Abstract
The dynamics of unauthorized holiness enforcement, symbolic boundary policing, and the creation of parallel authority structures that the preceding literature in this series has traced from the Old Testament through the medieval and Reformation periods are not historical curiosities confined to earlier religious eras but represent a persistent structural challenge to contemporary religious communities with immediate and extensively documented contemporary expressions. This paper examines four principal domains in which modern congregational purity policing operates: modesty movements, Sabbath enforcement disputes, doctrinal purity crusades, and social media denunciation. Drawing on sociology of religion, media studies, pastoral theology, and the analytical frameworks developed in the preceding literature, the paper argues that contemporary purity policing reproduces with remarkable fidelity the structural patterns, psychological dynamics, and institutional consequences identified in historical expressions of unauthorized holiness enforcement, while the digital environment of social media has introduced a set of amplification mechanisms that accelerate the characteristic dynamics of boundary intensification, status competition, and shame infliction in ways that generate consequences of unprecedented scale and speed. The paper concludes that the contemporary church’s engagement with purity policing requires not merely the tactical management of specific disputes but a theologically grounded understanding of the structural dynamics that generate and sustain unauthorized holiness enforcement in any institutional context.
1. Introduction
A pastor in a mid-sized evangelical congregation discovers that a small group of members has begun circulating a written document among the women of the church specifying precise standards of modest dress, complete with measurements for hemline heights, neckline depths, and sleeve lengths, and accompanying warnings about the spiritual danger of immodest appearance. A church elder finds that a faction within his congregation has begun applying pressure to families who fail to observe what the faction regards as proper Sabbath restrictions, including prohibitions on certain forms of recreation, meal preparation, and commercial activity that have no explicit grounding in the congregation’s stated doctrinal standards. A respected pastor with decades of faithful ministry finds his name circulating on a network of online platforms where bloggers and social media commentators have assembled a case for his doctrinal deviation, presenting carefully selected quotations from his sermons and writings as evidence of compromise or heresy, attracting thousands of readers and generating pressure on his denominational oversight to take action. A young woman who expressed a theological question in an online discussion forum finds herself the subject of a coordinated campaign of public correction and exposure involving dozens of participants who have never met her and have no institutional relationship with her or her congregation.
These scenarios are not hypothetical. They represent patterns of congregational behavior that are sufficiently common and sufficiently consequential in contemporary religious communities to have attracted significant attention from pastoral practitioners, denominational leaders, and scholars of religion. They represent the contemporary expressions of the structural dynamics that the preceding papers in this series have traced through the Old Testament, the Second Temple period, the medieval purity movements, and the Reformation era disciplinary systems: the assumption of unauthorized authority over the definition and enforcement of community holiness, the progressive displacement of central moral concerns by highly visible behavioral and doctrinal boundary markers, the creation of parallel authority structures that compete with and undermine legitimate institutional governance, and the deployment of shame dynamics as the primary mechanism of social enforcement.
What distinguishes the contemporary expressions of these dynamics from their historical predecessors is not their structural character—that is consistent across the periods examined—but the technological and cultural environment in which they operate. The digital revolution has provided self-appointed religious enforcers with tools for surveillance, publication, and social pressure of unprecedented reach and speed, creating the conditions for purity policing campaigns that can achieve national or international scale within hours, that operate entirely outside any institutional accountability structure, and whose consequences for the individuals targeted can be immediate, severe, and effectively irreversible in ways that the social pressure mechanisms of earlier periods could not match. At the same time, the broader cultural context of contemporary religious life—characterized by denominational fragmentation, declining institutional authority, the rise of para-church networks, and the individualization of religious identity—has created an environment in which the informal authority structures of purity enforcement face reduced institutional resistance and encounter populations whose relationship to legitimate institutional authority is itself attenuated.
This paper examines contemporary congregational purity policing through four case study domains, analyzing each in light of the structural frameworks developed in the preceding literature while attending to the specific features that distinguish contemporary expressions from historical precedents. It proceeds by examining each of the four domains—modesty movements, Sabbath enforcement disputes, doctrinal purity crusades, and social media denunciation—before offering a synthetic analysis of the contemporary purity policing phenomenon as a whole and concluding with theological and pastoral reflections on the implications of the analysis for communities committed to genuine rather than performative holiness.
2. Modesty Movements: The Contemporary Elaboration of Dress Regulation
2.1 The Modesty Movement as a Contemporary Phenomenon
The contemporary modesty movement within conservative Protestant Christianity represents one of the most extensively developed and sociologically significant expressions of boundary intensification and symbolic boundary policing in the modern religious landscape. While concern for appropriate dress has characterized conservative Christian communities throughout the modern period, the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries witnessed the emergence of a distinctive and self-conscious modesty movement—characterized by extensive written literature, online community formation, dedicated websites and ministries, and an organized advocacy posture within conservative evangelical and Reformed communities—that exhibits the characteristic features of symbolic boundary policing with particular clarity and analytical richness.
The modesty movement’s primary literature—including widely read books such as Harris’s (2004) extended treatment of courtship and modesty, Mahaney’s (2004) book-length treatment of feminine modesty, and the extensive blogosphere of modesty advocacy that developed through the 2000s and 2010s—is characterized by several recurring features. It begins from genuine and biblically grounded concerns: the New Testament’s instructions regarding modest dress (1 Tim. 2:9–10; 1 Pet. 3:3–4), the biblical principle that members of the covenant community bear responsibility for the effect of their behavior on others, and the legitimate concern that dress practices communicate something about the values and commitments of those who adopt them. These concerns are genuine and their biblical grounding is real, and acknowledging this is essential to understanding both the movement’s appeal and the nature of its characteristic distortions.
The distortion characteristic of the modesty movement emerges in the progressive specification of these general biblical principles into increasingly detailed and increasingly distinctive behavioral codes—precisely the pattern of boundary intensification examined in the broader literature. The general biblical concern for modesty is translated into specific measurements, specific garment types, specific color choices, and specific assessments of commercial clothing items against the standards the movement has developed, generating a regulatory apparatus whose primary social function is the communication of insider status and the management of community boundaries rather than the direct expression of the biblical values that motivated the original concern.
2.2 The Gender Asymmetry of Modesty Enforcement
Among the most analytically significant features of contemporary modesty movements is the pronounced gender asymmetry of their regulatory attention. The literature and advocacy of the modesty movement has been directed overwhelmingly toward the dress of women and girls, with the regulatory standards applied to female dress far more detailed, far more demanding, and far more socially consequential than any comparable standards applied to male dress. This asymmetry is not merely a demographic accident; it reflects structural features of the modesty movement’s underlying assumptions about the relationship between female dress and male sexual behavior that have significant theological and social implications.
The primary rationale offered for the gender asymmetry of modesty enforcement in the movement’s literature is the claim that female dress choices are the primary variable in determining whether male observers experience inappropriate sexual responses—a claim that transfers primary moral responsibility for the management of male sexual behavior onto female dress choices in a way that the biblical literature does not straightforwardly support. The biblical passages addressing modesty (1 Tim. 2:9–10; 1 Pet. 3:3–4) address the general concern for appropriate dress and the avoidance of ostentatious display of wealth; they do not construct the elaborate causal architecture that the modesty movement’s literature employs in justifying its detailed female dress regulations.
Valenti (2009), writing from outside the evangelical tradition, identifies the social dynamics of modesty culture with sociological precision, noting that the primary social function of detailed female dress regulation in religious communities is not the management of male sexual responses but the production of a visible female body politic that communicates the community’s distinctive values to the surrounding culture and to internal observers. The modesty-observant woman’s dress signals her community membership, her parents’ or husband’s authority, and the community’s rejection of cultural norms in a single visible display—making female dress a uniquely efficient vehicle for symbolic boundary policing that has no equivalent in the regulation of male dress.
The enforcement of modesty standards within congregational contexts exhibits the characteristic dynamics of informal moral authority in action. The enforcement is rarely conducted by formally appointed institutional authorities exercising a defined jurisdiction; it is conducted by self-appointed advocates—bloggers, women’s ministry leaders, vocal congregation members, and in some cases pastors operating outside their formal pastoral mandate—who apply social pressure, relational exclusion, and rhetorical condemnation to women whose dress fails to meet the standards the enforcers have defined. The women targeted by this enforcement are frequently unaware of having violated any formally established community standard; they discover through the enforcement action itself that an informal standard exists and that failure to observe it carries social consequences.
2.3 Modesty Enforcement and the Displacement of Central Concerns
The modesty movement’s characteristic displacement of central moral concerns by the detailed management of external appearance is visible with particular clarity in the literature’s consistent disproportion between the space devoted to dress specification and the space devoted to the formation of genuine character, the cultivation of justice and mercy, or the development of the interior virtues that the New Testament explicitly identifies as the primary expressions of genuine holiness. The woman whose neckline is approved by the community’s modesty standards but whose treatment of her domestic employees is exploitative, whose speech about absent community members is malicious, or whose interior life is characterized by the pride, envy, and resentment that Jesus Christ identified as the actual sources of defilement, will find the modesty movement’s literature largely unequipped to address her actual spiritual condition.
Moslener (2015), in her historical study of evangelical sexual purity culture, traces the development of modesty and purity movements within twentieth-century American evangelicalism, documenting the way in which the movements’ initial concerns—the formation of genuine sexual integrity in a hyper-sexualized culture—were progressively displaced by the elaboration of behavioral codes and social enforcement mechanisms whose primary function became the management of community identity boundaries rather than the formation of genuine interior virtue. Her analysis illustrates the familiar escalation dynamic: genuine concern generates behavioral standards; behavioral standards generate an enforcement apparatus; the enforcement apparatus acquires institutional momentum that carries it beyond its founding concern; and the community’s primary practical focus shifts from the interior transformation the original concern was meant to serve to the management of the behavioral standards that have displaced it.
3. Sabbath Enforcement Disputes: Contemporary Expressions of Historical Patterns
3.1 The Persistence of Sabbath Controversy
The Sabbath, whose regulation provided the most dramatically documented case of symbolic boundary policing in the New Testament accounts of Jesus Christ’s conflicts with the Pharisees, continues in the contemporary period to be a primary domain of informal purity enforcement in religious communities across the spectrum of conservative Christianity. Contemporary Sabbath enforcement disputes differ in their specific content from their Pharisaic predecessors—the question is rarely about whether carrying a burden through a city gate violates the Sabbath—but they exhibit the same structural dynamics: the progressive specification of general Sabbath principles into increasingly detailed behavioral codes, the enforcement of those specifications through social pressure and communal condemnation, the displacement of the Sabbath’s actual theological purposes by the management of a complex regulatory apparatus, and the characteristic generation of shame dynamics in the enforcement interactions that result.
Contemporary Sabbath enforcement disputes arise across a wide range of religious traditions and community types. In communities within the Seventh-day Adventist tradition, disputes about what constitutes appropriate Sabbath observance from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset—what foods may be prepared, what recreational activities are permitted, what forms of work-related activity are prohibited, and how strictly the boundaries of the day are to be policed—are both doctrinally significant and socially consequential, generating the kind of internal community conflict that detailed behavioral regulation reliably produces (Pearson, 1990). In Reformed and Presbyterian communities that maintain a Sabbatarian position on Sunday observance, disputes about the propriety of Sunday shopping, Sunday recreation, Sunday meal preparation, and Sunday labor generate similar patterns of informal enforcement and communal tension.
3.2 The Social Dynamics of Contemporary Sabbath Policing
What distinguishes contemporary Sabbath enforcement from its historical predecessors is the specific social context in which it operates. The Sabbath enforcement disputes of the contemporary congregational setting typically do not involve formal institutional procedures—consistorial examination, judicial sentencing, or civil penalty—but operate through the informal mechanisms of social pressure, relational exclusion, and public or semipublic condemnation that characterize unauthorized moral guardianship in its contemporary forms. The member who shops on Sunday finds that her behavior has been observed and reported within the congregational social network; the family that eats at a restaurant after the morning service discovers that its choice has become a topic of communal discussion; the minister who preaches a nuanced understanding of Sabbath application finds that a faction within his congregation has begun lobbying denominational authorities with concerns about his doctrinal fidelity.
The role of congregational social networks—both the informal face-to-face networks of congregational life and the more formal online networks that contemporary congregations maintain—in amplifying Sabbath enforcement dynamics deserves particular attention. The visibility of behavior in a congregational social context, where members are regularly in each other’s presence and where information about each other’s practices circulates rapidly through informal communication channels, creates an environment in which the social monitoring function of informal enforcement is continuous and pervasive rather than episodic. The knowledge that one’s Sunday activities are potentially visible to and potentially subject to communal evaluation creates the permanent surveillance condition that Foucault (1977) identifies as the primary mechanism of disciplinary power: the awareness of potential observation that generates self-regulation even in the absence of actual enforcement action.
The theological damage of contemporary Sabbath enforcement disputes is not limited to the immediate social consequences of the enforcement interactions. It extends to the systematic displacement of the Sabbath’s actual theological meaning—rest, renewal, the acknowledgment of God’s sovereignty over time and human productivity, the celebration of covenant liberation—by the management of an elaborate behavioral code whose observance becomes the operative measure of Sabbath seriousness. The community member who scrupulously avoids commercial activity on the Sabbath but who spends the day in anxiety, resentment, or interpersonal conflict has satisfied the behavioral specifications of contemporary Sabbath enforcement while entirely missing the theological reality that the behavioral specifications were supposed to serve.
3.3 Sabbath Enforcement and Temple Precedent
The preceding paper in this series on temple labor and sacred exceptions established, through careful analysis of Numbers 28:9–10, Leviticus 24:5–9, and Jesus Christ’s argument in Matthew 12:5–8, that the biblical Sabbath command consistently distinguishes between the prohibited melakhah of ordinary self-directed labor and the institutional labor required for the conduct of sacred service. Contemporary Sabbath enforcement disputes routinely reproduce the Pharisaic error that Jesus Christ explicitly identified and corrected: the application of the general Sabbath prohibition to categories of activity that the biblical witness itself places in a distinct hermeneutical category, including the institutional labor of those whose service on the Sabbath is itself a constitutive expression of the day’s sacred character.
The contemporary congregational context in which this error most commonly appears is the enforcement of Sabbath restrictions against those whose service on the Sabbath day is precisely the service that makes the community’s corporate worship possible: the musician who rehearses on Saturday evening to lead Sunday morning worship, the deacon who coordinates hospitality for the assembly, the pastor whose Sunday afternoon pastoral visits serve members in crisis, and the volunteers whose labor maintains the practical infrastructure of congregational life on the day the community gathers. The informal enforcement of Sabbath restrictions against these persons—the application of pressure to reduce or eliminate the labor that their service requires—reflects the characteristic displacement of the Sabbath’s actual theological purposes by the management of a behavioral code that cannot sustain the categorical distinctions the biblical witness itself maintains.
4. Doctrinal Purity Crusades: Orthodoxy Enforcement and Its Pathologies
4.1 The Legitimate Concern and Its Characteristic Distortion
The concern for doctrinal integrity is among the most genuinely important responsibilities of any community committed to a specific theological tradition. The apostolic warning against false teaching is pervasive in the New Testament—Paul’s letter to the Galatians, his pastoral letters to Timothy and Titus, the letters of John, and the book of Revelation all address the danger of doctrinal deviation with considerable urgency—and the community that treats doctrinal fidelity as unimportant has abandoned something essential to its own identity and integrity. The concern for doctrinal purity is not itself a pathology; it is a legitimate and biblically grounded responsibility of those charged with the oversight of covenant communities.
The pathology examined in this section is not the concern for doctrinal integrity but the specific pattern of informal doctrinal enforcement that operates outside legitimate institutional structures, through the mechanisms of public accusation, social pressure, and reputational damage, and that exhibits the characteristic features of unauthorized holiness enforcement in its distinctively doctrinal register. What the preceding literature calls symbolic boundary policing in the behavioral domain appears in the doctrinal domain as what might be called doctrinal boundary policing: the progressive narrowing of acceptable theological expression to a set of highly specified positions whose precise formulation becomes the primary index of doctrinal seriousness, and the informal enforcement of those specifications against those whose teaching or writing departs from them.
Contemporary doctrinal purity crusades typically begin from genuine theological concerns—real doctrinal deviations that have occurred within a tradition and that require genuine discernment and response. The problem arises when the response to genuine doctrinal concern is not the engagement of legitimate institutional processes—denominational oversight, the formal procedures of confessional accountability, the collegial engagement of theologians and church leaders through recognized channels—but the formation of informal enforcement networks whose primary mechanisms are public accusation, the compilation and distribution of dossiers of concerning quotations, and the organization of social pressure campaigns against those identified as doctrinally suspect.
4.2 The Heresy Hunter as a Contemporary Phenomenon
The figure of the contemporary heresy hunter—the blogger, podcaster, YouTube channel operator, or social media presence whose primary activity is the identification and public exposure of doctrinal deviation in the work of prominent Christian teachers, pastors, and authors—represents one of the most distinctive and consequential contemporary expressions of the informal moral authority pattern. The heresy hunter occupies a structural position in the contemporary religious information ecosystem that has no precise historical parallel, though its functional antecedents are clearly visible in the history of unauthorized holiness enforcement examined in the preceding papers: the Pharisaic tradition of identifying and publicly condemning those whose teaching or practice departed from the standard the Pharisees maintained, the medieval inquisitorial impulse translated into a lay and institutional form, and the Puritan tradition of doctrinal watchfulness applied through contemporary information technology.
The heresy hunter’s operational method exhibits several characteristic features that illuminate the structure of contemporary doctrinal purity policing with particular analytical clarity. The primary method is the close textual analysis of the targeted teacher’s published output—books, sermons, conference messages, social media posts, and interviews—for statements that can be read as departing from the doctrinal specifications the heresy hunter maintains. These statements are collected, presented in curated form, and subjected to interpretive analysis that positions them as evidence of doctrinal deviation, typically with explicit or implicit comparison to historical heresies or contemporary theological movements identified as dangerous. The heresy hunter rarely engages the targeted teacher directly in private before going public; the private engagement of Matthew 18:15 is characteristically bypassed in favor of immediate public exposure, because the primary function of the activity is not the restoration of the accused but the demonstration of the heresy hunter’s own doctrinal discernment and the establishment of his authority as a reliable identifier of theological danger.
Gilmour (2011), in his study of online religious identity and authority, observes that the internet has created conditions under which individuals can claim and exercise a form of religious authority—doctrinal adjudication, community standard enforcement, reputational assessment of public religious figures—that was previously accessible only to those with recognized institutional standing. The elimination of institutional gatekeeping in the online environment means that the heresy hunter’s authority claim is subject to no external validation before it reaches a potentially vast audience; its only effective validator is the audience’s own response, which in the attention economy of online religious discourse tends to reward the more dramatic, the more definitive, and the more emotionally engaging presentation rather than the more careful, the more nuanced, or the more institutionally accountable one.
4.3 The Narrowing of Doctrinal Acceptability
Contemporary doctrinal purity crusades exhibit with particular clarity the escalation dynamic that the preceding literature identifies as characteristic of symbolic boundary policing: the progressive narrowing of the range of acceptable theological expression beyond any point that the tradition’s own confessional standards would justify, driven by the competitive dynamics of doctrinal status competition and the social rewards that accrue to those identified as the tradition’s most vigilant defenders.
The narrowing operates through a characteristic mechanism: the initial concern about a genuine doctrinal deviation generates heightened alertness to similar deviations; the heightened alertness produces the identification of a widening range of theological expressions as potentially problematic; the identification of these expressions as problematic generates social pressure to avoid them; the avoidance of increasingly numerous and specific theological expressions progressively narrows the range of what can be said without triggering the enforcement apparatus; and the narrowed range becomes the de facto doctrinal standard against which future expressions are evaluated, regardless of its relationship to the tradition’s actual confessional commitments.
Trueman (2020), himself a careful and responsible voice within the Reformed theological tradition, has observed the phenomenon of doctrinal standard inflation within conservative evangelical and Reformed communities, noting the tendency for confessional standards to be progressively supplemented by additional specifications—on eschatology, on hermeneutical method, on specific cultural and ethical applications—whose status as binding doctrinal commitments is asserted by informal enforcement networks rather than established through the formal confessional processes of the relevant traditions. The result is a doctrinal environment in which the actual confessional standards of a tradition are less practically operative than the informal specifications maintained by the most active enforcement networks, and in which significant theologians and teachers who are fully confessionally orthodox find themselves subject to doctrinal pressure campaigns on grounds that their tradition’s own formal standards do not support.
4.4 The Consequences for Theological Discourse
The consequences of contemporary doctrinal purity crusades for the quality and character of theological discourse within affected communities are significant and extensively documented in the testimonies of those who have operated within the affected communities. The most immediate consequence is a chilling effect on genuine theological inquiry: the awareness that any exploration of difficult theological questions, any honest engagement with alternative perspectives, or any acknowledgment of complexity and uncertainty in areas where the enforcement community has established definitive positions carries the risk of triggering a public accusation campaign generates a powerful incentive toward the performance of doctrinal safety rather than the genuine pursuit of theological understanding.
This chilling effect produces precisely the kind of community that the preceding literature identifies as characteristic of mature symbolic boundary policing: a community whose visible theological surface is highly managed and carefully conformist, while the actual theological engagement of its members—their honest questions, their genuine uncertainties, their serious grappling with difficult texts and complex realities—is driven underground or abandoned altogether in the interest of avoiding the social consequences of visible deviation from the informal doctrinal standard. The community becomes, in theological terms, the whitewashed tomb of Matthew 23: outwardly impressive in its visible doctrinal conformity, inwardly impoverished in its actual theological life.
5. Social Media Denunciation: The Technological Amplification of Purity Policing
5.1 Social Media as a Purity Policing Environment
The emergence of social media as a primary medium of religious community formation and theological discourse represents the single most significant development in the contemporary environment of congregational purity policing. The analytical frameworks developed in the preceding literature—moral grandstanding, identity signaling, purity status competition, shame dynamics, boundary intensification—all apply with particular force in the social media environment, which provides both an amplification mechanism for these dynamics and a set of distinctive structural features that shape their expression in ways that differ from earlier contexts.
Social media platforms—including Twitter/X, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and the network of explicitly religious platforms and communities that have developed within and alongside them—share several structural features that are relevant to the analysis of purity policing. They are public or semipublic broadcasting environments in which individual expressions reach audiences of potentially unlimited scale with essentially no institutional gatekeeping. They operate through engagement metrics—likes, shares, comments, and follower counts—that systematically reward content generating strong emotional responses, of which moral outrage is among the most reliably engagement-generating. They create permanent public records of expressed positions that are easily searchable, quotable, and redistributable. And they enable the formation of communities of interest around shared concerns—including shared doctrinal positions, shared purity standards, and shared targets of enforcement concern—across geographic and institutional boundaries that previously limited the reach of informal enforcement networks.
Tosi and Warmke (2020), whose analysis of moral grandstanding is developed more fully in the social psychology paper in this series, observe that social media platforms are environments structurally optimized for grandstanding: they provide the large audiences that grandstanding requires, they reward the emotional intensity that grandstanding produces, and they create the status hierarchies within online communities that grandstanding is designed to navigate. These observations apply with particular force to religious purity policing on social media, where the combination of genuine theological stakes, emotionally intense community identity, and social media’s engagement-reward dynamics produces an environment in which the grandstanding dynamic operates without the moderating constraints that face-to-face community relationships typically impose.
5.2 The Mechanics of Online Religious Denunciation
The pattern of social media religious denunciation—the public targeting of an individual, pastor, author, or institution for perceived doctrinal or behavioral deviation—has become sufficiently common and sufficiently formulaic to constitute a recognizable genre of contemporary religious online behavior. Its characteristic structure illuminates the dynamics of purity policing in the social media environment with particular analytical clarity.
The denunciation typically begins with an initial post—on Twitter, Facebook, or a blog—that identifies the target and presents the evidence of deviation, often in the form of quoted statements, screenshots, or excerpts from the target’s published or online output. The initial post is designed to generate what online discourse analysts call “engagement”: comments, shares, and responses that extend the reach of the original content and contribute to its amplification within the relevant online community. The framing of the initial post characteristically employs the vocabulary of doctrinal or moral concern rather than personal animus, presenting the denunciation as a service to the community’s welfare rather than an attack on the individual.
The amplification phase involves the circulation of the initial content through the networks of those who share the denouncer’s concerns, generating a cascade of secondary posts that add commentary, additional evidence, and endorsements of the original assessment. Each secondary poster participates in the grandstanding dynamic identified by Tosi and Warmke (2020): by endorsing and amplifying the denunciation, the secondary participant demonstrates his own doctrinal vigilance, his alignment with the community of the rigorous, and his willingness to bear the reputational costs of public criticism—all of which generate the social recognition that grandstanding seeks. The piling-on dynamic that Tosi and Warmke identify as characteristic of social media moral discourse operates with particular intensity in religious denunciation contexts, where the theological stakes amplify the emotional intensity of each participant’s contribution.
The target of the denunciation campaign faces asymmetric conditions that the social media environment imposes with structural consistency. The campaign may achieve national or international scale within hours, reaching audiences that include the target’s congregation, denominational supervisors, professional colleagues, and broader public—all before the target is even aware that the campaign has begun, let alone has had the opportunity to respond. The response, when it comes, typically reaches a smaller audience than the original campaign—because algorithmic dynamics and selective sharing mean that corrections and clarifications rarely achieve the engagement metrics of initial accusations—and is itself subject to further criticism as evidence of defensiveness, evasion, or insufficient repentance. The structural asymmetry between accusation and response in the social media environment means that the social and reputational consequences of a denunciation campaign can be severely disproportionate to the actual gravity of the alleged deviation and effectively irreversible even when the deviation is subsequently shown to have been misrepresented or misunderstood.
5.3 The Shame Dynamics of Social Media Denunciation
The shame dynamics examined in the social psychology paper in this series operate with particular intensity in the social media denunciation context, amplified by the scale, speed, and permanence of the digital environment. The shame inflicted by public denunciation on social media differs from the shame inflicted by face-to-face public correction in several significant ways, each of which intensifies its effects on the target and increases its social consequences.
The scale of the online audience before which the shame is inflicted is potentially orders of magnitude larger than any face-to-face congregational context, and the permanent and searchable character of the online record means that the shame-inducing content remains accessible and circulable indefinitely. The target of a social media denunciation campaign does not merely experience shame before his or her immediate community; he or she experiences a form of public exposure that may reach every professional contact, family member, denominational relationship, and future employer or ministry partner whose interaction with the target might involve an internet search.
Ronson (2015), in his journalistic study of public shaming in the social media era, documents the psychological and social consequences of online shaming campaigns with extensive case study material, finding that the consequences for those targeted—including loss of employment, withdrawal from professional activity, and lasting psychological damage—are frequently severe and disproportionate to the stated concerns of those who initiate the campaigns. His analysis, while not focused on religious communities, identifies dynamics that operate with equal and in some respects greater force in religious social media contexts, where the theological amplification of moral condemnation adds a dimension of eternal significance to the social dynamics of public exposure.
Brown (2010), whose clinical research on shame and vulnerability is referenced in the social psychology paper, identifies what she calls the particular toxicity of shame in contrast to guilt, noting that shame attacks the person rather than the behavior and produces not the repair motivation of guilt but the withdrawal, concealment, or retaliation responses of the attack-others dynamic. The social media denunciation campaign’s characteristic framing of the target as doctrinally or morally defective—rather than as a person who has made a specific error that can be corrected—activates the global self-attack quality of shame rather than the behavior-specific quality of guilt, with predictable consequences for the target’s capacity to engage constructively with the concerns being raised.
5.4 Para-Church Networks and the Diffusion of Enforcement Authority
A distinctive feature of contemporary social media purity policing is the role of para-church networks—organizations, ministries, conferences, publications, and online communities that operate outside formal denominational structures—in providing the institutional infrastructure for informal enforcement campaigns. The proliferation of para-church networks in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries created a parallel religious information ecosystem that operates alongside, and in complex relationship to, the formal institutional structures of denominations, presbyteries, and ecclesiastical bodies.
Para-church networks provide the informal enforcer with several institutional resources that would otherwise be unavailable: an audience of like-minded individuals who share the enforcer’s concerns and are predisposed to credit his assessments, a platform for the publication of enforcement content that carries the implicit endorsement of the network’s identity and reputation, a community of peer validators who amplify and reinforce the enforcer’s authority claims, and a degree of institutional legitimacy derived from the network’s recognized standing within the broader religious community. The para-church enforcement network thus functions as precisely the parallel authority structure that the preceding literature identifies as the characteristic institutional consequence of informal moral authority formation, providing the informal enforcer with the social infrastructure of an alternative institution while maintaining the flexibility and freedom from accountability that formal institutional structures would impose.
Chaves (2011), in his sociological study of American congregations, observes the increasing significance of para-church networks in shaping the doctrinal and cultural environment of congregational life, noting that many congregations are more directly influenced in their theological and cultural orientations by the para-church networks within which their leaders participate—conferences, publications, online communities, informal pastoral networks—than by their formal denominational affiliations. This observation has important implications for understanding contemporary purity policing: the enforcement campaigns that originate within para-church networks reach into congregational life through the informal influence channels that these networks have established, bypassing the formal institutional structures of denominational oversight and congregational governance and operating instead through the relational and informational channels that para-church connection provides.
6. Synthetic Analysis: Contemporary Purity Policing as a Structural Phenomenon
6.1 Continuity with Historical Patterns
The four domains of contemporary congregational purity policing examined in this paper collectively exhibit a remarkable continuity with the structural patterns identified in historical expressions of unauthorized holiness enforcement. The modesty movement’s progressive specification of general biblical principles into detailed behavioral codes and its deployment of social shame as the primary enforcement mechanism replicates the boundary intensification dynamic of the Pharisaic purity system and its medieval and Reformation successors. Sabbath enforcement disputes reproduce with striking fidelity the specific dynamic that Jesus Christ identified and corrected in Matthew 12, including the application of general Sabbath prohibitions to categories of activity that the biblical witness itself distinguishes from prohibited melakhah. Doctrinal purity crusades exhibit the parallel authority structure formation, the escalation dynamics, and the displacement of genuine theological engagement by the management of highly specified boundary markers that the historical analysis consistently identifies as characteristic of unauthorized holiness enforcement. And social media denunciation deploys the shame infliction mechanism that the social psychology literature identifies as a primary currency of the zealotry system, now amplified to a scale and with a permanence that historical precedents could not approach.
This continuity is not coincidental. It reflects the structural consistency of the human psychological and social dynamics that generate unauthorized holiness enforcement across different cultural, institutional, and technological contexts. The specific content of the behavioral codes, the specific doctrinal specifications, and the specific technological mechanisms differ from one historical period to another; the underlying dynamics of moral grandstanding, identity signaling, purity status competition, and shame management remain structurally consistent, because they reflect stable features of the human condition operating within the particular social structure of communities organized around visible holiness performance as a primary status criterion.
6.2 The Distinctive Features of the Contemporary Context
While the structural continuity with historical patterns is clear, the contemporary context introduces several distinctive features that shape the expression and amplification of purity policing dynamics in ways that have no precise historical precedent.
The most significant distinctive feature is the digital amplification mechanism provided by social media. The informal enforcement dynamics of earlier periods operated through the mechanisms of face-to-face social pressure, communal reputation management, and relational exclusion—mechanisms that were bounded by the geographic and social limits of the communities in which they operated. Social media removes these bounds entirely: the self-appointed enforcer who achieves a significant online following can direct enforcement campaigns against targets anywhere in the world, reaching audiences of millions with enforcement content whose production requires no institutional legitimation, no formal investigation, and no procedural accountability. The consequence is an environment in which the asymmetry between the enforcement campaign and the target’s capacity for response is more extreme than any historical precedent, and in which the consequences for individuals targeted can be irreversible in ways that historical enforcement mechanisms typically were not.
The second distinctive feature is the fragmentation of institutional religious authority in the contemporary Western context. The Reformation era disciplinary systems, whatever their pathologies, operated within a context in which institutional religious authority was relatively concentrated and relatively effective: the Calvinist consistory, the Puritan session, and the Anabaptist congregation each exercised genuine institutional authority over their respective communities, and the informal enforcement dynamics of purity policing operated within and against that institutional authority in identifiable ways. The contemporary religious landscape is characterized by the fragmentation of institutional authority across a vast proliferation of denominations, independent congregations, and para-church networks, creating an environment in which the informal enforcer faces reduced institutional resistance and encounters populations whose relationship to any particular institutional authority is weak and conditional. The informal enforcement campaign that would have been contained and corrected by effective institutional authority in an earlier period now faces no effective institutional check, because the relevant institutional authorities—denominational bodies, pastoral oversight structures, ecclesiastical courts—have neither the jurisdictional reach nor the social credibility to constrain enforcement activities that operate primarily through para-church networks and social media platforms.
6.3 The Pastoral and Institutional Response
The analytical framework developed across the papers in this series provides a basis for identifying several elements of an appropriate pastoral and institutional response to contemporary congregational purity policing. The response must operate at multiple levels simultaneously: the individual level of pastoral care for both the enforcers and the enforced, the congregational level of institutional governance and community culture formation, and the broader level of denominational and network accountability structures.
At the individual level, the pastoral response to the self-appointed enforcer requires the combination of genuine engagement with the legitimate concerns that may underlie the enforcement activity and clear identification of the unauthorized character of the authority being claimed. The preceding social psychology literature’s analysis of the psychological dynamics underlying self-appointed enforcement—the shame management function, the identity construction function, the status competition function—suggests that purely cognitive engagement with the enforcer’s theological arguments will be insufficient; genuine pastoral engagement will need to address the psychological dynamics that generate and sustain the enforcement behavior alongside the theological distortions that the behavior reflects.
At the congregational level, the response requires the cultivation of an institutional culture in which legitimate authority is clearly defined, visibly exercised, and effectively maintained against the formation of parallel authority structures. Congregations in which the legitimate authority of properly appointed elders and pastors is weak, unclear, or inconsistently exercised provide the most favorable conditions for the formation of the informal enforcement networks that generate purity policing dynamics; conversely, congregations in which institutional authority is clearly defined, consistently exercised, and grounded in a well-understood theological rationale provide the most effective resistance to those dynamics.
At the broader institutional level, the response requires the development of denominational and network accountability structures capable of addressing informal enforcement campaigns that operate through para-church networks and social media platforms. This is the most challenging dimension of the institutional response, because the enforcement activities in question operate precisely in the spaces between and outside the formal structures of institutional accountability, and because the social media environment’s elimination of institutional gatekeeping means that enforcement content can reach vast audiences before any institutional response is possible. Nevertheless, denominational bodies, pastoral networks, and theological institutions that publicly and consistently articulate the distinction between legitimate institutional accountability and unauthorized informal enforcement, that refuse to treat enforcement campaigns conducted through para-church networks as equivalent to formal institutional processes, and that provide pastoral care and institutional support for those targeted by enforcement campaigns contribute significantly to the creation of the institutional environment in which genuine rather than performative holiness can be pursued.
7. Conclusion
Contemporary congregational purity policing—in its expressions through modesty movements, Sabbath enforcement disputes, doctrinal purity crusades, and social media denunciation—represents the continuation of a structural pattern that the broader literature in this series has traced from the Old Testament through the medieval and Reformation periods: the assumption of unauthorized authority over the definition and enforcement of community holiness, operating through informal mechanisms of social pressure and shame infliction, producing the characteristic consequences of boundary intensification, displacement of central moral concerns, and parallel authority structure formation. The contemporary context’s distinctive features—particularly the amplification mechanism of social media and the fragmentation of institutional religious authority—have not altered the structural character of this pattern but have intensified its effects and expanded its reach in ways that require specific analytical attention.
The theological tradition’s consistent diagnosis of unauthorized holiness enforcement—from the Old Testament’s treatment of Korah’s rebellion and the prophetic critique of priestly corruption, through Jesus Christ’s systematic engagement with the Pharisaic model, to the Pauline communities’ struggle with purity status competition and doctrinal boundary policing—provides a framework of remarkable diagnostic precision for contemporary expressions of the same pattern. The church that takes this tradition seriously will find in it not merely a historical narrative but an analytical instrument of genuine contemporary relevance: a set of theologically grounded diagnostic categories that can identify, name, and address the dynamics of purity policing in their contemporary forms with the same clarity that the biblical tradition brought to their historical predecessors.
The enduring pastoral challenge is not merely the correction of individual enforcers or the management of specific enforcement disputes but the formation of communities whose primary evaluative currency is genuine rather than performative holiness—communities in which the weightier matters of justice, mercy, and faithfulness are not displaced by the management of visible boundary markers, in which the correction of genuine failures is conducted through legitimate institutional channels and genuine pastoral concern rather than through social media campaigns and informal pressure networks, and in which the grace that genuine holiness requires is as visible and as operative as the standards it is meant to serve.
Notes
Note 1. The use of specific published works within the modesty movement literature—Harris (2004) and Mahaney (2004)—as illustrative examples requires the acknowledgment that both works have been the subject of subsequent controversy and revision within the communities that received them, and that the authors’ own later reflections on their influence complicate a simple characterization of their positions. The paper uses these works as illustrations of widely distributed patterns within the modesty movement literature rather than as comprehensive representations of their authors’ full theological positions. The analytical concern is with the structural dynamics the literature exhibits rather than with the specific authors or their total body of work.
Note 2. The paper’s treatment of Sabbath enforcement disputes is necessarily brief and cannot engage the full range of the theological debate about Sabbath observance that exists within conservative Protestant Christianity. The substantive questions of Sabbath theology—the relationship between the Old Testament Sabbath command and New Testament Sabbath observance, the significance of the Lord’s Day in apostolic practice, and the application of Sabbath principles in contemporary Christian life—are genuine theological questions that deserve careful and nuanced treatment that this paper’s analytical focus on enforcement dynamics cannot provide. The paper’s critical analysis of Sabbath enforcement is not a position on these substantive theological questions but an analysis of the specific dynamics of informal enforcement as they operate in the Sabbath domain. The preceding paper in this series on temple labor and sacred exceptions provides the more direct theological treatment of Sabbath hermeneutics.
Note 3. The figure of the “heresy hunter” described in Section 4.2 is a type characterized by specific behavioral patterns rather than a comprehensive description of all online theological commentary or critical engagement with theological positions. The distinction between legitimate theological criticism—careful, institutionally accountable, methodologically rigorous, and primarily oriented toward the accuracy of the theological discussion—and the heresy hunting pattern described in this paper is real and important. The paper’s analysis should not be read as discouraging genuine theological critique or as suggesting that all online theological commentary exhibits the enforcement pathologies described; it identifies a specific pattern that is distinguishable from legitimate theological engagement by the features described in the analysis.
Note 4. Ronson’s (2015) journalistic study of public shaming, cited in Section 5.3, is a work of popular nonfiction rather than academic scholarship and engages its subject through narrative case studies rather than systematic theoretical analysis. It is cited for its empirical documentation of the social and psychological consequences of online shaming campaigns rather than for its theoretical framework, and its use in this paper should be understood in that light. The theoretical framework for the shame dynamics analysis is provided by the clinical and social psychological literature cited in the social psychology paper in this series, particularly Tangney and Dearing (2002) and Nathanson (1992).
Note 5. The paper’s treatment of para-church networks in Section 5.4 addresses their role in the infrastructure of informal enforcement campaigns rather than offering a general assessment of para-church ministry. Para-church organizations have made and continue to make significant contributions to Christian ministry, scholarship, and community formation that are not addressed in this paper’s narrowly focused analysis. The analytical concern is with the specific way in which the para-church organizational form—its independence from formal denominational accountability, its audience formation through voluntary association, its influence within congregational communities through informal channels—creates structural conditions that can facilitate informal enforcement campaigns. This is a feature of the para-church organizational form under specific conditions, not a characterization of para-church ministry in general.
Note 6. The paper’s analysis of gender asymmetry in contemporary modesty movements in Section 2.2 engages a dimension of the modesty policing phenomenon that has significant theological and ethical implications beyond the scope of the symbolic boundary policing analysis that is the paper’s primary analytical focus. The disproportionate regulatory attention directed toward female dress in contemporary modesty movements—and the theological anthropology that underlies it—deserves more extended theological treatment than this paper can provide. The cited work of Moslener (2015) and Valenti (2009), approached critically from the paper’s explicitly biblical perspective, provides analytical tools for understanding the social dynamics involved, though neither work operates from within the theological framework that governs the present analysis.
Note 7. The paper’s concluding reflections on pastoral and institutional response are necessarily brief and schematic, given the paper’s primarily analytical rather than prescriptive orientation. A full treatment of the pastoral response to contemporary purity policing would require engagement with the extensive practical theology literature on congregational conflict, church discipline, and pastoral care under institutional pressure that lies beyond the scope of the present analysis. Adams (1979) and Powlison (2003) provide resources within the biblical counseling tradition that are relevant to the individual pastoral dimensions of the response; Strauch (1995) and Harvey (2003) address the institutional governance dimensions from within the broadly Reformed tradition that informs the present paper’s theological framework.
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