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This book relates the unique experiences of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,
Transgender and Queer/Questioning (LGBTQ+) people in Australian
Pentecostal-Charismatic Christian churches. Grounded in the
theoretical contributions of Michel Foucault, Judith Butler, Lewis
Coser, and others, the book exposes the discursive 'battleground'
over the 'truth' of sex which underlies the participants' stories.
These rich and complex narratives reveal the stakes of this
conflict, manifested in 'the line' - a barrier restricting out
LGBTQ+ people from full participation in ministry and service.
Although some participants related stories of supportive-if
typically conservative-congregations where they felt able to live
out an authentic, integrated faith, others found they could only
leave their formerly close and supportive communities behind,
'counter-rejecting' the churches and often the faith that they felt
had rejected them.
Based on two richly described case studies - a Pentecostal worship
service and popular music festival - this book draws on sociology,
theology and religious studies in order to understand the
significance of ecstatic experience in these contexts. Interviews
with performers in both settings, together with detailed first
person accounts of worship services and live performances, combine
to create a picture of the role of music, performance and space in
catalysing ecstasy. Drawing on the work of thinkers as diverse as
Michel Foucault, Emile Durkheim, Victor Turner and Friedrich
Schleiermacher, this book demonstrates that religious and
non-religious disciplines, paradigms and understandings can work in
a complementary fashion to help us understand the significance of
phenomena such as music and ecstatic experience. Ultimately, the
argument put forward in the book is that ecstatic experience takes
place in both religious and secular settings and is best understood
by both theistic and non-theistic approaches, working together. The
ecstatic experience common to both contexts is theorised as
'proto-religious phenomena' - the kernel from which religion may
develop.
Can training in the martial arts help you in everyday life? In
Pragmatic Karate Mark Jennings argues that it certainly can.
Provided you have a thorough grounding in the principles of this
ancient fighting art and take the right approach, both physically
and mentally, the karate moves you learn in the dojo can prove
invaluable in a confrontation, or threatened confrontation, in ways
more subtle that most people realise. Your karate training can even
change the way you look at the safety of your family and your home.
This is a detailed, authoritative work from a karate practitioner
with 35 years' experience who is also a long-serving police
officer.
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