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Articles on the Internet/Web and Religion

Report on Webmaster Survey 
Students from Hartford’s Seminary Fall 2000 course on Religion and the Internet surveyed webmasters from 63 U.S. congregational web sites.  These sites represented Muslim, Jewish, Catholic, and both conservative and liberal Protestantism congregations. Although the sample was small, there are many interesting findings from this glimpse into the process of creating and maintaining a congregational web site.

A collection of articles by the Pew Internet Project, several of which have direct relevance to religion.  Especially see their study of the internet use of 1309 congregations.

Internet World Stats: Internet usage in Asia

Ken Bedell
Technology and Theological Education

Congregations on the Internet

Dispatches from the Electronic Frontier

Religion and the Internet

Brenda Brasher
How can I get "that online Religion?" A research summary

Douglas Cowen 
From Parchment to Pixels: The Christian Countercult on the Internet

John Dart
Connected Congregations
Reprinted with permission from The Christian Century (2001)

Lorne Dawson
Cyberspace and Religious Life: Conceptualizing the Concerns and Consequences

Stewart M. Hoover
Religion, Media, and The Cultural Center of Gravity

Faith online: 64% of Wired Americans Have Used the Internet for Spiritual or Religious Purposes

Elena Larsen
CyberFaith: How Americans Pursue Religion Online

Mary Madden
America Online Pursuits: The Changing picture of who’s online
and what they do

David Scott
Christian Faith and the Cyberculture
 

Scott Thumma
Walking the Cyberspace Labyrinth  A talk given by at Trinity Episcopal Church in Hartford, CT on the spiritual dimensions of the World Wide Web.  

A lecture on Religion and the Internet
Given at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, this lecture invited Scott Thumma along with Rev. Charles Henderson and Elena Larsen to discuss how people are using the Internet for religious purposes.  You may also wish to visit the MIT website for a summary, transcript of the discussion, and an audio link to the lecture.

What's worse than a church without a web site? A quick question written by Scott Thumma

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