place to talk intelligently about spiritual issues that are important to us
Social media is changing the way we find God and explore our spirituality. Why? It is one of the few places that people can be anonymous and speak freely about their faith—or lack of it. Social media provides safe places where we can engage in real conservations about our doubts, fears, and desires. There is no worry about church, synagogue, or mosque leaders looking over our shoulders and criticizing us because we haven’t interpreted the Holy Book to their liking or listened to their religious teachings.
Social networks provide a place where people can find others who think and feel the same way about important issues in their life. Shouldn’t that also include God?
Shut Down By Their Own Communities
We often do not speak out in the communities in which we live because we’re afraid of being censored by peers or leaders.
As a former FBI counterintelligence agent, my job was to recruit Russian spies trying to steal economic and military secrets from the U.S. I found that one of the biggest obstacles to communicating with the foreign spy was their fear of censor—that somehow their actions would be observed by others and misinterpreted—and then they would be judged, before given the opportunity to explain the situation.
The attraction of using social networks for spiritual conversations is that it doesn’t matter which faith tradition a person comes from, or what area of the world, or background. It provides a forum outside their church, synagogue, or mosque and gives them permission to explore beyond the confines of their own religious experience.
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