Radical Transformations in Minority Religions

Radical Transformations in Minority Religions
Author: Beth Singler,Eileen Barker
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 187
Release: 2021-11-21
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781351851220

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All religions undergo continuous change, but minority religions tend to be less anchored in their ways than mainstream, traditional religions. This volume examines radical transformations undergone by a variety of minority religions, including the Children of God/ Family International; Gnosticism; Jediism; various manifestations of Paganism; LGBT Muslim groups; the Plymouth Brethren; Santa Muerte; and Satanism. As with other books in the Routledge/Inform series, the contributors approach the subject from a wide range of perspectives: professional scholars include legal experts and sociologists specialising in new religious movements, but there are also chapters from those who have experienced a personal involvement. The volume is divided into four thematic parts that focus on different impetuses for radical change: interactions with society, technology and institutions, efforts at legitimation, and new revelations. This book will be a useful source of information for social scientists, historians, theologians and other scholars with an interest in social change, minority religions and ‘cults’. It will also be of interest to a wider readership including lawyers, journalists, theologians and members of the general public.

From Radical Jesus People to Virtual Religion

From Radical Jesus People to Virtual Religion
Author: Claire Borowik
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 159
Release: 2023-02-28
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781009037372

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The Family International (formerly the Children of God) emerged from the radical fringe of the Jesus People Movement in the late 1960s to establish a new religious movement with communities in ninety countries. Characterized from its early days by controversy due to its unconventional version of Christianity, countercultural practices, and high level of tension with society, the Family International created a communal society that endured for four decades. The movement's reinvention in 2010 as an online community offers insights into the dynamic nature of new religious movements, as they strategically adapt to evolving social contexts and emergent issues, and the negotiations of belief and identity this may entail. The Family International's transformation from a radical communal movement to a deradicalized virtual community highlights the novel challenges alternative religions may face in entering the mainstream and attaining legitimacy within the increasingly globalized context of online information dissemination in virtual spaces.

Minority Churches as Media Settlers

Minority Churches as Media Settlers
Author: Dorota Hall,Marta Kołodziejska,Kerstin Radde-Antweiler
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2023-06-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781000905120

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How do minority Christian churches adapt to and negotiate with the changes brought about by deep mediatization? How do they use their media to present themselves to their followers and the general public? This book aims to answer these questions by investigating how minority organizations of two different Christian traditions in the UK and Poland – the Seventh-day Adventist Church and the Orthodox Churches – use their own media to position themselves in their social, religious, and political environments. Based on the analyses of media practices, media content, and interview material, the study develops the new concept of media settlers, which pertains to religious organizations that use their media to fulfill their own aims: expand, assert their authority, and maintain their communities. They do so through five key media practices, which can be defined as strategies: acknowledgment, authorization, omission, replication of content, and mass-mediatization of digital media. This book is of particular interest to scholars of religion and mediatization, mainly sociologists, graduate students, and qualitative researchers working with discourse analysis. It is an insightful read for anyone interested in the Seventh-day Adventist and Orthodox Churches nowadays.

Transforming Faith Communities

Transforming Faith Communities
Author: Michael Ian Bochenski
Publsiher: Lutterworth Press
Total Pages: 351
Release: 2017-09-28
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780718845988

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Transforming Faith Communities draws upon a model for the church that combines congregationalism with a constructive approach to church-state relationships within a vision for a renewed Christendom, commended as a viable option for Christian missionin the twenty-first-century world. Michael Ian Bochenski uses two movements to make his case: sixteenth-century Anabaptism and late twentieth-century Latin American liberation theology. Each movement is held up as a mirror to the other in a vision for the transformation of church and society that resonates powerfully with contemporary culture. Outlining the development of radical religious communities, Bochenski examines some of the factors that create world-affirming Christian faith communities, and explores many examples of effective and constructive engagement with church and society across the centuries.

Transformations and Challenges in the Global World

Transformations and Challenges in the Global World
Author: Mario Marinov,Valentina Milenkova,Boris Manov
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 298
Release: 2022-10-07
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781527589230

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This book analyses the changes, which the modern world has experienced in its communal, personal, institutional, and everyday aspects. It explores the characteristics of global thinking; ethical, axiological and religious dimensions of global consciousness; the challenges of COVID-19 and new forms of communication; and digitization and changes in social communities in the context of globalization. The volume shows that the problems of the modern world are complex and multilateral, caused by social crises, digital technologies, environmental threats, intercultural dialogue, and attitudes towards the Other.

State Responses to Minority Religions

State Responses to Minority Religions
Author: Dr David M Kirkham
Publsiher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2014-01-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781472416483

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The response of states to demands for free exercise of religion or belief varies greatly across the world. In some places, religions come as close as imaginable to autonomous existences with little interference from government. In other cases religion finds itself grinding out a meagre living, if at all, under the jealously watchful eye of the state. This book provides a legal and normative overview of the variety of responses to minority religions available to states. Exploring case studies ranging from Islamic regions such as Indonesia, Pakistan, and the wider Middle East, to Western Europe, Eastern Europe, China, Russia, Canada, and the Baltics, contributors include international scholars and experts in law, sociology, religious studies, and political science. This book offers invaluable perspectives on how minority religions are currently being received, reviewed, challenged, or ignored in different parts of the world.

New Religious Movements in the Twenty first Century

New Religious Movements in the Twenty first Century
Author: Phillip Charles Lucas,Thomas Robbins
Publsiher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 378
Release: 2004
Genre: History
ISBN: 0415965764

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First Published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Reactions to the Law by Minority Religions

Reactions to the Law by Minority Religions
Author: Eileen Barker,James T. Richardson
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2020-12-30
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781000333244

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Much has been written about the law as it affects new and minority religions, but relatively little has been written about how such religions react to the law. This book presents a wide variety of responses by minority religions to the legal environments within which they find themselves. An international panel of experts offer examples from North America, Europe and Asia demonstrating how religions with relatively little status may resort to violence or passive acceptance of the law; how they may change their beliefs or practices in order to be in compliance with the law; or how they may resort to the law itself in order to change their legal standing, sometimes by forging alliances with those with more power or authority to achieve their goals. The volume concludes by applying theoretical insights from sociological studies of law, religion and social movements to the variety of responses. The first systematic collection focussing on how minority religions respond to efforts at social control by various governmental agents, this book provides a vital reference for scholars of religion and the law, new religious movements, minority religions and the sociology of religion.