Richard Rohr once noted that the journey of faith is a constant work of undoing. He wrote that faith itself is “not just a security blanket of doctrinal statements and moral principles. . . . It is more about ‘unbelieving’ the disguise that we all are,”6 unbelieving the false versions of ourselves that we have defensively clung to. Is it possible that a key piece of what needs to be undone and unbelieved in our present age is the digital social imaginary that we have been baptized into?

