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EVERYDAY EVANGELICALS: LIFE IN A RELIGIOUS SUBCULTURE AFTER THE BELFAST AGREEMENT A New Perspective on Northern Irish Evangelicalism

Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

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Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement. A New Perspective on Northern Irish Evangelicalism. Everyday Evangelicals. Gladys Ganiel, Irish School of Ecumenics, Trinity College Dublin ( [email protected] ) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

EVERYDAY EVANGELICALS:

LIFE IN A RELIGIOUS SUBCULTURE AFTER THE BELFAST AGREEMENT

A New Perspective on Northern Irish Evangelicalism

Page 2: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Everyday Evangelicals

Gladys Ganiel, Irish School of Ecumenics, Trinity College Dublin ([email protected])

Claire Mitchell, Queen’s University Belfast, ([email protected])

Page 3: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Religion & the NI Conflict

Religion as an ethnic marker

But, evangelicalism as especially important for Protestant identity

Page 4: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

What is Evangelicalism?

Evangelicals 25 – 30 per cent of the Protestant population Emerged as a movement in 18th century

revivals What do evangelicals believe?

Must be ‘born again’ Bible is the inspired word of God Christ’s death on the cross was a historical event

necessary for salvation Christians must express their faith through social

action/evangelism

Page 5: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Evangelicalism & Macro Politics

Evangelicalism conceived in rigid social or political categories

Seen as a politicised religion, linked to conflict and boundary maintenance

Change to be expected in response to devolution

Page 6: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Micro-level Evangelicalism

Evangelicalism as a subculture based on beliefs as well as social relationships and networks.

Potential for subcultural resources to prompt change.

Page 7: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Findings: A Distinct Subculture

Some important intertwining of religion & politics, but five other significant ‘subcultural tools’

Page 8: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Centrality of ‘conversion’

ye must be born again!

Page 9: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Supernaturalism

Supernaturalism, attributing agency to God (often rather than to self)

Page 10: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Existential Questions

Predominance of existential questions (including fear of hell, meaning of life)

Page 11: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

The Advocate

The importance of the ‘advocate’

Page 12: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Everyday Life

Devotional life and practice (prayer meetings, daily bible readings, networks)

Page 13: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Importance?

As evangelicals negotiate social & political change, they don’t just react to macro political changes or simply draw on the religio-political ideas and resources that have been emphasised in the academic literature.

They have a much greater religious repertoire for ‘making sense’ of change.

Page 14: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Trajectories of Change

Privatising

Moderating

Transforming

Page 15: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Trajectories of Change

Converting

Conserving

Exiting

Page 16: Everyday Evangelicals : Life in a Religious Subculture after the Belfast Agreement

Conclusions: Evangelicalism in a Plural Public Sphere