White Evangelicals as a “People”: The Church Growth Movement from India to the United States

IF 0.3 3区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY RELIGION AND AMERICAN CULTURE-A JOURNAL OF INTERPRETATION Pub Date : 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1017/rac.2020.2
Jesse Curtis
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article begins with a simple question: How did white evangelicals respond to the civil rights movement? Traditional answers are overwhelmingly political. As the story goes, white evangelicals became Republicans. In contrast, this article finds racial meaning in the places white evangelicals, themselves, insisted were most important: their churches. The task of evangelization did not stop for a racial revolution. What white evangelicals did with race as they tried to grow their churches is the subject of this article. Using the archives of the leading evangelical church growth theorists, this article traces the emergence and transformation of the Church Growth Movement (CGM). It shows how evangelistic strategies created in caste-conscious India in the 1930s came to be deployed in American metropolitan areas decades later. After first resisting efforts to bring these missionary approaches to the United States, CGM founder Donald McGavran embraced their use in the wake of the civil rights movement. During the 1970s, the CGM defined white Americans as “a people” akin to castes or tribes in the Global South. Drawing on the revival of white ethnic identities in American culture, church growth leaders imagined whiteness as pluralism rather than hierarchy. Embracing a culture of consumption, they sought to sell an appealing brand of evangelicalism to the white American middle class. The CGM story illuminates the transnational movement of people and ideas in evangelicalism, the often-creative tension between evangelical practices and American culture, and the ways in which racism inflected white evangelicals’ most basic theological commitments.
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白人福音派作为“人”:从印度到美国的教会成长运动
本文从一个简单的问题开始:白人福音派如何回应民权运动?传统的答案绝大多数是政治性的。随着故事的发展,白人福音派教徒变成了共和党人。相比之下,这篇文章在白人福音派信徒坚持认为最重要的地方发现了种族意义:他们的教堂。传福音的任务并没有因为种族革命而停止。这篇文章的主题是白人福音派教徒在努力发展教会的过程中如何处理种族问题。本文利用福音派教会增长理论家的主要档案,追溯了教会增长运动(CGM)的出现和转变。它展示了20世纪30年代在种姓意识强烈的印度创建的福音策略是如何在几十年后在美国大都市地区得到部署的。在最初抵制将这些传教方法引入美国的努力之后,CGM创始人唐纳德·麦加夫兰在民权运动之后接受了它们的使用。在20世纪70年代,CGM将美国白人定义为“一个民族”,类似于全球南方的种姓或部落。利用美国文化中白人民族身份的复兴,教会成长领袖将白人想象成多元主义,而不是等级制。他们信奉消费文化,试图向美国白人中产阶级推销一种有吸引力的福音主义品牌。CGM的故事阐明了福音派中人员和思想的跨国流动,福音派实践与美国文化之间往往具有创造性的紧张关系,以及种族主义如何影响白人福音派最基本的神学承诺。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
25.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: Religion and American Culture is devoted to promoting the ongoing scholarly discussion of the nature, terms, and dynamics of religion in America. Embracing a diversity of methodological approaches and theoretical perspectives, this semiannual publication explores the interplay between religion and other spheres of American culture. Although concentrated on specific topics, articles illuminate larger patterns, implications, or contexts of American life. Edited by Philip Goff, Stephen Stein, and Peter Thuesen.
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