Monday, June 05, 2006

Memetics and The Parable of the Mustard Seed


Jesus asked, "How can I describe the Kingdom of God? What story should I use to illustrate it? It is like a tiny mustard seed. Though this is one of the smallest of seeds, it grows to become one of the largest of plants, with long branches where birds can come and find shelter." (Mark 4:30, NLT)

In this parable, Jesus seems to be reassuring his early followers that, despite their small numbers in the vast, Pagan Roman empire, God's kingdom will experience an explosion of growth, ultimately providing the umbrella under which all people can seek shelter. As we see today, his prediction of the spread of Christianity has proven correct. How has this religion achieved such dominance in the West?

Christianity, like all religions, has spread through employing effective memes. Arguably, the memeplex of Christianity has employed some of the most efficient replicators of any religion.1 Evangelism, common among many religions, is one meme employed ferociously by Christians. Christian missionaries travel the world, providing many needed functions to help the local people, and also spreading the word of God to all they help. There is no better means by which to spread your idea than by embedding in the idea itself the responsibility to witness to others.

As the number of Christians grew, another strategy meme naturally arose as a product of evangelism—repetition. The more Christians there were that were evangelizing, the more non-Christians heard the message. "[As] any advertising executive would tell you: repetition sells."2 Repetition is also prominent in the religion's rituals, as it is in most religions. Repetition of the core teachings implants the ideas more deeply into a practitioner's psyche.

Christianity employs a division of people into two categories: saved and unsaved. Believers in Christ have been saved, and non-believers can always be saved if they commit to Christ. This dichotomy utilizes three effective memes. Saved status provides the follower with both security and belonging. An eternity of separation from God is a frightful thought to people who have chosen to consider this belief structure, and committing to Christ immediately secures one from this fate. Second, it fulfills the same role as street gangs unfortunately do to many youths today; it gives the followers the feeling of belonging to something greater than themselves. Additionally, the meme of simplicity increases replication of the Christian memeplex—it is an easy process to become saved; there is no long list of steps that must be undertaken; one must simply succumb to Christ's divinity.

One final meme I'd like to discuss is the "window of opportunity" meme. Again, any salesperson will tell you that "limited time offers," "one day sales," and "store specials" increase the probability that a customer will purchase the product affected by the offer. Christianity teaches that we have a single life to live as humans, a single life in which to decide that Christ is our savior, or not. In essence, it's a limited time offer, and if we don't buy now, the offer expires.

Many more memes than the ones I've described here have all-but-ensured that Jesus's prediction would come true—Christianity has sprouted from a tiny mustard seed into a huge, wide-reaching plant. All religions that utilize fit memes have also experienced similar growth at certain times in history, including Buddhism, Islam, Judaism, and Paganism. Memes, being cultural units of transmission, are subject to changing culture and, hence, their levels of fitness will change as the cultural environment in which they spread changes. Catholicism, for instance, has experienced difficulty in recent times with its traditional views on such things as female priests. Modern culture is beginning to place greater emphasis on the reason meme, that rules should make sense, than on the tradition meme. As a result, Catholicism suffers, as one of its primary memes, tradition, becomes a poorer replicator in the primal soup of modern culture. As long as the culture is responsive to the memes employed by Christianity, it will continue to flourish as a successful religion. As the culture changes, as all cultures do, Christianity will be forced to adapt or decline.


1 The current rise of Islam raises some interesting questions as to what has changed in the culture to make Islam's memes replicate so much more effectively than in the past.

2 Brodie, Richard. Virus of the Mind. Integral Press. 1996


4 comments:

Yasmin Waring said...

Your quiet polemic (as it reads to me in tone) which, more or less, reduces christianity to a marketing pyramid scheme (the first century Amway perhaps? or rather Amway's market paradigm?) seems to carelessly disregard the benefits of this "product," nonetheless (yeah, I do kinda strive for unconditional love; naive? daunting, but I do try).

Believe me, I am too brutally aware of the monstrosities committed on behalf of this "WalMart" of world religions, but to neglect such a compelling nuance seems to weaken your premise--and I'm not actually sure what that is: if it is to highlight, and imitate the "meme" strategies employed by Christianity, inc., to build a better religion, or to expose these economic strategies as fallacies? Or perhaps neither? I am a slow read at times and a bit dense...

Lastly, given the infinite schisms existing within christianity (a brand name that has lost all meaning to me because of endlessly diverging views and praxis; here even you only discern one "Christian" group, Catholics) it seems that perhaps it has had to develop/expand its "vertical markets" in order to adapt to meme/cultural/paradigm shifts to date. Perhaps it's this desperate diversification that mitigates the power in the Name.

Where do I stand? I do consider myself a "christian" who maintains a healthy dose of skepticism just short of robbing myself completely of faith. (I won't burden you with exposition) I just felt your commentary elicited so many questions.

Mandolina/Scheherazade

Mike said...

Hi Mandolina,
Thanks for the response! Actually, it's not meant to be polemic in the least, although I am sorry that it reads that way. It may not have come across in any of my writings on here yet, but I am not anti-Christian, or anti-religious in the least. The exact opposite really - I am pro-Christian, if Christianity is consciously chosen by the person. I think all religions could be examined from a memetic perspective; I happened to choose Christianity because I'm discussing with a good friend of mine the Parable of the Mustard Seed, so I thought I'd flesh out some of my thoughts on it.

It's my view that none of our religions can capture the true richness and depth of the universe. I believe that, based on our experiences, one or another religion will best fit our experiences (such as how Buddhism has for mine). For my good friend with whom I'm discussing the parable, Christianity fits his experiences (he's a pastor!). And I think that when one consciously chooses the religion that matches one's psyche, one's experiences, that is a wonderful thing that person has found that can greatly enhance that person's life! Regardless of the memetic composition of the religion. Regardless of the religion itself—Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Islam, Pagan, etc.

As a matter of fact, I really meant for my post to be a compliment to Christianity because it has, in my opinion, probably the best set of memes of any religion I've studied. This has helped it spread throughout cultures.

Thank you for your reponse, and I hope this reply has cleared up some of my underlying motives.
- Mike

Mike said...

One more thing I forgot to touch on. You noted the schisms in Christianity. I think you're right: in a sense, the diversification has diluted the power in the Name. So while this is a negative from the point of view of Mere Christianity (as C.S. Lewis defined it), I think it's also a positive from the perspective that the greater the diversity of thought accepted (while remaining within the bounds of the belief system, of course!), the greater the number of people whose experiences will match one of the Christian sects. Now, would it be better to lessen the number of divisions, and simply broaden the accepted beliefs within each division? Or is it better to maintain different labels for each? I don't know. In the end, I don't think it matters too much. If you believe in Jesus as the Son of God and your Savior, and strive to love others as He did, the rest becomes much less important.

Anonymous said...

While most would probably consider me a christian (I believe there is evidence that the basic core of christianity is true), I believe that the primary driving force behind christianity's propagation is its memetic makeup. It was a mustard seed indeed.