Returning once and again to CAA, it's a bit of a mixed bag of feelings.
Most recently, it's like visiting a necropolis. Topic headstones jut out of the soil, some polished, others broken... and for those who have tread these pathways before, there are patches of bare ground where a discussion once stood but has been wiped from existence by the mods. The rest, as Hamlet says, is silence. You run into a couple mourners from time to time who reminisce of better days when this was a vibrant town.
You shake your head. What happened?
The intersection of anime and Christianity has always been an ill-defined spot on the Venn Diagram. Watching the best of anime can be a spiritual experience, but most of the titles past and present are mundane, derivative, and not at all uplifting; some of them are downright unwholesome. As always, they reflect entertainment media in general, and the dynamics of society at large.
A lot of people "grow out" of anime; that's perfectly understandable. It is now, and always has been, a medium largely focused on the teenage demographic. But that also suggests we should see a renewal of interest here at CAA, an influx of new blood. We don't, even though consumer demand for anime has grown steadily since I became a CAA member in 2004.
So, then, demand for Christianity - half of that narrow band of the Venn Diagram - must be partly at fault. And I think we see these trends already; there are plenty of other media sites that discuss them, and there's no point in rehashing that topic here.
But I also think Marshall McLuhan's observation that "The Medium is the Message" applies here in several ways. Bulletin-board-style sites have had their heyday, but have declined, their content replicated and replaced by the Facebooks and Reddits and YouTubes of the world. Likewise, the life cycle of these bulletin boards is so well-documented that it's practically a trope: initial enthusiasm and rapid growth gives way to discomfort with diversity, smug complacency, and stagnation. Theological discussion boards are particularly vulnerable, as participants are often more intransigent by nature, and any deviation from their perspectives may be perceived as slights, leading to friction, conflict, and eventual abandonment.
CAA hasn't been insulated from any of these dynamics. Whereas we once had several hundred board updates per day, now we have fewer than 200 per month. And that number continues to drop.
For those who keep the faith by posting -- and to the mods who keep the lights burning -- you have my appreciation and respect. I come here to praise CAA, not to bury it -- and yet this is the closest thing to an autopsy I've ever written. It's a sad statement about the intersection of an art form that I love and a worldview that I (try to) live by. CAA is a mirror that, over time, has reflected a trend I'm not at all comfortable with. Like it or not, though, it is reality.
Happy 2022, with earnest wishes that the sun never sets on CAA even as the rays slowly dim...