From the writings of Max Weber, in particular ‘The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism’ we learn how religious ethics has influenced the emergence of Modern Western Captialism. (Giddens, 1971 p. 169)
Weber sees Protestantism as the main drive for economic rationality since ‘labour in the material world, for the Calvinist, becomes attributed with the highest positive ethical evaluation.’ (ibid, p.127)
Weber claims that ‘Protestant beliefs and codes of behaviour’ is ‘to stimulate economic activity.’ (ibid, p. 125) ‘Belief in the value of efficient performance’ dominates man consequently by “acquisition as the purpose of his life” yet combined with “the avoidance of personal enjoyment.” (Weber in Giddens 1971 p.126) Performance of ‘good workers’ became a ‘sign’ of election for eternal salvation.
Considering Weber’s notion of the protestant ethic in the 21st century one can contemplate the following:
Thus the book of reference, namely the holy bible, remained the same source of wisdom, religion adapted to new logics of contemporary society in some way or another. At the same time the significance and function of religion changed and gain new meaning.
Whilst Weber argued that religion was the main motivation for the emergence of capitalism, by today his theory can be turned from upside down; today it is the economic system, which is ruling over religious life. Consumption -as the main principle to sustain capitalist society -has determined our purpose of life into ‘consuming Life’ (Bauman 2007).
‘Consumers’ ‘subjectivity’ is made out of shopping choices – choices made by the subject and the subject’s prospective purchasers; its description takes the form of the shopping list. What is assumed to be the materialization of the inner truth of the self is in fact an idealization of the material – objectified – traces of consumer choice.’ (Baumann, 2007, p15)
‘Left behind: Eternal forces’ is a Christian video game released in 2006. The game is based on the bestselling apocalyptic book series ‘Eternal forces’. It is a virtual recreation of New York City and the game’s aim is to convert non-believers into Christians through a ‘pray button’ or alternatively kill Antichrist’s forces with military units. (Bray 2006)
The controversial subject matter of interactive religiously motivated warfare obviously leaves broad room for criticism. However my intention is primarily to emphasise on the aspect how religion is consumed as an entertaining commodity.
‘Left behind’ is religious action-packed mass entertainment in real-time. It is sold in video stores just as it is in churches; ‘pastors as well as youth leaders recommend the game to their parishioners.’ (Greene 2006)
The Promotional trailer describes the ultimate challenge of the game and equally sums up the fears of contemporary society, ‘terror and confusion has ran the world over, for those left behind, the apocalypse has just begun.’ Chief executive of the game Troy Lyndon argues the intention behind this game is to spread messages of the bible to a whole new generation as well as giving ‘parents and gamers an option for an action-packed title’, that also gets players thinking ‘about eternal matters.’ (Lyndon in Musgrove 2006)
Also Co-founder Jeffrey Frincher emphasize on the relationship between virtual entertainment and religious belief: “people are drawn to things that provide answers. My personal position is that the Bible provides all those answers.”(Greene 2006)
Man’s ‘search for meaning’ (Frankl 1977) is a fundamental element of our conscious, likewise our ultimate seek for control, security and guidance. Mission and purpose of religion is not only to create meaning but also to cope with our fears. As the example ‘Eternal Forces’ indicates, apocalyptic fears are sold to us and consumed by us, as spectacles in a society of spectacles. (Debord 1967) At the same time the videogame however presents possible solutions of how to handle these fears, through the obedience of Christian belief.
Consequently consumption of fear ultimately urges for a cure of those fears. Our fears did not vanish even though we consume. We consume because that’s what we have learned but that doesn’t mean we gain any further certainty through it and we live in a world where uncertainty is probably our biggest fear. We live in a society, which is constantly bombarding us with news messages of horror, terrorism, devastation, and diseases subliminally suggesting that the end is not far from our doorstep. ‘We are living in a world that is beyond controllability,’ as Ulrich Beck argues, and ‘there is nothing taken for granted’ for the risks we are permanently opposed to; they are ‘somehow universal and unspecific. One hears or reads about them.’ (Beck 1992, p. 53)
Spectacles operate on the level of fear, with all the uncertainties our society is confronted on a daily bases. As Debord argues ‘The spectacle is a permanent opium war designed to force people to equate goods with commodities and to equate satisfaction with a survival that expands according to its own laws.’ (1967, p. 44)
Some fears are more private, some concern society as a whole. We learn to believe that life in this world is dangerous, through the commodity knowledge; the possibility of an apocalypse is within reach. We seek for security in our daily struggle of uncertainty, and we are ready to consume this security from wherever it is available. And when rationality and knowledge might not be enough, spiritual thinking becomes quite a satisfying alternative. Yet remains the economy’s role as the ‘material basis of social life,’ (ibid, p.41) so it must be survival which is consumable.
And when touching upon the aspect of ‘coping with the symptoms and symbols of risk’ (Beck 1992, p. 57) then religion comes into the game. It might -in contemporary society- not only serve to hope for salvation in Heaven, but probably and simply to make life on Earth more controllable, and more predictable. Too much knowledge of the world creates too much uncertainty at the same time, like Plato’s Allegory of the Cave tells us, ‘the visible world becomes a mere shadow, a reflection of a reality that by nature escapes our possible knowledge’ (ibid, p. 73). We seek for simpler answers to this world than the ones we get and we need more security.
Following the writings of the holy bible is a sensible solution to fight against the apocalyptic uncertainty we are daily confronted by the media. Religion offers answers to the question our ‘information Society’ (May 2002) is unable to answer, because it simply stops asking. Creationism will neglect the issue of global warming and religious conservatism. Then sexual abstinence would be the simplest solution to the spread of sexually transmittable diseases.
Religion has well adapted to the expectations of consumer culture. It presents it self in the bigger better more style of ready made mass entertainment with the happy ever after feel good factor. There is a religious adaptation to every imaginable available consumer product. Additionally the consumer gets the feeling of actually doing something good for him- or herself (like consuming Coke light, or sugar free chocolate). Religion is translated into the language of consumption. Religious television, religious a newspaper, religious Hip-Hop, makes it easier for us to keep the faith, yet make life controllable through preaching the ethics of the bible.
Not only are religious messages of how to be a good believer lightly transmitted to the audience through the media, also the church has adapted to the expectations of religious entertainment policy. As Pastor Osteen from Lakewood church remarks: "Other churches have not kept up, and they loose people by not changing with the times." (Goodmanson 2005) Arguably the changing times he is touching upon is on one hand the aspect to be entertained and to feel good about yourself and on the other hand to run institutions like businesses in order to smoothly function.
Principles once parodied in a Simpson episode when super capitalist Mr Burns transforms the local church into an entertainment park has become highly popular in real life:
Through the practices of ‘evangelical entrepreneur’ Pastor Osteen has ‘has nearly quadrupled attendance.’ (Symonds 2005) Churchgoing becomes a spectacle for the masses. Churchgoer come to see Paster Osteen, who is a well known face from Sunday sermons on cable network and best-seller author of a book called ‘your best life now.’ Churchgoers become the audience of their entertainer and celebrity figure Paster Osteen. Believers are the target group of Pastor Osteen’s marketing messages in the shopping mall called ‘megachurch’ with the size of a massive stadium. They come to consume ready-made answers on LCD screens; a coffee at the church café or to buy fashionably designed religious symbols.
Churches are run like business and approach the audience through target-orientated marketing strategies. Niche-marketing practices of the Bapist convention create churches for specific target groups. The Baptist church is ready to adapt to the consumer behaviour of its 16.4 million-members; "Cowboy churches for people working on ranches, country music churches, or motorcycle churches aimed at bikers." (Martin King in Symonds 2005)
However such Mega-churches just seem to proof the assertions of ‘rather than making America more Christian,’ the mega-churches have simply succeeded in, ‘making Christianity more American, through the ‘Disneyfication of religion.’’ (Goodmanson 2005)
Umberto Eco’s notion on Disneyland as ‘hyper-real’ can easily be applied to these mega churches, where ‘in search for instances where the American imagination demands the real thing and, to attain it must fabricate the absolute fake; where the boundaries between game and illusion are blurred.’ (Eco, 1985 p. 8) It became the creation of a place people feel ‘homesick’ to, the commercial perfect amusement part of the authentic fake. (ibid, p. 48). ‘They keep their buildings open seven days a week, from dawn to dusk, and deliver a truly catholic array of services.’ Some of those mega-church complexes ‘house banks, pharmacies and schools.’ (Goodmanson 2005)
Religion under these premises is a logical consumer choice in the urge for security. But what is your option otherwise? The end of the world is just a doorstep away from you, and you better be good.
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