"The contemporary emphasis on written or academic theology obscures the long history in which people sought to understand and express their faith by way of various outlets and formats. Because historical Christianity has embraced every communication medium, the media ecology approach to communication study offers a powerful tool to examine that history and the affordances of the media for theological expression. Just so, the history of theology offers a variety of test cases to illustrate media ecology at work. In A Media Ecology of Theology Paul Soukup invites us to explore the interaction between communication media, broadly defined, and the Christian theological heritage. Soukup follows a media ecology methodology, moving from a description of a communication medium to an examination of its affordances to a discussion of how those affordances shape the faith-seeking-understanding practiced in each. He shows that, in some cases, different media support different theological conclusions, and different theological stances shape media. The case studies range from the first to the twenty-first centuries, with a limitation imposed by selection, language, and culture." (Publisher description)
Introduction: The Culture of Faith-Seeking-Understanding, 1
1 Orality and Christian Theology: A Media Ecology Perspective, 17
2 The Stories of Faith: Narrative and Theological Meaning, 33
3 Educational Systems: Managing the Content of Faith, 49
4 Writing and Printing: Shifting Theological Authority, 65
5 Translation: Experiencing Scripture as Applied Communication, 77
6 Art: Shaping the Sacramental Imagination, 95
7 Music: Hearing the Divine, 119
8 Architecture: Building Up the Faith, 139
9 Ritual: Expressing Belief in Action, 153
10 Film: Expanding the Sacramental Horizon, 171
11 Social Media: Opening Up the Theological Ecosystem, 187
Conclusion: Faith-Seeking-Understanding in Popular Culture, 203