|
Books > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Other Protestant & Nonconformist Churches > Pentecostal Churches
Pentecostal Christianity is flourishing inside the prisons of Rio
de Janeiro. To find out why, Andrew Johnson dug deep into the
prisons themselves. He began by spending two weeks living in a
Brazilian prison as if he were an inmate: sleeping in the same
cells as the inmates, eating the same food, and participating in
the men's daily routines as if he were incarcerated. And he
returned many times afterward to observe prison churches' worship
services, which were led by inmates who had been voted into
positions of leadership by their fellow prisoners. He accompanied
Pentecostal volunteers when they visited cells that were controlled
by Rio's most dominant criminal gang to lead worship services,
provide health care, and deliver other social services to the
inmates. Why does this faith resonate so profoundly with the
incarcerated? Pentecostalism, argues Johnson, is the "faith of the
killable people" and offers ex-criminals and gang members the
opportunity to positively reinvent their public personas. If I Give
My Soul provides a deeply personal look at the relationship between
the margins of Brazilian society and the Pentecostal faith, both
behind bars and in the favelas, Rio de Janeiro's peripheral
neighborhoods. Based on his intimate relationships with the figures
in this book, Johnson makes a passionate case that Pentecostal
practice behind bars is an act of political radicalism as much as a
spiritual experience.
This expansive study offers an interpretation of the 'new
Pentecost': the rise of charismatic Christianity, before, during,
and after the 'long 1960s'. It examines the translocal actors,
networks, and media which constructed a 'Spiritscape' of
charismatic renewal in the Anglo-world contexts of Australia, the
British Isles, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United
States. It places this arena also in a wider and dynamic worldwide
setting, exploring the ways in which charismatic imaginations of an
'age of the Spirit' were shaped by interpenetrations with the
'Third World', the Soviet Bloc, and beyond in the global Sixties
and Seventies. Age of the Spirit explains charismatic developments
within Protestantism and Catholicism, mainline and
non-denominational churches, and within existing pentecostalisms,
and places these in relation to lively scholarly themes such as
secularisation, authenticity, and cosmopolitanism. It offers an
unrivalled analysis of charismatic music, books, television,
conferences, personalities, community living, and controversies in
the 1960s and 1970s. It looks forward to the many global legacies
of charismatic renewal, for example in relation to the politics of
sexuality in the Anglican Communion, or to support for President
Donald J. Trump. The essential question at the heart of this book
is relevant for scholars and practitioners of Christianity alike:
how did charismatic renewal transform the churches in the twentieth
century, moving from the periphery to the mainstream?
|
|