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Autobiography and the psychological study of religious lives
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ISBN: 1282594451 9786612594458 9042029129 1441614435 9781441614438 9789042029125 9789042025684 9042025689 9781282594456 6612594454 Year: 2008 Publisher: Amsterdam Rodopi

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This volume positions itself on the cutting edge of two fields in psychology that enjoy rapidly increasing attention: both the study of human lives and some core domains of such lives as religion and spirituality are high on the agenda of current research and teaching. Biographies and autobiographies are being approached in new ways and have become central to the study of human lives as an object of research and a preferred method for obtaining unique data about subjective human experiences. Ever since the beginning of the psychology of religion, autobiographies have also been pointed out as an important source of information about psychic processes involved in religiosity. In this volume, a number of leading theoreticians and researchers from Europe and the USA try to bring them back to this field by drawing on new insights and latest developments in psychological theory.


Book
Unsettled Minds
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ISBN: 0520942728 9780520942721 9780520256798 0520256794 Year: 2009 Publisher: Berkeley, Calif. London University of California Press

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This book examines how nineteenth- and twentieth-century American believers rejected older, often evangelical, theological traditions and turned to scientific psychologies to formulate new ideas about mind and spirit and new practices for spiritual growth. Christopher G. White looks in particular at how a group of liberal believers-including William James and G. Stanley Hall-turned away from traditional Christian orthodoxies and built a revised religious identity based on new psychological motifs and therapies. Unsettled Minds is the first book to explain the dramatic rise of new spiritualities of the mind, spiritualities that, by the early twenty-first century, were turning eagerly to scientific and clinical psychological studies to reimagine religion and the problems of religious uncertainty.


Book
The darkening age : the Christian destruction of the classical world
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ISBN: 1509812326 9781509812325 9781509816064 1509816062 Year: 2017 Publisher: London Macmillan

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Despite the long-held notion that the early Christians were meek and mild, going to their martyr's deaths singing hymns of love and praise, the truth, as Catherine Nixey reveals, is very different. Far from being meek and mild, they were violent, ruthless and fundamentally intolerant. Unlike the polytheistic world, in which the addition of one new religion made no fundamental difference to the old ones, this new ideology stated not only that it was the way, the truth and the light but that, by extension, every single other way was wrong and had to be destroyed. From the 1st century to the 6th, those who didn't fall into step with its beliefs were pursued in every possible way: social, legal, financial and physical. Their altars were upturned and their temples demolished, their statues hacked to pieces and their priests killed. It was an annihilation. Authoritative, vividly written and utterly compelling, this is a remarkable debut from a brilliant young historian.


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Neighboring faiths
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ISBN: 9780226168937 9780226169095 022616893X 022616909X 1322152101 9781322152103 Year: 2014 Publisher: Chicago London

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Christianity, Judaism, and Islam are usually treated as autonomous religions, but in fact across the long course of their histories the three religions have developed in interaction with one another. In Neighboring Faiths, David Nirenberg examines how Muslims, Christians, and Jews lived with and thought about each other during the Middle Ages and what the medieval past can tell us about how they do so today. There have been countless scripture-based studies of the three "religions of the book," but Nirenberg goes beyond those to pay close attention to how the three religious neighbors loved, tolerated, massacred, and expelled each other-all in the name of God-in periods and places both long ago and far away. Nirenberg argues that the three religions need to be studied in terms of how each affected the development of the others over time, their proximity of religious and philosophical thought as well as their overlapping geographies, and how the three "neighbors" define-and continue to define-themselves and their place in terms of one another. From dangerous attractions leading to interfaith marriage; to interreligious conflicts leading to segregation, violence, and sometimes extermination; to strategies for bridging the interfaith gap through language, vocabulary, and poetry, Nirenberg aims to understand the intertwined past of the three faiths as a way for their heirs to produce the future-together.


Book
Neurology and Religion
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9781316014165 9781107082601 9781107442962 1107082609 1107442966 1108770460 1316014169 1108764169 9781108764162 9781108770460 Year: 2019 Publisher: Cambridge Cambridge University Press

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This innovative book examines what can be learnt about the brain mechanisms underlying religious belief and practice from studying people with neurological disorders, such as stroke, epilepsy and Parkinson's disease. Using a clinical case study approach, the book analyses the interaction of social influences, religious upbringing and neurological disorders on lived religious experience in a number of different religions. The interdisciplinary contributors to the book ensure a variety of perspectives to help understand how the religious life is affected when different cognitive functions are impaired; how faith modifies the effects of neurological disorders; and how awareness of faith practices may assist in the treatment of these conditions.


Book
The making of the medieval Middle East : religion, society, and simple believers
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ISBN: 9780691179094 0691179093 0691203156 069118416X Year: 2018 Publisher: Princeton (N.J.): Princeton university press,

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In the second half of the first millennium CE, the Christian Middle East fractured irreparably into competing churches and Arabs conquered the region, setting in motion a process that would lead to its eventual conversion to Islam. Jack Tannous argues that key to understanding these dramatic religious transformations are ordinary religious believers, often called "the simple" in late antique and medieval sources. Largely agrarian and illiterate, these Christians outnumbered Muslims well into the era of the Crusades, and yet they have typically been invisible in our understanding of the Middle East's history. What did it mean for Christian communities to break apart over theological disagreements that most people could not understand? How does our view of the rise of Islam change if we take seriously the fact that Muslims remained a demographic minority for much of the Middle Ages? In addressing these and other questions, Tannous provides a sweeping reinterpretation of the religious history of the medieval Middle East. This provocative book draws on a wealth of Greek, Syriac, and Arabic sources to recast these conquered lands as largely Christian ones whose growing Muslim populations are properly understood as converting away from and in competition with the non-Muslim communities around them. -- A bold new religious history of the late antique and medieval Middle East that places ordinary Christians at the center of the story In the second half of the first millennium CE, the Christian Middle East fractured irreparably into competing churches and Arabs conquered the region, setting in motion a process that would lead to its eventual conversion to Islam. Jack Tannous argues that key to understanding these dramatic religious transformations are ordinary religious believers, often called "the simple" in late antique and medieval sources. Largely agrarian and illiterate, these Christians outnumbered Muslims well into the era of the Crusades, and yet they have typically been invisible in our understanding of the Middle East's history. What did it mean for Christian communities to break apart over theological disagreements that most people could not understand? How does our view of the rise of Islam change if we take seriously the fact that Muslims remained a demographic minority for much of the Middle Ages? In addressing these and other questions, Tannous provides a sweeping reinterpretation of the religious history of the medieval Middle East. This provocative book draws on a wealth of Greek, Syriac, and Arabic sources to recast these conquered lands as largely Christian ones whose growing Muslim populations are properly understood as converting away from and in competition with the non-Muslim communities around them. Review: "This book is a must-read for anyone who wishes to understand the world the Arabs found in the seventh century and how they interacted with the Christian majority. Tannous brilliantly weaves complex religious and social questions to shed an entirely new light on a period that is still pivotal for us today."--Muriel Debi , cole Pratique des Hautes tudes, PSL "In this strikingly original book, Jack Tannous has delivered a frontal assault on traditional assumptions about early Islam. His absorbing and persuasive exercise in microhistory focuses on the lived experience of ordinary people and presents us with a continuing Christian Middle East until at least the eleventh century."--Averil Cameron, University of Oxford "This is a marvelous book, dizzying in its detail, dazzling in its discipline. Tannous sees through the eyes not of intellectuals and professional theologians but of the vast mass of believers, whether Christian or Muslim. Meticulous, generous, evocative, and persuasive, The Making of the Medieval Middle East paints a neglected world in full color."--Margaret Mullett, professor emerita, Queen's University Belfast "Tannous draws on a rich and fascinating selection of primary source material to paint a fresh picture of the early medieval Middle East."--Robert G. Hoyland, author of In God's Path: The Arab Conquests and the Creation of an Islamic Empire "This is undoubtedly a work of major importance. By shifting the focus from intellectual elites to everyday Christian believers, Tannous provides a more illuminating understanding of the gradual transition to the majority Islamic world of the medieval Middle East."--Sebastian Brock, author of An Introduction to Syriac Studies "The Making of the Medieval Middle East is no less than a marvelous achievement--there isn't a stone Tannous has left unturned in his path of inquiry. Future scholars will have to reconsider their methods and theses in light of this bold and exceptional book."--Uriel I. Simonsohn, author of A Common Justice: The Legal Allegiances of Christians and Jews under Early Islam

Keywords

Middle East --- Moyen Orient --- Religion --- 28 <5-011> --- 28 <5-011> Christelijke kerken, secten. Kristelijke kerken--(algemeen)--Nabije-Oosten. Midden-Oosten --- 28 <5-011> Les diverses Eglises chretiennes:--general--Nabije-Oosten. Midden-Oosten --- Christelijke kerken, secten. Kristelijke kerken--(algemeen)--Nabije-Oosten. Midden-Oosten --- Les diverses Eglises chretiennes:--general--Nabije-Oosten. Midden-Oosten --- Christians-Middle East-History. --- Middle East-Church history. --- Middle East-Religion-History-To 1500. --- RELIGION / Christianity / History. --- Abbasid Baghdad. --- Arab Muslim immigrants. --- Arab conquerors. --- Arab conquests. --- Arab encampments. --- Arabic. --- Chalcedonians. --- Christian Middle East. --- Christian authorities. --- Christian beliefs. --- Christian communities. --- Christian community. --- Christian confession. --- Christian doctrines. --- Christian education. --- Christian history. --- Christian identity. --- Christian leaders. --- Christian literature. --- Christian message. --- Christian movements. --- Christian schools. --- Christian tradition. --- Christianity. --- Christians. --- Christian–Muslim interaction. --- Christian–Muslim relations. --- Church of the East. --- Eucharist. --- Islam. --- Islamic history. --- Islamic tradition. --- Jacob of Edessa. --- Jews. --- Miaphysite church. --- Miaphysite. --- Miaphysites. --- Middle Ages. --- Middle East. --- Middle Eastern Christian. --- Muhammad. --- Muslim habitation. --- Muslim rule. --- Muslim tradition. --- Muslims. --- Prophet. --- Qenneshre. --- Roman Middle East. --- Roman Syria. --- Roman state. --- Syria. --- Syriac language. --- basic education. --- canons. --- church leaders. --- clergy. --- community formation. --- confessional allegiance. --- confessional indifference. --- continuities. --- cultural institutions. --- debate. --- doctrinal difference. --- doctrinal theology. --- educational institutions. --- family connections. --- garrison cities. --- intercultural exchange. --- learned philosophers. --- literacy. --- material benefits. --- medieval Middle East. --- military upheaval. --- monasteries. --- non-Muslims. --- political discontinuity. --- political power. --- post-Chalcedonian. --- religious believers. --- religious claims. --- religious competition. --- religious conversion. --- religious difference. --- religious diversity. --- religious dynamics. --- religious framework. --- religious minority. --- religious motivation. --- religious questions. --- religious tradition. --- religious traditions. --- rival churches. --- sacraments. --- salaf. --- shared experiences. --- shared settings. --- simple Christians. --- simple Muslims. --- simple believer. --- simple believers. --- simple faith. --- simplicity. --- theological literacy. --- theological speculation. --- translations. --- violence.


Periodical
Journal of contemporary religion
Author:
ISSN: 13537903 Publisher: London

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2 <05> --- 2 <05> Godsdienst. Theologie--Tijdschriften --- Godsdienst. Theologie--Tijdschriften --- Periodicals --- Religious studies --- religion --- contemporary religion --- comparative religion --- sociology of religion --- religious denominations --- world religions --- religious studies --- new age movement --- spirituality --- Third World politics --- evangelical politics --- evangelicalism --- global religion --- Mother Goddess --- hinduism --- KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa) --- Draupadi --- fire walking --- Draupadi firewalking festival --- gender --- matriliny --- mother‐goddess religion --- book reviews --- new age ideology --- surveys --- sociology --- Africa --- Latin America --- matriarchy --- Theravada Buddhism --- British Theravada Buddhism --- Buddhism in Europe --- Western Buddhism --- funeral customs --- funerary rituals --- Japan --- Japanese death rituals --- British Forest Sangha --- living funeral --- seizenso (生前葬) --- non-religious funeral --- Christian Science --- Mary Baker Eddy (1821-1910) --- neo-pentecostalism --- deliverance --- charismatic movements --- quakerism --- British Quakerism --- quakers --- esotericism --- Western Esotericism --- Essenes --- New Age --- paganism --- Wicca --- Wiccan cosmology --- circle --- sacred circle --- sacred space --- witchcraft --- Modern Paganism --- George Gurdjieff (1866-1949) --- Gurdjieff Work --- ethnicity --- religious belonging --- religion and ethnicity --- Pentecostalism --- Mexico --- Mexican Pentecostalism --- speaking in tongues --- faith healing --- Zambia --- Frederick Chiluba --- Zambian Christianity --- religion and politics --- Standing Advisory Council on Religious Education (SACRE) --- religious education --- Brazil --- Catholicism --- Protestantism --- Evangelicalism --- Marcelo Rossi --- new Catholicism --- pillarization --- minority movements --- psychedelic communitas --- ritual --- Findhorn --- Paul Verhoeven --- René Girard --- exorcism --- Church of England --- Orthodox Church --- Orthodox theology --- female diaconate --- priesthood --- female priesthood --- new religious movements (NRM) --- scientology --- Soka Gakkai (創価学会) --- Japanese new religious movements --- psychedelic culture --- doof --- psychedelic dance music --- psychedelica --- film and literature --- Satan --- Goddess movement --- Goddess Feminism --- Marija Gimbutas (1921-1994) --- archaeology --- Malta --- science and religion --- science --- intermarriage --- American Jews --- Jewish identity --- training --- socialisation --- theological training --- Religion in the Netherlands --- Dutch ecumenical movement --- Ecumenism --- Christianization --- Christianisation --- Christianity --- Christianization of Europe --- theological education --- Scotland --- secularization --- secularisation --- religious decline --- evil --- communication --- storytelling --- demon possession --- supernatural assault --- combat narratives --- religiousness --- Anglicanism --- Anglican Church --- Anglican Clergy --- ordination --- Hungary --- Hungarian Jews --- mormonism --- mormons --- Chinese shamanic movements --- shamanism --- Chinese religious movements --- Malaysia --- Chinese shamanism --- Goddess of Mercy Devotional Society (GDMS) --- Guanyin --- Pray to the Heavenly Father (PHF) --- New Era Temple (NET) --- Confucianism --- Confucian Identity --- Transcendental Meditation (TM) --- Yoga --- Reiki (霊気) --- Western Spiritualism --- mediumship --- New Age Channelling --- neopaganism --- neo-paganism --- humanism --- philosophy --- Nagasaki Peace Park (Japan) --- atomic bomb --- buddhism --- Kannon (観音) --- Bodhisattva of Compassion --- Spirits of the Dead --- Spirit Appeasement --- World War II --- Transpersonal Psychology (TP) --- Ken Wilber --- consciousness --- Religious Pluralism --- Central Asia --- Unprogrammed Friends (Quakerism) --- comparative analysis --- American Catholic Identity --- Catholic Diocese --- Church-Going --- Christian counter-cult movement (CCM) --- anti-cult movement 'ACM) --- Vampire Subculture --- vampires --- vampirism --- J. K. Rowling --- Harry Potter books --- magic-as-technology --- fantasy --- children's literature --- fantasy literature --- fantasy novels --- fiction --- disenchantment --- new religions --- syncretic process --- Praxis theory --- Cognitive Anthropology --- Postmodernism --- Evangelism --- Alpha Programme (UK) --- cell church model --- religion and gender --- Damanhur (Italy) --- spiritual community --- ecovillages --- Game of Life --- Theory of Play --- Jewish Mysticism --- Judaism --- Ted Falcon --- Makom Ohr Shalom --- Heritage Front (Canada) --- neo-nazism --- white supremacy --- participant observation method --- Finland --- Finnish Church --- clergy --- religion and racism --- black clergy --- Wales (UK) --- Welsh Church --- European Union (EU) --- Orthodox Christianity --- Church of Greece --- Orthodox Church of Greece (OCG) --- religion and film --- Hollywood films --- medical staff --- nursing --- western spirituality --- Asian materialism --- immigration --- immigrants --- Immigrant religiosity --- ethnic identity --- Reformed Protestantism --- fundamentalism --- fundamentalist religions --- Fundamentalist Christianity --- Netherlands --- United Kingdom (UK) --- European Values surveys --- religion and state --- seva --- Hindu movements --- Ramakrishna Math --- Ramakrishna Mission --- iconography --- Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) --- Vivekananda (1863-1902) --- African witchcraft --- sangoma --- parapsychology --- Tibetan Buddhism --- guru-disciple --- Leonardo Boff --- theology --- trans-cultural phenomenology --- glossolalia --- Golden Light --- New Zealand --- christian glossolalia --- religious identity --- religious diversity --- spiritual love --- William James (1842-1910) --- Vatican --- Vatican documents --- New Age movement --- counterculture --- Alternative spirituality --- network models --- Vaisnava Hindu Association (Hungary) --- Govinda Maharaja --- France --- legislation --- Anti-Cult Law (France, 2001) --- ethnography --- Haitian Catholicism --- Marian devotion --- International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) --- Hare Krishna movement --- anti-cult movement (ACM) --- voodoo --- United States (US) --- Sweden --- unchurched spirituality --- unchurched religions --- churched religions --- Singapore --- godly religions --- godless religions --- typology of religions --- Japanese religions --- religious pluralism --- religious harmony --- publishing industry --- Christian Book Industry --- Christian Publishing --- book trade --- Northern Ireland --- Northern Ireland conflict --- religious conflicts --- Toronto Blessing --- Christian revivalism --- Toronto Airport Christian Fellowship (TACF) --- Alpha Course --- charismatic christianity --- futurology --- Norway --- Conservative Christian Organizations --- Agder (Norway) --- research --- implicit religion --- cross-cultural studies --- military chaplaincy --- military chaplains --- religious neutrality --- alternative religions --- lawsuits --- custody --- child custody disputes --- anti-semitism --- superstition --- Jews --- religion and media --- moral authority --- Drammen (Norway) --- morality --- ethics --- ethical values --- Council for Religious Studies (CONER-SC) --- Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902-1994) --- Lubavitcher Rebbe --- Beis Menachem --- messianic movements --- Lubavitch Messianism --- prophecies --- Celtic Christianity --- psychological type theory --- organizational culture --- religious institutions --- Franciscan Order of Friars Minor (OFM) --- religious organizations --- popular culture --- religion and technology --- technology and religion --- science-fiction --- science fiction and fantasy --- Contemporary Paganism --- millenarianism --- new era millenarianism --- Kuan-yin --- Bodhisattva --- Kuan-yin Worship in America --- American Buddhism --- tourism and pilgrimage --- Israel --- Christian Zionism --- cults --- cult recruitment --- Cult Formation --- consumerism --- psychopathology model --- Fight Club (novel) --- Chuck Palahniuk --- Gujarati Hindu communities --- hinduism (UK) --- Hinduism (New Zealand) --- hindu traditions --- diaspora Hinduism --- Battlestar Galactica (TV series) --- monotheism and polytheism --- atheism --- Pentecostal women --- Prem Rawat --- Sant --- Divine Light Mission --- Hinduism --- Narasiṃha --- Andhra Pradesh (India) --- popular Hinduism --- Religious and Moral Pluralism (RAMP) --- antisemitism --- anti-Semitic beliefs --- psychology --- interreligious dialogue --- Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) --- China --- Chinese Protestantism --- Cyprus --- Orthodox Church of Cyprus (OCC) --- Korean Christianity --- South Korea --- Bible-Copying Movement --- copying the bible --- confucianism and christianity --- evangelical youth --- prayer meetings --- darshan --- Jagannath --- religion and internet --- online religion --- communication technology --- glocalization --- Cambodia --- ethnographic research --- Sikhism --- Sikh communities --- sikhism in Italy --- Left Behind (TV series) --- American entertainment industry --- violence and death --- End Times --- christian literature --- death pornography --- electronic dance music --- conscious partying movement --- psy-trance --- Greece --- European Values Study (EVS) --- Ireland --- Catholic Church --- Clerical Child Sex Abuse --- child abuse --- sexual abuse --- child sexual abuse --- Catholic Ireland --- marketing theory --- Neocatechumenal Way (NCW) --- religious marketing --- renewal movements --- Church as an inn --- rhetorical theory --- Joel Osteen --- Lakewood Church (Texas) --- Christian preachers --- Poland --- religious clothing --- religious habit --- religious dress --- Catholic sisters --- Catholic Nuns --- mixed-faith --- religious transmission --- Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual University (BKWSU) --- disasters --- 9-11 --- World Trade Center (WTC) --- Raja yoga --- Life Spirituality --- Anglo-Indian Christianity --- India --- Tamil Saivism --- bhakti movement --- Tamil Nadu (India) --- British Sikhism --- Italy --- Italian Religion and Spirituality Project --- Italian Catholicism --- vicarious religion --- Grace Davie --- British Deaf Community --- disenfranchised grief --- education systems --- faith-based schools --- Indian religion --- technology --- technological society --- technological progress --- role-playing games --- religious behavior --- virtual religions --- online religions --- Darkmists --- Finnish Wicca movement --- classifications --- church and state --- Finnish Free Wicca Association (FFWA) --- Asatru --- neopagan movement --- Germany --- Interpretive Drift --- Tanya Luhrmann --- Coming Home Experience (CHE) --- immigrant identity --- ethnic religiousness --- de-differentiation --- caregivers --- spiritual belief --- religious belief --- spiritual discrimination --- religious discrimination --- Religiosity and Altruism --- happiness --- religion and altruism --- christian values --- Law and legislation --- marriage --- Civil Partnership Act (UK) --- ceremonial law --- religious weddings --- marriage law --- British Social Attitudes Survey (BSA) --- religious affiliation --- multi-cultural society --- Catholic religious life --- consecration --- virginity --- consecration of virgins --- Evangelical Contribution on Northern Ireland (ECONI) --- chinese religion --- Chinese Christian Church --- bioethics --- medical ethics --- Joseph Ber Soloveitchik (1903-1993) --- Conspirituality --- New Age spirituality --- conspiracy thinking --- conspiracy theories --- conspiracism --- conspiracies --- religious micro public spheres --- Jürgen Habermas --- Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) --- personal development --- management --- human resources (HR) --- ethics of sensitivity --- new age philosophy --- photography --- photographic research methods --- local churches --- freemasonry --- rituals --- ritual experiences --- Australia --- contemporary witchcraft --- wicca --- Rejection of Christianity Scale --- Paranormal Belief --- Jewish Spiritual Renewal (JSR) --- egalitarianism --- Haredi communities --- Ultra-Orthodox Jews --- homosexuality --- Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) --- World Youth Day (WYD) --- pilgrimage --- multi-religious society --- popular music --- religion and music --- heavy metal music --- christian metal music --- U2 (rock band) --- music and religion --- Gospel Hall Brethren --- British National Health Service (NHS) --- Israeli secularism --- traditionalism --- secularity --- non-religion --- education and non-religion --- religion and education --- acquisition of religion --- belief acquisition --- Credibility Enhancing Display (CRED) --- Indian atheist movement --- secularisation processes --- British secularity --- islam --- terrorism --- discrimination --- non-religious --- terminology --- anthropology --- divinisation of technology --- violence --- René Girard (1923-2015) --- warfare --- militainment --- North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) --- contemporary spirituality --- comics --- comic books --- pluralism --- Danish Pluralism Project --- Denmark --- religious groups in Britain --- Polish migrants --- afterlife --- afterlife belief --- life after death --- Australian youth --- commitments --- religiosity --- Orthodox Jewish women --- Orthodox femininity --- religious writing --- Western Europe --- secularism --- Secular Religion --- Muslim women --- niqabs and burqas --- Islam in Europe --- islam in Britain --- integration --- islamophobia --- religious tolerance --- education --- segregation --- Marian apparition shrines --- Catholic Marian faith --- Virgin Mary --- Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) --- music --- religious music --- near-death experiences (NDE) --- Hans Schauder (1911-2001) --- Marcus Lefébure (1933-2012) --- counseling --- self-spirituality --- artificial insemination --- reproductive technology --- medicine --- religion and science --- Jewish medical ethics --- belief --- youth --- Evangelical Christianity --- Christian Identity --- English Universities --- religion and society --- Evangelical Anglicanism --- Pope John Paul II (1920-2005) --- performance of belief --- mourning events --- religious mediatisation --- religion in Poland --- Youth and Belief --- dimensions of belief --- hip hop --- Gospel rap --- Religion in Britain --- post-secularity --- religiosity in Britain --- Indonesia --- Indonesian Islam --- popular religion --- Islamic popular culture --- advertisements --- Israeli advertising --- corporatization --- Emerging Church --- protestantism --- Protestant movements --- personal religiosity --- Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism --- hermeneutics --- congregational hermeneutics --- Christian Zionist movement --- believers and non-believers --- atheists --- religious believers --- traditions --- Catholic ritual traditions --- All Souls’ Day --- ritual innovation --- collective commemoration of the dead --- Pentecostal spirituality --- phenomenology --- Nordic countries --- religion in the Nordic countries --- faith --- community --- Austria --- Muslim religiosity --- female migrants --- Ravidassia community --- Indian religions --- Britain --- sexual minority rights --- religion and sexuality --- tolerance --- islam in the Netherlands --- religion and security --- Latin-American Evangelicalism --- New Apostolic Reformation --- evangelical networks --- Carlos Annacondia --- South-American preachers --- evangelical social engagement --- Evangelical masculinity --- Acts29 --- Acts 29 --- deconversion --- testimony --- testimonials --- Evangelical Exit Narratives --- religious exiting --- Technology and Ecclesiology --- digital technology --- worship practices --- holistic spirituality --- holistic milieu --- Buddhism --- Buddhist identity --- Atheist Movement in the United States --- evangelical Pentecostalism --- death of a child --- soul contract theodicy --- Greek belief --- Thailand --- meditation --- Lithuania --- femininity --- Ultra-Orthodox thought --- inter-religious dialogue --- Catholicism in Britain --- abortion --- Bible --- Bible-centricism --- demography --- Spain --- Spanish religiosity --- religious groups --- Christian organisations --- religious plurality --- ecocentrism --- anthropocentrism --- buddhist lifestyle --- Magnolia Grove Monastery (US) --- global yoga --- social activism --- charity --- contemporary yoga --- channeling --- business consulting --- Lance Armstrong --- religion and spirituality --- symbolic culture --- religious symbols --- music consumption --- religious leadership --- disaster risk reduction --- religious faith --- social behaviour --- volunteering --- inclusive individualism --- religious indicators --- Catholicism in Ireland --- Catholic identity --- youth and religion --- Anglican cathedrals --- British Wicca --- radical feminism --- Goddess Spirituality --- Monica Sjöö (1938–2005) --- spirituality and conspiracism --- social media --- facebook --- alternative therapy --- alternative therapies --- secularisation theory --- Pentecostal conversion --- domestic violence --- socialism --- religion and socialism --- anti-religiosity --- LGBT activism --- religious minorities --- assimilation --- structural assimilation --- Milton Gordon (1918-2019) --- stages of assimilation --- ecology --- climate change --- eco-religion --- religion and ecology --- Treaty of Lisbon --- Portugal --- churches --- identity --- European integration --- women --- postsecularism --- secular-believer --- food assistance --- social space --- adult siblings --- family --- intimacy --- lateral reading --- sisters --- spiritual marketplace --- alternative fairs --- quantitative methods --- immigrant buddhists --- Buddhism in Denmark --- religious demography --- immigrant religion --- Harry Potter --- magic --- representation of religion --- pagans --- print media --- newspapers --- trope analysis --- catholicism --- Canada --- Catholic disaffiliation --- retention --- lapsation --- quantitative data --- anti-christian --- adolescents --- prejudice --- worship music --- third-space theory --- busking --- prayer room --- Senegal --- marabouts --- enchanted religious imagination --- spiritual capital --- religious capital --- Christian ritual --- ethnographic studies --- cross-cultural analysis --- ritual inefficacy --- Eastern Europe --- improvisation --- healing --- Transylvania --- canonization --- religious movements --- Swaziland --- African Independent Christianity --- AIDS (HIV) --- intergenerational relations --- risk --- Swazi Jerikho Zionism --- Guatemala --- religious contestation --- Q’eqchi’-Maya --- ritual authority --- Samoa --- intersectionality --- temporality --- failure --- Holy Land --- muslim identity --- Western Muslims --- identity development --- objectification --- international student migration --- international students --- Hillsong --- addiction --- modernity --- Charles Taylor --- malaise of modernity --- hegemony --- oratory --- discourse --- Muslims in Sweden --- creationist movement --- Creationism --- Ken Ham --- virtual communities --- digitisation --- Evangelical belief --- online Christianity --- emotion --- language --- online testimonies --- discourse analysis --- Nine Emperor Gods Festival --- religious festival --- religious practice in Singapore --- procession --- church community --- social actions --- relationships --- megachurch --- social capital --- social engagement --- Spanish Catholic Church --- economic recession --- social welfare --- spanish politics --- Irish society --- Irish Roman Catholic Church --- economic crisis --- Irish government --- religious cultures --- globalization --- globalisation --- symbolic boundary-making --- cultural difference --- religious knowledge --- gender roles --- parenthood --- gender equality --- childcare --- imagined future --- Brazilian culture --- female body --- national identity --- immigrant religiosity --- Mexican–American immigrants --- religious authority --- gender culture --- womanhood --- Roman Catholic Church --- migration --- Jainism --- second-generation Jains --- Jain dharma --- religious practices --- femininities and masculinities --- Switzerland --- female religious leadership --- female leadership --- congregations --- Russia --- religious freedom in Russia --- Pussy Riot --- Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) --- religious–secular boundary --- blasphemy --- religious feelings --- human rights --- punk prayer --- roadside memorials --- Chile --- commemorative sites --- ex-votos --- folk saints --- violent death --- animitas --- burkini --- Muslim head-coverings --- hijab --- burkini ban --- United Arab Emirates --- obscenity --- profanity --- offensive language --- Twitter --- Evangelical Lutheran Church in Denmark (ELCD) --- lived religion --- Halloween --- new religious practices --- Valentine's day --- Christian dance --- religious experience --- social psychology --- attachment theory --- correspondence hypothesis --- compensation hypothesis --- Asia --- philanthropy --- humanitarianism --- religious giving --- development ethics --- community development --- Myanmar --- gift-giving --- Buddhist ethics --- reciprocity --- hospitality --- dāna --- social relations --- debt --- vinaya --- discipline --- monastic behavior --- lay buddhists --- buddhist monks --- religious conversion --- Chinese–Indonesian religiosity --- interreligious relations --- anti-conversion legislation --- Nepal --- Sri Lanka --- religious nationalism --- proselytization --- theorizing --- study of religion --- practice theories --- individualism --- ritual theory --- ritual studies --- angel spirituality --- subjunctive --- ritual framing --- habitus --- capital --- generation --- normativity --- tradition --- relational --- animism --- fieldwork --- material religion --- religious materiality --- personhood --- phenomenological anthropology --- feminist critique --- ontology --- ontological turn --- hinduism in Norway --- Tamil Hindus --- online worship --- YouTube --- digital religion --- Irish mythology --- Morrigan --- e-community --- Orthodox Judaism --- omniscient gods --- Kabbalah --- Teshuva movement --- Cuba --- permaculture --- ecumenical --- sustainability --- religious upbringing --- religious nones --- Brexit --- anti-abortion activism --- Czech Republic --- Slovakia --- anti-abortion movement --- global conservative network --- Greek Orthodox Church --- religious change --- church politics --- Greek Orthodoxy --- lay involvement --- organisational reform --- ecclesiastical governance --- religious peacebuilding --- religion and peace --- rhetoric of love --- religion and violence --- Ethiopia --- religious organisations --- religion and integration --- demonology --- spirit-possession --- sexual difference --- spiritual warfare --- theologically engaged anthropology --- Deliverance church --- Emerging Church movement --- resonance --- congregational music --- interreligious marriage --- ethnic dilution --- mixed couples --- offspring --- identification processes --- interfaith families --- Damanhur Federation --- spiritual communities --- performative economics --- Taiwan --- Buddhism in Taiwan --- economy --- humanity --- alternative medicine --- complexity theory --- secularization theory --- religious complexity --- desecularization --- deprivatization --- black religious pluralism --- hip hop religion --- Universal Zulu Nation --- Afrika Bambaataa (Lance Taylor) --- hybridity --- African diaspora --- satanism --- hate speech --- The Satanic Temple (TST) --- black mass --- Satanist movement --- iTunes --- mobile applications --- mobile apps --- religious applications --- sacred texts --- japanese new religions --- cult controversy --- legitimation --- Tenrikyo (天理教) --- Peter Clarke --- Tenrikyo in France --- culture-free religion --- second generation --- Muslims --- children of immigrants --- Croatia --- welfare --- religious–secular competition theory --- dominant religion --- pro-Trump Evangelicalism --- Christian nationalism --- Intelligent Design (ID) --- Richard Dawkins --- inerrancy --- congregational boundary work --- biblical inerrancy --- Muslim pilgrimage --- hajj --- umrah --- reformism --- sufism --- Afghanistan --- Pakistan --- anti-colonialism --- Naqshbandiyya-Mujaddidīyya Sufi order --- Bodh Gaya --- weikza-lam --- civil society --- children --- life satisfaction --- Russian Longitudinal Monitoring Survey (RLMS-HSE) --- endogeneity --- Chinese international students --- conversion --- diversity --- British universities --- continuity and change --- Georg Simmel (1858-1918) --- conversion to Islam --- Pope Francis --- abuse scandals --- faith-based organizations --- universalism --- social services --- justice --- monism --- LGBT --- political participation --- group consciousness --- Neo-Pagan movement --- Rodoslavie --- anti-modernism --- radical Siberian Neo-Paganism --- Russian neo-paganism --- theism --- metaphysical beliefs --- religious beliefs --- theists --- digital activism --- internet --- Sikh women --- Sikh feminism --- fourth-wave feminism --- online religious spaces --- Hindu women --- Tamil diaspora --- digital counter-publics --- bhikkhuni ordination --- Thai Forest Tradition --- Buddhism in Australia --- online activism --- conversion narratives --- Paul Ricoeur (1913-2005) --- Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (UCKG) --- Brazilian pentecostalism --- Donald Trump --- evangelical identity --- sports chaplaincy --- women’s football --- pastoral care --- religion and sport --- Kenya --- missionary work --- religious competition --- religious aesthetics --- Christian-Muslim relations --- mihadhara --- Lebanon --- dehumanisation --- social inequalities --- Shi’ism --- Shi’i Islam --- Islam in Europa --- Karbala --- Sunni --- Shia --- Fredrik Barth (1928-2016) --- sectarianism --- Norwegian Muslims --- Sunni–Shia conflict --- diaspora --- high-tech industry --- workplace --- identity conflict --- Reform Judaism --- Reform Jewish ritual --- Norwegian Asatru --- heathenry --- Estonia --- commemorative rituals --- People’s Republic of China (PRC) --- war commemoration --- mourning --- Kuomintang (KMT) --- death ritual --- ritualised remembrance --- video games --- shinto (神道) --- Ōkami (大神) --- Japanese mythology --- Japanese religion --- fictional world --- South African Buddhism --- East Asian Buddhism --- Soka Gakkai International (SGI) --- Pure Land Buddhism --- Foguangshan --- Kwan Um School of Zen --- satsang dispositif --- self-transformation --- Mooji (Anthony Paul Moo-Young) --- neo-advaita --- Satsang-movement --- Islam in Poland --- Eastern European Islam --- Polish Islam --- religious attendance --- David Icke --- spirituality and media --- psalms --- cultural festival --- heritage studies --- nonreligious identity --- nonreligion --- cultural religion --- millennials --- multiple classification analysis (MCA) --- conversion and deconversion --- marginalization --- Catholic youth --- nationalism --- feminism --- charisma --- Church of Christ the King (CCK) --- pilgrimage studies --- pilgrimages --- African Pentecostalism --- Neo-Pentecostalism --- historical sociology --- narratives --- secular age --- social imaginaries --- intersubjectivity --- self-help literature --- institutional religion --- therapeutic culture --- contemporary art --- Japanese Buddhism --- buddhist economics --- affective retail --- capitalism --- butsudan (仏壇) --- opinion polls --- Yemeni refugees --- petitions --- Korean Muslims --- Islam in South Korea --- Iran --- historiography --- majority religion --- corona --- coronavirus --- covid-19 --- pandemic --- public health --- evangelical churches --- lockdown restrictions (US) --- Belgium --- England --- isomorphism --- gendered migration --- transnationalism --- seafarers --- chaplains --- port chaplains --- Doxecology

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