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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > General
In the United States and Europe, an increasing emphasis on equality
has pitted rights claims against each other, raising profound
philosophical, moral, legal, and political questions about the
meaning and reach of religious liberty. Nowhere has this conflict
been more salient than in the debate between claims of religious
freedom, on one hand, and equal rights claims made on the behalf of
members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT)
community, on the other. As new rights for LGBT individuals have
expanded in liberal democracies across the West, longstanding
rights of religious freedom - such as the rights of religious
communities to adhere to their fundamental teachings, including
protecting the rights of conscience; the rights of parents to
impart their religious beliefs to their children; and the liberty
to advance religiously-based moral arguments as a rationale for
laws - have suffered a corresponding decline. Timothy Samuel Shah,
Thomas F. Farr, and Jack Friedman's volume, Religious Freedom and
Gay Rights brings together some of the world's leading thinkers on
religion, morality, politics, and law to analyze the emerging
tensions between religious freedom and gay rights in three key
geographic regions: the United States, the United Kingdom, and
continental Europe. What implications will expanding regimes of
equality rights for LGBT individuals have on religious freedom in
these regions? What are the legal and moral frameworks that govern
tensions between gay rights and religious freedom? How are these
tensions illustrated in particular legal, political, and policy
controversies? And what is the proper way to balance new claims of
equality against existing claims for freedom of religious groups
and individuals? Religious Freedom and Gay Rights offers several
explorations of these questions.
This volume of essays explores the long-unstudied relationship
between religion and human security throughout the world. The 1950s
marked the beginning of a period of extraordinary religious
revival, during which religious political-parties and
non-governmental organizations gained power around the globe. Until
now, there has been little systematic study of the impact that this
phenomenon has had on human welfare, except of a relationship
between religious revival to violence. The authors of these essays
show that religion can have positive as well as negative effects on
human wellbeing. They address a number of crucial questions about
the relationship between religion and human security: Under what
circumstances do religiously motivated actors tend to advance human
welfare, and under what circumstances do they tend to threaten it?
Are members of some religious groups more likely to engage in
welfare-enhancing behavior than in others? Do certain state
policies tend to promote security-enhancing behavior among
religious groups while other policies tend to promote
security-threatening ones? In cases where religious actors are
harming the welfare of a population, what responses could eliminate
that threat without replacing it with another? Religion and Human
Security shows that many states tend to underestimate the power of
religious organizations as purveyors of human security. Governments
overlook both the importance of human security to their populations
and the religious groups who could act as allies in securing the
welfare of their people. This volume offers a rich variety of
theoretical perspectives on the nuanced relationship between
religion and human security. Through case studies ranging from
Turkey, Egypt, and Pakistan, to the United States, Northern
Ireland, and Zimbabwe, it provides important suggestions to policy
makers of how to begin factoring the influence of religion into
their evaluation of a population's human security and into programs
designed to improve human security around the globe.
The term "Manifest Destiny" has traditionally been linked to U.S.
westward expansion in the nineteenth century, the desire to spread
republican government, and racialist theories like Anglo-Saxonism.
Yet few people realize the degree to which "Manifest Destiny" and
American republicanism relied on a deeply anti-Catholic
civil-religious discourse. John C. Pinheiro traces the rise to
prominence of this discourse, beginning in the 1820s and
culminating in the Mexican-American War of 1846-1848. Pinheiro
begins with social reformer and Protestant evangelist Lyman
Beecher, who was largely responsible for synthesizing seemingly
unrelated strands of religious, patriotic, expansionist, and
political sentiment into one universally understood argument about
the future of the United States. When the overwhelmingly Protestant
United States went to war with Catholic Mexico, this "Beecherite
Synthesis" provided Americans with the most important means of
defining their own identity, understanding Mexicans, and
interpreting the larger meaning of the war. Anti-Catholic rhetoric
constituted an integral piece of nearly every major argument for or
against the war and was so universally accepted that recruiters,
politicians, diplomats, journalists, soldiers, evangelical
activists, abolitionists, and pacifists used it. It was also,
Pinheiro shows, the primary tool used by American soldiers to
interpret Mexico's culture. All this activity in turn reshaped the
anti-Catholic movement. Preachers could now use caricatures of
Mexicans to illustrate Roman Catholic depravity and nativists could
point to Mexico as a warning about what America would be like if
dominated by Catholics. Missionaries of Republicanism provides a
critical new perspective on ''Manifest Destiny,'' American
republicanism, anti-Catholicism, and Mexican-American relations in
the nineteenth century.
This is Laurence Gardner's final book, written shortly before his
death in 2010 and is the accompanying book to his Origin of God
(published 2011 by dash house publishing). Together with Origin of
God, this book outlines an irrefutable and searing indictment of
conventional belief and exposes the evils and absurdities
perpetuated over the millenia in the name of Christianity. In
Revelation of the Devil, Laurence Gardner traces the history of the
Devil, from its roots in Mesopotamia and the Old Testament all the
way up to the modern world of today. Travelling through the New
Testament, as well as the Koran, and then passing in turn through
the Inquisitions, the Reformation and the Enlightenment, he unmasks
what he has called "the myth of evil and the conspiracy of Satan."
For nearly 2,000 years a supernatural entity known as the Devil has
been held responsible by Church authorities for bringing sin and
wickedness into the world. Throughout this period, the Devil has
been portrayed as a constant protagonist of evil, although his
origin remains a mystery and his personality has undergone many
interpretive changes, prompting questions such as: If God is all
good and all powerful, then why does evil exist? How can it exist?
If God created everything, then where did the Devil come from? If
the Devil exists, then why does he not feature in any pre-Christian
document? Revelation of the Devil follows the Devil's sinister
history, in the manner of a biography, from his scriptural
introduction to the dark satanic cults of the present day. In a
strict chronological progression, we experience the mood of each
successive era as the Devil's image was constantly manipulated to
suit the changing motives of his creators in their bid for
threat-driven clerical control.
Jacob Kinnard offers an in-depth examination of the complex
dynamics of religiously charged places. Focusing on several
important shared and contested pilgrimage places-Ground Zero and
Devils Tower in the United States, Ayodhya and Bodhgaya in India,
Karbala in Iraq-he poses a number of crucial questions. What and
who has made these sites important, and why? How are they shared,
and how and why are they contested? What is at stake in their
contestation? How are the particular identities of place and space
established? How are individual and collective identity intertwined
with space and place? Challenging long-accepted, clean divisions of
the religious world, Kinnard explores specific instances of the
vibrant messiness of religious practice, the multivocality of
religious objects, the fluid and hybrid dynamics of religious
places, and the shifting and tangled identities of religious
actors. He contends that sacred space is a constructed idea: places
are not sacred in and of themselves, but are sacred because we make
them sacred. As such, they are in perpetual motion, transforming
themselves from moment to moment and generation to generation.
Places in Motion moves comfortably across and between a variety of
historical and cultural settings as well as academic disciplines,
providing a deft and sensitive approach to the topic of sacred
places, with awareness of political, economic, and social realities
as these exist in relation to questions of identity. It is a lively
and much needed critical advance in analytical reflections on
sacred space and pilgrimage.
"Sainthood" has been, and remains, a contested category in China,
given the commitment of China's modern leadership to
secularization, modernization, and revolution, and the discomfort
of China's elite with matters concerning religion. However, sainted
religious leaders have succeeded in rebuilding old institutions and
creating new ones despite the Chinese government's censure. This
book offers a new perspective on the history of religion in modern
and contemporary China by focusing on the profiles of these
religious leaders from the early 20th century through the present.
Edited by noted authorities in the field of Chinese religion,
Making Saints in Modern China offers biographies of prominent
Daoists and Buddhists, as well as of the charismatic leaders of
redemptive societies and state managers of religious associations
in the People's Republic. The focus of the volume is largely on
figures in China proper, although some attention is accorded to
those in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and other areas of the Chinese
diaspora. Each chapter offers a biography of a religious leader and
a detailed discussion of the way in which he or she became a
"saint." The biographies illustrate how these leaders deployed and
sometimes retooled traditional themes in hagiography and
charismatic communication to attract followers and compete in the
religious marketplace. Negotiation with often hostile authorities
was also an important aspect of religious leadership, and many of
the saints' stories reveal unexpected reserves of creativity and
determination. The volume's contributors, from the United States,
Canada, France, Italy, and Taiwan, provide cutting-edge
scholarship-some of which is available here in English for the
first time. Taken together, these essays make the case that vital
religious leadership and practice has existed and continues to
exist in China despite the state's commitment to wholesale
secularization.
This book supplies fundamental information about the diverse
religious beliefs of Africa, explains central tenets of the African
worldview, and overviews various forms of African spiritual
practices and experiences. Africa is an ancient land with a
significant presence in world history-especially regarding the
history of the United States, given the ethnic origins of a
substantial proportion of the nation's population. This book
presents a broad range of information about the diverse religious
beliefs of Africa that serves to describe the beliefs, practices,
deities, sacred places, and creation stories of African religions.
Readers will learn about key forms of spiritual practices and
experiences, such as incantations and prayer, dance as worship, and
spirit possession, all of which pepper African American religious
experiences today. The entries also discuss central tenets of the
African worldview-for example, the belief that humankind is not to
fight nature, but to integrate into the natural environment. This
volume is specifically written to be highly accessible to students.
It provides a much-needed source of connections between the
religious traditions and practices of African Americans and those
of the people of the continent of Africa. Through these
connections, this work will inspire tolerance of other religions,
traditions, and backgrounds. The included selection of primary
documents provides users first-hand accounts of African religious
beliefs and practices, serving to promote critical thinking skills
and support Common Core State Standards. Presents approximately 100
alphabetically arranged entries written by a team of expert
contributors Overviews the plurality of African religious cultures
and identifies the distant origins of African American religious
experiences today Includes primary documents discussing African
religious beliefs and practices
The al-Qaeda Franchise asks why al-Qaeda adopted a branching-out
strategy, introducing seven franchises spread over the Middle East,
Africa, and South Asia. After all, transnational terrorist
organizations can expand through other organizational strategies.
Forming franchises was not an inevitable outgrowth of al-Qaeda's
ideology or its U.S.-focused strategy. The efforts to create local
franchises have also undermined one of al-Qaeda's primary
achievements: the creation of a transnational entity based on
religious, not national, affiliation. The book argues that
al-Qaeda's branching out strategy was not a sign of strength, but
instead a response to its decline in the aftermath of the 9/11
attacks. Franchising reflected an escalation of al-Qaeda's
commitments in response to earlier strategic mistakes, leaders'
hubris, and its diminished capabilities. Although the introduction
of new branches helped al-Qaeda create a frightening image far
beyond its actual capabilities, ultimately this strategy neither
increased the al-Qaeda threat, nor enhanced the organization's
political objectives. In fact, the rise of ISIS from an al-Qaeda
branch to the dominant actor in the jihadi camp demonstrates how
expansion actually incurred heavy costs for al-Qaeda. The al-Qaeda
Franchise goes beyond explaining the adoption of a branching out
strategy, also exploring particular expansion choices. Through nine
case studies, it analyzes why al-Qaeda formed branches in some
arenas but not others, and why its expansion in some locations,
such as Yemen, took the form of in-house franchising (with branches
run by al-Qaeda's own fighters), while other locations, such as
Iraq and Somalia, involved merging with groups already operating in
the target arena. It ends with an assessment of al-Qaeda's future
in light of the turmoil in the Middle East, the ascendance of ISIS,
and US foreign policy.
The emergence of formative Judaism has traditionally been examined
in light of a theological preoccupation with the two competing
religious movements, 'Christianity' and 'Judaism' in the first
centuries of the Common Era. In this book Ariel Schremer attempts
to shift the scholarly consensus away from this paradigm, instead
privileging the rabbinic attitude toward Rome, the destroyer of the
temple in 70 C.E., over their concern with the nascent Christian
movement. The palpable rabbinic political enmity toward Rome, says
Schremer, was determinative in the emerging construction of Jewish
self-identity. He asserts that the category of heresy took on a new
urgency in the wake of the trauma of the Temple's destruction,
which demanded the construction of a new self-identity. Relying on
the late 20th-century scholarly depiction of the slow and measured
growth of Christianity in the empire up until and even after
Constantine's conversion, Schremer minimizes the extent to which
the rabbis paid attention to the Christian presence. He goes on,
however, to pinpoint the parting of the ways between the rabbis and
the Christians in the first third of the second century, when
Christians were finally assigned to the category of heretics.
Joseph W. Williams examines the changing healing practices of
pentecostals in the United States over the past 100 years, from the
early believers, who rejected mainstream medicine and overtly
spiritualized disease, to the later generations of pentecostals and
their charismatic successors, who dramatically altered the healing
paradigms they inherited. Williams shows that over the course of
the twentieth century, pentecostal denunciations of the medical
profession often gave way to ''natural'' healing methods associated
with scientific medicine, natural substances, and even psychology.
By 2000, figures such as the pentecostal preacher T. D. Jakes
appeared on the Dr. Phil Show, other healers marketed their books
at mainstream retailers such as Wal-Mart, and some developed
lucrative nutritional products that sold online and in health food
stores across the nation. Exploring the interconnections,
resonances, and continued points of tension between adherents and
some of their fiercest rivals, Spirit Cure chronicling adherents'
embrace of competitors' healing practices and illuminates
pentecostals' dramatic transition from a despised minority to major
players in the world of American evangelicalism and mainstream
American culture.
There is a striking similarity between Marian devotional songs and
secular love songs of the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance. Two
disparate genres-one sacred, the other secular; one Latin, the
other vernacular-both praise an idealized, impossibly virtuous
woman. Each does so through highly stylized derivations of
traditional medieval song forms - Marian prayer derived from
earlier Gregorian chant, and love songs and lyrics from medieval
courtly song. Yet despite their obvious similarities, the two
musical and poetic traditions have rarely been studied together.
Author David Rothenberg takes on this task with remarkable success,
producing a useful and broad introduction to Marian music and
liturgy, and then coupling that with an incisive comparative
analysis of this devotional form with the words and music of
secular love songs of the period. The Flower of Paradise examines
the interplay of Marian devotional and secular poetics within
polyphonic music from c. 1200 to c. 1500. Through case studies of
works that demonstrate a specific symbolic resonance between Marian
devotional and secular song, the book illustrates the distinctive
ethos of this period in European culture. Rothenberg makes use of
an impressive command of liturgical and religious studies,
literature and poetry, and art history to craft a study with wide
application across disciplinary boundaries. With its broad scope
and unique, incisive analysis, this book is suited for scholars,
students, and general readers alike. Undergraduate and graduate
students of musicology, Medieval and Renaissance studies,
comparative literature, art history, Western reglious history, and
music history-especially that of the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and
sacred music-will find this book a useful and informative resource
on the period. The Flower of Paradise is also of interest to those
with a particular dedication to any of its diverse subject areas.
For individuals involved in religious organizations or those who
frequent Medieval or Renaissance cultural sites and museums, this
book will deepen their knowledge and open up new ways of thinking
about the history and development of secular and sacred music and
the Marian tradition.
The diversity of Nietzsche's books, and the sheer range of his
philosophical interests, have posed daunting challenges to his
interpreters. This Oxford Handbook addresses this multiplicity by
devoting each of its 32 essays to a focused topic, picked out by
the book's systematic plan. The aim is to treat each topic at the
best current level of philosophical scholarship on Nietzsche. The
first group of papers treat selected biographical issues: his
family relations, his relations to women, and his ill health and
eventual insanity. In Part 2 the papers treat Nietzsche in
historical context: his relations back to other philosophers-the
Greeks, Kant, and Schopenhauer-and to the cultural movement of
Romanticism, as well as his own later influence in an unlikely
place, on analytic philosophy. The papers in Part 3 treat a variety
of Nietzsche's works, from early to late and in styles ranging from
the 'aphoristic' The Gay Science and Beyond Good and Evil through
the poetic-mythic Thus Spoke Zarathustra to the florid
autobiography Ecce Homo. This focus on individual works, their
internal unity, and the way issues are handled within them, is an
important complement to the final three groups of papers, which
divide up Nietzsche's philosophical thought topically. The papers
in Part 4 treat issues in Nietzsche's value theory, ranging from
his metaethical views as to what values are, to his own values of
freedom and the overman, to his insistence on 'order of rank', and
his social-political views. The fifth group of papers treat
Nietzsche's epistemology and metaphysics, including such well-known
ideas as his perspectivism, his INSERT: Included in Starkmann 40%
promotion, September-October 2014 being, and his thought of eternal
recurrence. Finally, Part 6 treats another famous idea-the will to
power-as well as two linked ideas that he uses will to power to
explain, the drives, and life. This Handbook will be a key resource
for all scholars and advanced students who work on Nietzsche.
For an understanding of the early Christian movement, two matters
are essential. One is the size of the movement. The other is the
distribution of the movement. In regard to the first matter, it has
been widely assumed that there were 6 million Christians (or 10% of
the population of the Roman Empire) around the year 300. But those
kinds of calculations have no substantial ancient bases or any
modern method by which such numbers can be established. As to the
distribution of the movement, the consensus view is that
Christianity was an urban movement until the conversion of Emperor
Constantine. On close examination, these two popular views-an urban
Christianity of 6 million-would nearly saturate every urban area of
the entire Roman Empire with Christians, leaving no room for Jews
or pagans. That scenario simply does not work. But where does the
solution lie? Were there fewer Christians in the Roman world? Was
the Roman world much more urbanized that we previously thought? Did
large numbers of Jews convert to Christianity? Or, as Thomas
Robinson argues, is the urban thesis defective, and the neglected
countryside must now be considered in any reconstruction of early
Christian growth? In Who Were the First Christians? Robinson
deconstructs the "urban thesis, " and then goes further; he asks
what was the makeup of the typical Christian congregation, and
whether it was a lower-class movement or an upwardly mobile
middle-class movement. In answering these questions, Robinson
engages with the influential writings of Wayne Meeks, Rodney Stark,
and Ramsay MacMullen, among others. He argues persuasively that
more attention needs to be given to the countryside and to the
considerable contingent of the marginal and the rustic even within
urban populations. The result is that this book effectively
dismantles the long-accepted urban thesis, and proves that a
profoundly revised vision of early Christian growth and development
is required.
Death is an element at the center of all religious imagination.
Analysts from Freud to Agamben have pondered religion's fascination
with death, and religious art is saturated with images of suffering
unto death. As this volume shows, religious fascination with death
extends to the notion of elective death, its circumstances, the
virtue of those who perform it, and how best to commemorate it. The
essays in Martyrdom, Self-Sacrifice, and Self-Immolation address
the legendary foundations for those elective deaths which can be
categorized as religiously sanctioned suicides. Broadly condemned
as cowardice across the world's moral codes, suicide under certain
circumstances-such as martyrdom, self-sacrifice, or
self-immolation-carries a dynamic importance in religious legends,
some tragic and others uplifting. Believers respond to such legends
presumably because choosing death is seen as heroic and redemptive
for the individuals who die, for their communities, or for
humanity. Envisioning suicide as virtuous clashes with popular
conceptions of suicide as weak, immoral, and even criminal, but
that is precisely the point. This volume offers analyses from
renowned scholars with the literary tools and historical insights
to investigate the delicate issue of religiously sanctioned
elective death.
In The Reformation of Feeling, Susan Karant-Nunn looks beyond and
beneath the formal doctrinal and moral demands of the Reformation
in Germany to examine the emotional tenor of the programs that the
emerging creeds-revised Catholicism, Lutheranism, and
Calvinism/Reformed theology-developed for their members. As
revealed by the surviving sermons from this period, preaching
clergy of each faith both explicitly and implicitly provided their
listeners with distinct models of a mood to be cultivated. To
encourage their parishioners to make an emotional investment in
their faith, all three drew upon rhetorical elements that were
already present in late medieval Catholicism and elevated them into
confessional touchstones.
Looking at archival materials containing direct references to
feeling, Karant-Nunn focuses on treatments of death and sermons on
the Passion. She amplifies these sources with considerations of the
decorative, liturgical, musical, and disciplinary changes that
ecclesiastical leaders introduced during the period from the late
fifteenth to the end of the seventeenth century. Within individual
sermons, Karant-Nunn also examines topical elements-including Jews
at the crucifixion, the Virgin Mary's voluminous weeping below the
Cross, and struggles against competing denominations-that were
intended to arouse particular kinds of sentiment. Finally, she
discusses surviving testimony from the laity in order to assess at
least some Christians' reception of these lessons on proper
devotional feeling.
This book is exceptional in its presentation of a cultural rather
than theological or behavioral study of the broader movement to
remake Christianity. As Karant-Nunn conclusively demonstrates, in
the eyes of the Reformation's formative personalities strict
adherence to doctrine and upright demeanor did not constitute an
adequate piety. The truly devout had to engage their hearts in
their faith.
One of Aquinas's best known works after the Summa Theologica, Summa
Contra Gentiles is a theological synthesis that explains and
defends the existence and nature of God without invoking the
authority of the Bible. A detailed expository account of and
commentary on this famous work, Davies's book aims to help readers
think about the value of the Summa Contra Gentiles (SCG) for
themselves, relating the contents and teachings found in the SCG to
those of other works and other thinkers both theological and
philosophical. Following a scholarly account of Aquinas's life and
his likely intentions in writing the SCG, the volume works
systematically through all four books of the text. It is,
therefore, a solid and reflective introduction both to the SCG and
to Aquinas more generally. The book is aimed at students of
medieval philosophy and theology, and of Aquinas in particular. It
will interest teachers of medieval philosophy and theology, though
it does not presuppose previous knowledge of Aquinas or of his
works. Davies's book is the longest and most detailed account and
discussion of the SCG available in English in one volume.
In a groundbreaking examination of the antislavery origins of
liberal Protestantism, Molly Oshatz contends that the antebellum
slavery debates forced antislavery Protestants to adopt an
historicist understanding of truth and morality. Unlike earlier
debates over slavery, the antebellum slavery debates revolved
around the question of whether or not slavery was a sin in the
abstract. Unable to use the letter of the Bible to answer the
proslavery claim that slavery was not a sin in and of itself,
antislavery Protestants, including William Ellery Channing, Francis
Wayland, Moses Stuart, Leonard Bacon, and Horace Bushnell, argued
that biblical principles opposed slavery and that God revealed
slavery's sinfulness through the gradual unfolding of these
principles. Although they believed that slavery was a sin,
antislavery Protestants' sympathy for individual slaveholders and
their knowledge of the Bible made them reluctant to denounce all
slaveholders as sinners. In order to reconcile slavery's sinfulness
with their commitments to the Bible and to the Union, antislavery
Protestants defined slavery as a social rather than an individual
sin. Oshatz demonstrates that the antislavery notions of
progressive revelation and social sin had radical implications for
Protestant theology. Oshatz carries her study through the Civil War
to reveal how emancipation confirmed for northern Protestants the
antislavery notion that God revealed His will through history. She
describes how after the war, a new generation of liberal
theologians, including Newman Smyth, Charles Briggs, and George
Harris, drew on the example of antislavery and emancipation to
respond to evolution and historical biblical criticism. The
theological innovations rooted in the slavery debates came to
fruition in liberal Protestantism's acceptance of the historical
and evolutionary nature of religious truth.
In September, 1219, as the armies of the Fifth Crusade besieged the
Egyptian city of Damietta, Francis of Assisi went to Egypt to
preach to Sultan al-Malik al-Kamil.
Although we in fact know very little about this event, this has not
prevented artists and writers from the thirteenth century to the
twentieth, unencumbered by mere facts, from portraying Francis
alternatively as a new apostle preaching to the infidels, a
scholastic theologian proving the truth of Christianity, a champion
of the crusading ideal, a naive and quixotic wanderer, a crazed
religious fanatic, or a medieval Gandhi preaching peace, love, and
understanding. Al-Kamil, on the other hand, is variously presented
as an enlightened pagan monarch hungry for evangelical teaching, a
cruel oriental despot, or a worldly libertine.
Saint Francis and the Sultan takes a detailed look at these richly
varied artistic responses to this brief but highly symbolic
meeting. Throwing into relief the changing fears and hopes that
Muslim-Christian encounters have inspired in European artists and
writers in the centuries since, it gives a uniquely broad but
precise vision of the evolution of Western attitudes towards Islam
and the Arab world over the last eight hundred years."
In the "twinkling of an eye" Jesus secretly returns to earth and
gathers to him all believers. As they are taken to heaven, the
world they leave behind is plunged into chaos. Cars and airplanes
crash and people search in vain for loved ones. Plagues, famine,
and suffering follow. The
antichrist emerges to rule the world and to destroy those who
oppose him. Finally, Christ comes again in glory, defeats the
antichrist and reigns over the earth. This apocalyptic scenario is
anticipated by millions of Americans. These millions have made the
Left Behind series--novels that depict the
rapture and apocalypse--perennial bestsellers, with over 40 million
copies now in print. In Rapture Culture, Amy Johnson Frykholm
explores this remarkable phenomenon, seeking to understand why
American evangelicals find the idea of the rapture so compelling.
What is the secret behind the remarkable
popularity of the apocalyptic genre? One answer, she argues, is
that the books provide a sense of identification and communal
belonging that counters the "social atomization" that characterizes
modern life. This also helps explain why they appeal to female
readers, despite the deeply patriarchal
worldview they promote. Tracing the evolution of the genre of
rapture fiction, Frykholm notes that at one time such narratives
expressed a sense of alienation from modern life and protest
against the loss of tradition and the marginalization of
conservative religious views. Now, however,
evangelicalism's renewed popular appeal has rendered such themes
obsolete. Left Behind evinces a new embrace of technology and
consumer goods as tools for God's work, while retaining a protest
against modernity's transformationof traditional family life.
Drawing on extensive interviews with readers
of the novels, Rapture Culture sheds light on a mindset that is
little understood and far more common than many of us suppose.
Religion in China survived the most radical suppression in human
history--a total ban of any religion during and after the Cultural
Revolution (1966-1979). All churches, temples, and mosques were
closed down, converted for secular uses, or turned to museums for
the purpose of atheist education. China remains under Communist
rule. But in the last three decades, religion has revived and
thrived. Christianity has been the fastest growing religion for
decades. Many Buddhist and Daoist temples have been restored. The
state even sponsors large Buddhist gatherings and ceremonies to
venerate Confucius and the legendary ancestors of the Chinese
people. Traditional Chinese temples have sprung up in some areas.
On the other hand, quasi-religious qigong practices, once
ubiquitous in public parks throughout the country, are now rare.
All the while, the authorities have carried out waves of atheist
propaganda, anti-superstition campaigns, severe crackdowns on the
underground Christian churches and various ''evil cults.'' How do
we explain the religious situation in China today? How do we
explain the religious situation in China today? How did religion
survive the eradication measures in the 1960s and 1970s? How do
various religious groups manage to revive despite strict
regulations? Why have some religions grown fast in the reform era?
Why have some forms of spirituality gone through dramatic turns? In
Religion in China, Fenggang Yang provides a comprehensive overview
of the religious change in China under Communism, drawing on his
''political economy'' approach to the sociology of religion.
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