St. John's Law Review

Religious Experience in the Age of Digital Reproduction

By: Frederick Mark Gedicks and Roger Hendrix

Religious experience arises out of one of the strongest motivational drives of human life, the need for meaning in one’s existence. Many human activities speak to this need; religion does so by offering a “‘deep understanding’ of the place of human beings” in the world, together with “guidance about the most worthwhile way to live” in it.  Religion “points to that which is ultimate, infinite, unconditional in man’s spiritual life,” and thus defines for its adherents that which is most important in their lives, their “ultimate concern.”

 What is one to make of the fact that mass culture now portrays and even triggers such a deep and significant human experience?  On the one hand, it is not necessarily good news for believers that Hollywood has appropriated religious experience as a formula for commercial success.  Can encounters with God really be evoked by something as mercenary and prosaic as a movie, a television show, or a rock CD?  Many believers are put off by purported spiritual reactions to mass culture, thinking them vaguely vulgar, tainted by commercial and other spiritually dubious motivations.  And with some reason.  There is no doubt that the religious content of many pop vehicles designed to appeal to a mass audience is diluted, so as to avoid giving offense and enable broad viewer identification with actors and themes.  The proliferating prime-time portrayals of spirituality, for example, are “deliberately non-specific about the spiritual forces animating their characters’ universe.”  They portray the idea of a deity “unattached to religion,” who is variously described as “fate, God, the higher power, the universe, [or] the collected energy source.”  Likewise with spiritual bestsellers, which tend to be “extra-biblical”—that is, “not what evangelicals consider the literal truth.”  This pragmatism may have even become normative—that is, it may now be thought that a mass cultural product should be tailored to appeal to a wide audience.  The Passion, for example, was widely criticized as a product of mass culture precisely because of its uncompromising and even sectarian account of the crucifixion.

The combination of vast information about diverse religious experiences made accessible by the digital revolution, and epistemological uncertainty brought on by contemporary postmodern sensibilities, has moved religious experience beyond the control of denominational and institutional religion to the control of the masses, where marketplace democracy determines what is real and true.