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Preaching to Convert: Evangelical Outreach and Performance Activism in a Secular Age
John FletcherPreaching to Convert offers an intriguing new perspective on the outreach strategies of U.S. evangelicals, framing them as examples of activist performance, broadly defined as acts performed before an audience in the hopes of changing hearts and minds. Most writing about activist performance has focused on left-progressive causes, events, and actors. Preaching to Convert argues against such a constricted view of activism and for a more nuanced understanding of U.S. evangelicalism as a movement defined by its desire to win converts and spread the gospel.
The book positions evangelicals as a diverse, complicated group confronting the loss of conservative Christianity's default status in 21st-century U.S. culture. In the face of an increasingly secular age, evangelicals have been reassessing models of outreach. In acts like handing out Bible tracts to strangers on the street or going door-to-door with a Bible in hand, in elaborately staged horror-themed morality plays or multimillion-dollar creationist discovery centers, in megachurch services beamed to dozens of satellite campuses, and in controversial "ex-gay" ministries striving to return gays and lesbians to the straight and narrow, evangelicals are redefining what it means to be deeply committed in a pluralist world. The book's engaging style and careful argumentation make it accessible and appealing to scholars and students across a range of fields.
The book positions evangelicals as a diverse, complicated group confronting the loss of conservative Christianity's default status in 21st-century U.S. culture. In the face of an increasingly secular age, evangelicals have been reassessing models of outreach. In acts like handing out Bible tracts to strangers on the street or going door-to-door with a Bible in hand, in elaborately staged horror-themed morality plays or multimillion-dollar creationist discovery centers, in megachurch services beamed to dozens of satellite campuses, and in controversial "ex-gay" ministries striving to return gays and lesbians to the straight and narrow, evangelicals are redefining what it means to be deeply committed in a pluralist world. The book's engaging style and careful argumentation make it accessible and appealing to scholars and students across a range of fields.
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Cover
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Title
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Copyright
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Dedication
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Acknowledgements
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Contents
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Introduction: Tackling You to Change the World
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1. Performance Activism, Progressive Oversights, and Deep Differences
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2. Positioning Secular Age Evangelicalism
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3. Face to Face, Door to Door: Personal Evangelism and the Scandal of Salvation
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4. Apologies and Apologetics: Meta-Kerygmatic Evangelism
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5. Hell and Judgement: Houses of Distinction
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6. Prepare to Believe: Performing the Evangelical Worldview at the Creation Museum
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7. Staging Church, Marketing the Divine
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8. Change Is Possible: Exodus and the Opposite of Homosexuality
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Conclusion: American Grace and Evangelical True Believers
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NOTES
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
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INDEX
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Citable Link
Published: 2013
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
- 978-0-472-11915-8 (hardcover)
- 978-0-472-03652-3 (paper)
- 978-0-472-02987-7 (ebook)