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E-raamat: New Evangelical Social Engagement [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

Edited by (Associate Professor, Indiana University), Edited by (Professor of Religious Studies and American Studies, Director of the Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis)
  • Formaat: 336 pages, 5 illus.
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Jan-2014
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199329533
  • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
  • Raamatu hind pole hetkel teada
  • Formaat: 336 pages, 5 illus.
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Jan-2014
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199329533
Evangelicals are increasingly turning their attention toward issues such as the environment, international human rights, economic development, racial reconciliation, and urban renewal. This marks an expansion of the social agenda advanced by the Religious Right over the past few decades. For outsiders to evangelical culture, this trend complicates simplistic stereotypes. For insiders, it brings contention over what "true" evangelicalism means today. The New Evangelical Social Engagement brings together an impressive interdisciplinary team of scholars to map this new religious terrain and spell out its significance.

The volume's introduction describes the broad outlines of this "new evangelicalism." The editors identify its key elements, trace its historical lineage, account for the recent changes taking place within evangelicalism, and highlight the implications of these changes for politics, civic engagement, and American religion. Part One of the book discusses important groups and trends: emerging evangelicals, the New Monastics, an emphasis on social justice, Catholic influences, gender dynamics and the desire to rehabilitate the evangelical identity, and evangelical attitudes toward the new social agenda. Part Two focuses on specific issues: the environment, racial reconciliation, abortion, international human rights, and global poverty. Part Three contains reflections on the new evangelical social engagement by three leading scholars in the fields of American religious history, sociology of religion, and Christian ethics.
Acknowledgments ix
Contributors xi
Introduction: The New Evangelical Social Engagement 1(30)
Brian Steensland
Philip Goff
PART ONE Recent Evangelical Movements and Trends
1 "FORMED": Emerging Evangelicals Navigate Two Transformations
31(19)
James S. Bielo
2 Whose Social Justice? Which Evangelicalism? Social Engagement in a Campus Ministry
50(23)
John Schmalzbauer
3 All Catholics Now? Specters of Catholicism in Evangelical Social Engagement
73(21)
Omri Elisha
4 The New Monasticism
94(15)
Will Samson
5 "We Need a Revival": Young Evangelical Women Redefine Activism in New York City
109(20)
Adriane Bilous
6 New and Old Evangelical Public Engagement: A View from the Polls
129(28)
John C. Green
PART TWO Areas of Evangelical Social Engagement
7 Green Evangelicals
157(22)
Laurel Kearns
8 The Rise of the Diversity Expert: How American Evangelicals Simultaneously Accentuate and Ignore Race
179(21)
Gerardo Marti
Michael O. Emerson
9 Prolifers of the Left: Progressive Evangelicals' Campaign against Abortion
200(21)
Daniel K. Williams
10 Global Reflex: International Evangelicals, Human Rights, and the New Shape of American Social Engagement
221(21)
David R. Swartz
11 Global Poverty and Evangelical Action
242(23)
Amy Reynolds
Stephen Offutt
PART THREE Reflections on Evangelical Social Engagement
12 What's New about the New Evangelical Social Engagement?
265(15)
Joel Carpenter
13 Evangelicals of the 1970s and 2010s: What's the Same, What's Different, and What's Urgent
280(12)
R. Stephen Warner
14 We Need a New Reformation
292(13)
Glen Harold Stassen
Index 305
Philip Goff is director of the Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture and professor of Religious Studies and American Studies at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. Author or editor of over thirty books and journal volumes, he writes about the role of religion in American history, particularly its relationship to other aspects of American culture.

Brian Steensland is Associate Professor of Sociology at Indiana University. His first book, The Failed Welfare Revolution, received the Mary Douglas Prize and the Political Sociology Book Award. His academic articles have appeared in leading sociology journals, such as the American Journal of Sociology and Social Forces.