建造窄门:基督的数字决定和修辞空间的吸引力

Amber M. Stamper
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对于福音派来说,大众媒体传福音的吸引力一直在于,它有可能触及全球范围内更遥远的“未得救”人口。然而,正如印刷和广播革命很快揭示的那样,通过这些媒体来定位个人需求并在布道者和受众之间建立一种个人亲密感被证明是一个永恒的挑战。数字革命改变了这种关系:互联网的互动能力和以低成本瞄准利基受众的能力重新塑造了大众媒体的布道。然而,对网络布道实践的仔细研究表明,事实上,这种最新的“革命”——而不是代表着全新的领域——实际上更接近于自基督教起源以来在实体教堂和非虚拟环境中发生的布道类型。“修辞空间”的概念——来自修辞学家Roxanne Mountford关于讲坛和教堂建筑的设计如何直接影响牧师和会众行为的研究——帮助我们了解其中的原因。以全球媒体拓展的Jesus2020.com和葛培理福音协会的peacewithgod网站为例,我探讨了如何通过将福音网站概念化为具有建筑特征的修辞空间,以类似于物理空间的方式发挥有说服力的作用,数字宗教学者获得了有效描述这些网站独特吸引力的理论框架。设计的三个元素特别揭示了网页设计如何在不知不觉中创造个性化,亲密和互动的体验,同时快速移动用户做出转换的决定:界面修辞,导航和虚拟关系设计。因此,将福音网站理解为修辞空间,可以让数字宗教学者看到互联网福音传播与非虚拟空间中的福音传播有许多相似之处,这促使我们将其视为一种比通常认识到的更熟悉和历史的策略。
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Building the Narrow Gate: Digital Decisions for Christ and the Draw of Rhetorical Space
For evangelicals, the allure of mass media evangelism has always been the potential to reach ever-more-distant “unsaved” populations across the globe. However, as the print and broadcast revolutions quickly revealed, targeting individuals’ needs and developing a sense of personal intimacy between evangelists and audience via these media proved a perpetual challenge. The digital revolution transformed this relationship: the interactive capabilities of the Internet and the ability to inexpensively target niche audiences re-shaped mass media evangelism. However, a close examination of evangelistic practices online reveals that, in fact, this latest “revolution” — rather than representing entirely novel ground — actually more closely approximates the type of evangelism that has taken place in brick and mortar churches and non-virtual environments since Christianity’s origins. The concept of “rhetorical space” — drawn from rhetorician Roxanne Mountford’s work on how the design of pulpits and church buildings directly impacts the types of pastoral and congregational behaviors promoted — helps us to see why. Using Global Media Outreach’s Jesus2020.com and The Billy Graham Evangelistic Association’s PeacewithGod.net web sites as exemplars, I explore how, by conceptualizing evangelistic websites as rhetorical spaces with architectural features functioning persuasively in a manner similar to physical spaces, scholars of digital religion gain a theoretical framework for effectively describing the unique draw of these sites. Three elements of design in particular reveal how web design works imperceptibly to create a personalized, intimate, and interactive experience, while quickly moving users to make the decision to convert: the rhetorics of interface, navigation, and virtual relationship design. Understanding evangelistic websites as rhetorical spaces thus allows scholars of digital religion to see ways in which Internet evangelism has many similarities with evangelism in non-virtual spaces, pushing us to view it as a more familiar and historical strategy than is commonly recognized.
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