Category Archives: Research projects

Towards a global history of American evangelicalism

One of my highlights of the summer was taking part in the  ‘Towards a global history of American evangelicalism’ workshop at the Roosevelt Study Center, Middelburg, Netherlands. This workshop, funded by the Luce Foundation, followed up from a conference, of the same name, at the University of Southampton in 2014. The workshop was to discuss the planned production of a special issue of Journal of American Studies on the same theme. You can see what a happy and intellectually stimulated group of folks we were in the picture (courtesy of Hans Krabbendam: from left to right, David Swartz , John Maiden, Uta Balbier, Hans Krabbendam, Melani McAlister, John Corrigan, Heather Curtis,  Timothy Stoneman, Brandi Hughes, Axel Schäfer  and Kendrick OliverMiddelburg conference).

 

The American foreign missionary enterprise expanded from the 1820s, alongside the nation’s economic and imperial growth. During the Cold War period, evangelical missionary work expressed a universalist vision of American power, with Christianity often understood and utilized  as a  spiritual bulwark against the perceived global threat of Communism. In the later part of the 20th century, the numerical balance of Christianity in the world – and evangelicalism and Pentecostalism – has increasingly shifted to the global south. Scholars have highlighted the emergence of ‘world Christianity’ and the ‘diffusion’ of evangelicalism; and with it indigenous evangelical leaderships and practices, resistance to western paternalism, the reflexivity of missions, and increasingly transnational exchanges and flows of resources. What have been the changes and continuities in  American evangelicalism’s engagement with the wider world during this long period?

There were papers here on conferences (1966 Congress on World Evangelism and Lausanne 1974) and organisations (e.g. Prison Fellowship International; Sharing of Ministries Abroad USA); print and radio media; gender and mission; race and civil rights; foreign policy and international aid. The paper I presented concerned ongoing research on an US Episcopalian charismatic mission network, and its activities in Latin America and Africa since the 1980s. I argued that this network displayed a strong emphasis on the mutual sharing of resources and responsiveness to local priorities and leaderships in its work with dioceses abroad; and this reflected both and a growing emphasis in evangelical theology and practice of mission on interdependence and a blurring of lines between ‘sender’ and ‘receiver’. I’ll keep you posted on developments with the special issue as they emerge.

Times Higher awards!

 

Times Higher Education AwardsTHE4

The OU’s Religious Studies department has long been known for its formal dress code. Here are John Wolffe, John Maiden and Gavin Moorhead attending the Times Higher Education awards in London, where the project ‘Building on History: Religion in London’ was shortlisted in the Widening Participation or Outreach Initiative of the Year category.

This public engagement initative enabled the project team work alongside various community stakeholders in order to enhance understanding of the history of religious diversity in London and promote local engagement with religious history. You can learn more about the project at http://www.open.ac.uk/arts/research/religion-in-london/ .

The project team are joined here (top picture) by Graham Harvey (RS Head of Department) and Annika Mombauer (Associate Dean, Research). The University of Sheffield – many congratulations to them – were eventually presented with the trophy by the comedian Jack Dee, but even so it was a great evening!

A very spirited project!

Let me introduce to you my great grandmother – who was a practicing Spiritualist medium at a time when she could still have been convicted under the 1735 Witchcraft Act. Police officers would regularly attend her séances undercover, trying to prove she was up to no good. Unfortunately for them, her guides would always draw her attention to the fact that there was someone with ‘big feet’ in the room who shouldn’t be there – and she would calmly welcome ‘the police officer amongst us’ and scare the living daylights out of them!

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Times Higher Education awards

We have excellent news – the Building on History: Religion in London project, which involves John Wolffe, John Maiden and Gavin Moorhead from the department, has been shortlisted for the ‘Widening Participation or Outreach Initiative of the Year’ category of the Times Higher Education Awards 2014! Many thanks to all our project collaborators and stakeholders who made it such as success. See more details at: www.the-awards.co.uk.

For more details on the project please visit http://www.open.ac.uk/arts/research/religion-in-london/

The Votives Project

Our friends Emma-Jayne Graham and Jessica Hughes over at Classical Studies run 
a blog on their Votives Project, which explores votive offerings to the Greek and Roman gods and to the present day. Please check out their website which you can find at http://thevotivesproject.wordpress.com/us/ . Incidentally, the cover image for Marion Bowman and Ulo Valk’s new edited volume (pictured) features votive offerings at the Divine Mercy Shrine, Lagiwniki, Cracow, Poland.