And if there’s no less than an attention-grabbing resemblance (if not a exact parallel) between the destiny of the Protestant mainline, lengthy a taken-for-granted pillar of the American social order, and the tribulations inside legacy media, there’s additionally some resemblance between the expansion of nondenominational faith and the flourishing of personalised, individually branded, deinstitutionalized media.
Take two consultant media success tales of the web age: Joe Rogan, the populist fanatic who dominates the podcasting world, and Heather Cox Richardson, the liberal historian who dominates the Substack rankings. They aren’t usually thought-about collectively as a result of their fan bases couldn’t be extra completely different, however they’re each examples of what you would possibly name the “nondenominational” pattern within the commentariat: They’re like megachurch pastors who run their very own start-up church buildings with none connection to the normal world of Presbyterianism or Lutheranism, seminaries and normal conventions and the like. They usually aren’t doing a small enterprise: Rogan is the larger determine by far (he just lately re-signed with Spotify for a reported quarter-billion {dollars}), however Richardson’s each day publication has effectively over one million subscribers.
Most unbiased media figures don’t have that attain, in fact, simply as most nondenominational church buildings aren’t particularly massive outdoors their native communities. However simply as nondenominational Christianity as an entire is getting larger than many established church buildings, the general viewers for “nondenominational” media content material provides as much as one thing a lot bigger than just some mammals skittering within the postapocalyptic panorama. Taken collectively, the world of newsletters and podcasts and YouTube content material creation has a probably sweeping, society-spanning attain.
However Shafer’s line about this world being “within the shadows” nonetheless appears apt, since one of many key options of the brand new media panorama is what you would possibly name its illegibility — which means the problem of ever realizing, through some moderately fast survey, what sort of narratives most individuals are absorbing, who is admittedly influencing public opinion, what forces and figures are shaping what People imagine.
Massive establishments are good for legibility. In my youth, you possibly can nonetheless learn a number of newspapers, subscribe to some key magazines and political journals, watch a number of information applications and principally have your finger on the heartbeat of what each elite America and mass America thought was occurring at any given second. In an identical means, as a author who usually covers faith, I’ve at all times discovered it a lot simpler to limn traits and necessary developments inside my very own hierarchical and centralized Catholic Church — and after I’m writing about Protestantism, it’s simpler to cowl debates inside the Southern Baptist Conference or the Episcopal Church than to make definitive statements concerning the entirety of what we name Evangelicalism or Pentecostalism.
