E-Word? McLuhan, Baudrillard, and Verisimilitude in Preaching
Abstract
:“We live in a world where there is more and more information, and less and less meaning”.(Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation, 79)
1. Introduction
2. Marshall McLuhan: Media and Mediation
Our conventional response to all media, namely that it is how they are used that counts, is the numb stance of the technological idiot. For the “content” of a medium is like the juicy piece of meat carried by the burglar to distract the watchdog of the mind.
When you are on the air you are, in a way, everywhere at once. Electric man is a “super angel.” When you are on the telephone you have no body. And, while your voice is there, you and the people you speak to are here, at the same time. Electric man has no bodily being. He is literally dis-carnate. But a discarnate world, like the one we now live in, is a tremendous menace to an incarnate Church, and its theologians haven’t even deemed it worthwhile to examine the fact.(McLuhan 2010, p. 50; emphasis original)
3. Jean Baudrillard: Signs in Place of Substance
By crossing into a space whose curvature is no longer that of the real, nor that of truth, the era of simulation is inaugurated by a liquidation of all referentials—worse: with their artificial resurrection in the systems of signs, a material more malleable than meaning, in that it lends itself to all systems of equivalences… It is a question of substituting the signs of the real for the real….
What if God himself can be simulated, that is to say can be reduced to the signs that constitute faith? Then the whole system becomes weightless, it is no longer itself anything but a gigantic simulacrum—not unreal, but a simulacrum, that is to say never exchanged for the real, but exchanged for itself, in an uninterrupted circuit without reference or circumference.
The medium is the message not only signifies the end of the message, but also the end of the medium. There are no more media in the literal sense of the word (I’m speaking particularly of electronic mass media)—that is, of a mediating power between one reality and another, between one state of the real and another. Neither in content, nor in form… the medium and the real are now in a single nebula whose truth is indecipherable.
4. Preaching and Electronic Media: Assessing the Challenges
4.1. Incarnation and Divine Communication
We do not proclaim ourselves; we proclaim Jesus Christ as Lord and ourselves as your slaves for Jesus’ sake. For it is the God who said, “Let light shine out of darkness,” who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.(2 Cor 4:5–6)
Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom. And all of us, with unveiled faces, seeing the glory of the Lord as though reflected in a mirror, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another; for this comes from the Lord, the Spirit.(2 Cor 3:17–18)
4.2. Incarnation and Christian Identity
God may speak to us through Russian Communism, a flute concerto, a blossoming shrub, or a dead dog. We do well to listen to Him if He really does. But, unless we regard ourselves as the prophets and founders of a new Church, we cannot say that we are commissioned to pass on what we have heard as independent proclamation.(Church Dogmatics I.1 (Barth 2010, p. 55))
Christianity’s earliest and most persistent doctrines focus on embodiment. From the Incarnation (the Word made flesh) and Christology (Christ was fully human) to the Eucharist (this is my body, this is my blood), the resurrection of the body, and the church (the body of Christ who is the head), Christianity has been a religion of the body. We relate to God as corporeal bodies, and in our relations with other human bodies, we experience God.(Creamer 2008, p. 63; emphasis original)
One cannot “do” theology without taking the embodied nature of such “doing” into account. Theology comes from bodies in material contexts. Such an exploration reveals the need for a holistic approach to theology—one in which bodies of theology, the Trinitarian Body, the Body of Christ, and human bodies, are not separated out in an atomistic fashion, but are interconnected by one another.
5. Preaching and Electronic Media: Some Possible Ways Forward
5.1. Personal Identity
5.2. Community
5.3. Spirituality
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | “Deus, Creator coeli et terrae, tecum loquitur per praedicatores suos… Illa Dei verba non sunt Platonis, Aristotelis, sed Deus ipse loquitur” (Luther 1916, p. 531 §4812; ET Wood 1969, p. 93). |
2 | “Inter tot praeclaras dotes quibus ornavit Deus humanum genus, haec praerogativa singularis est, quod dignatur ora et linguas hominum sibi consecrare, ut in illis sua vox personet” (Calvin 1974, p. 9; ET Calvin 1960, p. 1018). |
3 | On the influence of Catholic intellectual and devotional tradition on McLuhan’s thought, see (Marchessault 2005, pp. 35–42) (“While McLuhan’s religious devotion was never a part of his public persona and was never revealed in his cultural theories, it was deeply present in his thinking” (Marchessault 2005, p. 35)). |
4 | “The TV image offers some three million dots per second to the receiver… the viewer of the TV mosaic, with technical control of the image, unconsciously reconfigures the dots into an abstract work of art on the pattern of a Seurat or Rouault” (McLuhan 2003, p. 418; emphasis original); further, (Levinson 1999, pp. 101–3). |
5 | The hermeneutical labor required of the viewer is key to McLuhan’s complex distinction between “hot” and “cool” media, on which see (McLuhan 2003, pp. 39–50, 425; cf. Levinson 1999, pp. 105–18). |
6 | “All technological extensions of ourselves must be numb and subliminal, else we could not endure the leverage exerted upon us by such extension” (McLuhan 2003, p. 404). |
7 | McLuhan explicitly compares the myth of Narcissus with the idolatry described in Hebrew Scripture: “They that make them shall be like unto them” (Ps 115:8 ASV, identified, however, as “the 113th Psalm”; McLuhan 2003, p. 67). |
8 | Acknowledgment of the surreptitious power of images, he avers, is what motivated the Byzantine Iconoclasts: “their metaphysical despair came from the idea that the image didn’t conceal anything at all, and that these images were in essence not images, as an original model would have made them, but perfect simulacra, forever radiant with their own fascination” (Baudrillard 1994, p. 5). |
9 | On Baudrillard’s critique of television/telecommunication and the concept of “implosion” (both ideas building on McLuhan), see (Genosko 1999, pp. 92–95). |
10 | Similarly, from an earlier discussion, “there comes into being a manifold universe of media that are homogeneous in their capacity as media and which mutually signify each other and refer back to each other. Each one is reciprocally the content of another; indeed, this ultimately is their message—the totalitarian message of a consumer society” (Baudrillard 1967, p. 230, cited in Huyssen 1989, p. 13). |
11 | On Ellul’s concept of “propaganda,” see (Greenman et al. 2012, pp. 40–46); for Baudrillard’s discussion of propaganda (exemplified by the advertising industry), see (Baudrillard 1994, pp. 87–94 (esp. 87–88)). |
12 | As Walters notes (Walters 2012, pp. 57–58), Baudrillard turns this critique against Christianity itself. |
13 | McLuhan describes this distinction as “the great contrast between perceptual and conceptual confrontation.” As he explains, “The revelation is of thing, not theory. And where revelation reveals actual thing-ness you are not dealing with concept. The thing-ness revealed in Christianity has always been a scandal to the conceptualist: it has always been incredible” (McLuhan 2010, p. 81). |
14 | Baudrillard invokes Narcissus to introduce his discussion of holographic representation, which he takes to be an extension of “propaganda” into the visible realm (Baudrillard 1994, pp. 105–9). |
15 | This insight originates with Seán McGuire, to whom I am indebted for corrections to an earlier draft of this article. |
16 | As noted by (Walters 2012, p. 72), in discussing appropriation of Baudrillard’s categories by French sacramental theologian Louis-Marie Chauvet (b. 1942). Fittingly, Calvin’s critique of transubstantiation was that it “destroys the analogy between the sign and the thing signified [everti analogiam signi et rei signatae]” (Calvin 1870, p. 231; ET Calvin 1958, p. 467). |
17 | Hence, “the imaginary of Disneyland is neither true nor false, it is a deterrence machine set up in order to rejuvenate the fiction of the real in the opposite camp”! (Baudrillard 1994, p. 13). |
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Knowles, M.P. E-Word? McLuhan, Baudrillard, and Verisimilitude in Preaching. Religions 2022, 13, 1131. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121131
Knowles MP. E-Word? McLuhan, Baudrillard, and Verisimilitude in Preaching. Religions. 2022; 13(12):1131. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121131
Chicago/Turabian StyleKnowles, Michael P. 2022. "E-Word? McLuhan, Baudrillard, and Verisimilitude in Preaching" Religions 13, no. 12: 1131. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121131
APA StyleKnowles, M. P. (2022). E-Word? McLuhan, Baudrillard, and Verisimilitude in Preaching. Religions, 13(12), 1131. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121131