1. Bobkowski, Piotr S and Pearce, Lisa D. ( 2011). Baring their soul in online profiles or not? Religious self-disclosure in social media. Journal for the scientific study of religion. 50(4),744-762. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41349951 This article involves surveys done to find out the percentages of users that can be religiously identify themselves on MySpace and how much religious self-disclosure do young people engage in in their MySpace profiles. It has been suggested by the NSYR findings that today among youngsters, religion is not a common spoken topic. Worldwide, teenagers and youngsters do not discuss about religion neither do they really identify with a particular group. Online religious communities are open to almost everyone …show more content…
Digitalization has given freedom to many people who had and has questions or doubts regarding certain traditions or what had been said in various religious texts. Now, people not only make use of the internet but they have become a part of the network that is worldwide. The book highlights how virtual communities in the mid 1990s started gaining popularity and no one would have known that today virtual communities or the internet itself would be so predominant in human’s life. The term ‘virtual community’ quickly changed to ‘online communities’ as the term ‘virtual communities’ were making reference to wrong relationship ideas. There has been many arguments about the fact that practices or rituals cannot be performed online. Page 58 of this book explains how technopaganism has been used for the benefit of people of paganism beliefs. Technopaganism is a means by which people can perform pagan rituals online, without moving from one place to another. There has been the creation of a website that has been designed for the Jews to enable them to get back in touch with their religion and cultures. The online religious communities are not only restricted to online discussion or questions answers, it also involves prayer or meditation or other various rituals based on particular religion.
3. Horrigan, John B. (2001). Online Communities. Pew research center information and technology.