Restlessness and Belonging: Augustinian Wisdom for the Digital Empire
Life is to be lived rather than consumed.

In a digital environment and market society where everything is for sale, the human face is one more object to exchange. Devices often hold our attention captive to advertisers, brand the face as a product through social media, and alter the conditions for human relationships apart from vulnerability and love. In this new empire, tech designers aim to keep users tied to screens with unprecedented power in what is described as the "attention economy." Emerging research recognizes the power of persuasive design, the negative impacts of digital multitasking, and the predatory nature of tactics to hook users. When unintended consequences merge with devious intent, our efficient innovations turn on all of us. This reflects the Augustinian concept of disordered love as well as knowledge devoid of wisdom.

We need greater moral vision to help us responsibly assess forms of technology, as Autumn Ridenour shows us in Restlessness and Belonging. All creation, Augustine maintains, is good. But when digital devices and social media rewire communication through personalized algorithms, they often dehumanize us in ways that divide our attention and draw us away from one another. Alternatively, the act of loving God, self, neighbor, and creation toward ordered ends serves as an interpretive guide for using, designing, and limiting devices to their proper role. Augustine’s meditations on the beauty and interdependence of nature as well as the face of Christ lead us to reprioritize relational identity, moral agency, and belonging aimed at communion. Reflecting the face of the other opens a possibility for transformation through an encounter of reciprocation that ends in fellowship. This experience is the opposite of objectification—here, individuals are empowered more deeply as subjects to receive and enact virtue.

Reevaluating technology’s power over our lives is an urgent social and ethical task. Loving God, self, and neighbor involves relating in ways beyond the mediated surface of technology. Recognizing the face as divine image and glory, practicing wisdom and virtue, and sharing in enriched presence, Augustinian pilgrims empower one another toward an eternal city formed by their common objects of love. The goal is to reimagine the way we consume technology before the technological empire consumes us.

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Restlessness and Belonging: Augustinian Wisdom for the Digital Empire
Life is to be lived rather than consumed.

In a digital environment and market society where everything is for sale, the human face is one more object to exchange. Devices often hold our attention captive to advertisers, brand the face as a product through social media, and alter the conditions for human relationships apart from vulnerability and love. In this new empire, tech designers aim to keep users tied to screens with unprecedented power in what is described as the "attention economy." Emerging research recognizes the power of persuasive design, the negative impacts of digital multitasking, and the predatory nature of tactics to hook users. When unintended consequences merge with devious intent, our efficient innovations turn on all of us. This reflects the Augustinian concept of disordered love as well as knowledge devoid of wisdom.

We need greater moral vision to help us responsibly assess forms of technology, as Autumn Ridenour shows us in Restlessness and Belonging. All creation, Augustine maintains, is good. But when digital devices and social media rewire communication through personalized algorithms, they often dehumanize us in ways that divide our attention and draw us away from one another. Alternatively, the act of loving God, self, neighbor, and creation toward ordered ends serves as an interpretive guide for using, designing, and limiting devices to their proper role. Augustine’s meditations on the beauty and interdependence of nature as well as the face of Christ lead us to reprioritize relational identity, moral agency, and belonging aimed at communion. Reflecting the face of the other opens a possibility for transformation through an encounter of reciprocation that ends in fellowship. This experience is the opposite of objectification—here, individuals are empowered more deeply as subjects to receive and enact virtue.

Reevaluating technology’s power over our lives is an urgent social and ethical task. Loving God, self, and neighbor involves relating in ways beyond the mediated surface of technology. Recognizing the face as divine image and glory, practicing wisdom and virtue, and sharing in enriched presence, Augustinian pilgrims empower one another toward an eternal city formed by their common objects of love. The goal is to reimagine the way we consume technology before the technological empire consumes us.

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Restlessness and Belonging: Augustinian Wisdom for the Digital Empire

Restlessness and Belonging: Augustinian Wisdom for the Digital Empire

by Autumn Alcott Ridenour
Restlessness and Belonging: Augustinian Wisdom for the Digital Empire

Restlessness and Belonging: Augustinian Wisdom for the Digital Empire

by Autumn Alcott Ridenour

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$49.99 
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Overview

Life is to be lived rather than consumed.

In a digital environment and market society where everything is for sale, the human face is one more object to exchange. Devices often hold our attention captive to advertisers, brand the face as a product through social media, and alter the conditions for human relationships apart from vulnerability and love. In this new empire, tech designers aim to keep users tied to screens with unprecedented power in what is described as the "attention economy." Emerging research recognizes the power of persuasive design, the negative impacts of digital multitasking, and the predatory nature of tactics to hook users. When unintended consequences merge with devious intent, our efficient innovations turn on all of us. This reflects the Augustinian concept of disordered love as well as knowledge devoid of wisdom.

We need greater moral vision to help us responsibly assess forms of technology, as Autumn Ridenour shows us in Restlessness and Belonging. All creation, Augustine maintains, is good. But when digital devices and social media rewire communication through personalized algorithms, they often dehumanize us in ways that divide our attention and draw us away from one another. Alternatively, the act of loving God, self, neighbor, and creation toward ordered ends serves as an interpretive guide for using, designing, and limiting devices to their proper role. Augustine’s meditations on the beauty and interdependence of nature as well as the face of Christ lead us to reprioritize relational identity, moral agency, and belonging aimed at communion. Reflecting the face of the other opens a possibility for transformation through an encounter of reciprocation that ends in fellowship. This experience is the opposite of objectification—here, individuals are empowered more deeply as subjects to receive and enact virtue.

Reevaluating technology’s power over our lives is an urgent social and ethical task. Loving God, self, and neighbor involves relating in ways beyond the mediated surface of technology. Recognizing the face as divine image and glory, practicing wisdom and virtue, and sharing in enriched presence, Augustinian pilgrims empower one another toward an eternal city formed by their common objects of love. The goal is to reimagine the way we consume technology before the technological empire consumes us.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781481319744
Publisher: Baylor University Press
Publication date: 11/01/2025
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Autumn Alcott Ridenour is Mockler Associate Professor of Christian Ethics at Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary.

Table of Contents

1 The Digital Empire
2 Knowledge Without Wisdom?
3 A World of Images?
4 Face to Face
5 Sabbath Vision as Belonging
6 The Digital Empire and Presence of the Kingdom
Conclusion: Till We Have Faces
Epilogue: The Love of God

What People are Saying About This

Gerald McKenny Gerald McKenny

This insightful and engaging study deftly draws on a wide range of Augustinian themes to illuminate digital life. It displays the author's nuanced understanding of Augustine, her keen awareness of digital technology, and her profound grasp of what life with God and our fellow human beings is all about. The book hooked me with its compelling diagnosis of our restless hearts in the shallowness, distraction, and counterfeit connection that mark digital life. But what truly drew me into it were the wonderful accounts of the rest we seek in communion with God and one another that remain our deepest desire notwithstanding the power of the digital empire.

Charles Mathewes Charles Mathewes

From its beginnings, Autumn Alcott Ridenour’s work has paired careful attention to thinkers and debates she finds compelling, with a seriously creative refocusing of scholarly attention to overlooked and underappreciated themes—themes to which, she cannily suggests, we must more seriously attend.  In this book, she turns the very-hot conversations of "political theology" to a topic that, though massively overlooked in the scholarship, may well be the most powerful "empire" with which we struggle today: the digital world we all increasingly, for good and ill, inhabit.  Written with lucidity and acuity in equal measure, the project combines analytic insight and profound moral and spiritual wisdom.

Kevin J. Vanhoozer

Give this book to your swiped-out, your scrolled-down, your app-addled masses yearning for genuine facetime. Augustine wrote his classic City of God to help the church navigate the Roman Empire, and Ridenour finds Augustinian wisdom for the church today as it strives to be a holy nation in the midst of the prevailing digital empire. Restlessness and Belonging is a helpful tonic for those who have discovered there is no true rest for the web-weary, net-fixed, or media-sated.

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