Becoming Christians

Prayers in Christianity are often considered to be a theological or pastoral topic; while social scientific studies generally tend to reduce them, like prayers in other religious contexts, to the status of psychological responses bringing comfort to the practitioner, or a collective construction co...

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Main Authors: Jianbo Huang, Mengyin Hu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Donner Institute 2017-04-01
Series:Approaching Religion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/65906
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spelling doaj-650beb80972a473e9eb3a46873242ff92020-11-25T01:41:48ZengDonner InstituteApproaching Religion1799-31212017-04-017110.30664/ar.65906Becoming ChristiansJianbo Huang0Mengyin Hu1East China Normal UniversityEast China Normal University Prayers in Christianity are often considered to be a theological or pastoral topic; while social scientific studies generally tend to reduce them, like prayers in other religious contexts, to the status of psychological responses bringing comfort to the practitioner, or a collective construction connected with social and cultural institutions. However, what prayer actually is, and what it means to Christians who practise it remains an open issue for further, more intensive and thorough study. Based on fieldwork in an urban church in China, this article provides some perspectives on contemporary Chinese Christians and their prayer life, attempting to elaborate its possible significance, especially in terms of subject-formation processes within these Christians. Meanwhile, this article argues that, in working towards a better understanding of Christians, it is more efficacious to take ‘Christians’ as those who are, rather than a given or acquired identity, or a status of being, engaged in a process of becoming through a practice, or set of practices, which in this case is prayer,. Moreover, in the case of this Chinese Christian church, the practise of prayer also indicates some reflections on the cultural and religious diversity of contemporary Chinese society. https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/65906Prayers, Christians, Subject Formation, Contemporary China
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jianbo Huang
Mengyin Hu
spellingShingle Jianbo Huang
Mengyin Hu
Becoming Christians
Approaching Religion
Prayers, Christians, Subject Formation, Contemporary China
author_facet Jianbo Huang
Mengyin Hu
author_sort Jianbo Huang
title Becoming Christians
title_short Becoming Christians
title_full Becoming Christians
title_fullStr Becoming Christians
title_full_unstemmed Becoming Christians
title_sort becoming christians
publisher Donner Institute
series Approaching Religion
issn 1799-3121
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Prayers in Christianity are often considered to be a theological or pastoral topic; while social scientific studies generally tend to reduce them, like prayers in other religious contexts, to the status of psychological responses bringing comfort to the practitioner, or a collective construction connected with social and cultural institutions. However, what prayer actually is, and what it means to Christians who practise it remains an open issue for further, more intensive and thorough study. Based on fieldwork in an urban church in China, this article provides some perspectives on contemporary Chinese Christians and their prayer life, attempting to elaborate its possible significance, especially in terms of subject-formation processes within these Christians. Meanwhile, this article argues that, in working towards a better understanding of Christians, it is more efficacious to take ‘Christians’ as those who are, rather than a given or acquired identity, or a status of being, engaged in a process of becoming through a practice, or set of practices, which in this case is prayer,. Moreover, in the case of this Chinese Christian church, the practise of prayer also indicates some reflections on the cultural and religious diversity of contemporary Chinese society.
topic Prayers, Christians, Subject Formation, Contemporary China
url https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/65906
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AT mengyinhu becomingchristians
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