Any Body There? Worship and Being Human in a Digital AgeNovember 21, 2017 By Collegeville Institute Craig Mueller Eugene, Oregon, Wipf & Stock, 2017 Visit this title on the publisher's website. We may wonder as we watch people engage with their smart phones while being oblivious to what is going on around them. Anybody there? is the question facing the church as it wrestles with declining religious affiliation. Craig Mueller considers this contemporary context, and offers a response based in an incarnational spirituality accentuating the body and finding expression in corporate, multisensory liturgy. Mueller creatively weaves together topics from our digital lives with personal and congregational stories and theological, liturgical, and spiritual reflections. Concepts such as virtually, the analog, 24/7 connectivity access, design, and GPS are juxtaposed with themes of embodiment, mortality, Sabbath, mystery, beauty, and vocation. Drawing on his experience as a pastor to millennials, his studies in liturgical theology, and his work on the effects of technology on daily life. Mueller proposes that corporate worship is an antidote to the distraction, fragmentation, and spiritual hunger in society today. As humans continue to merge with machines, participation in the Sunday liturgy reminds us of what it means to be human: a deeper connection to our bodies and the earth and a clear sense of purpose and mission for our everyday lives. Like this post? Subscribe to have new posts sent to you by email the same day they are posted.