Proselytizing is not evangelism: epistemic virtue and religious suasion at a post‐fundamentalist church in Nashville

Author:

Victor Sam1

Affiliation:

1. McGill University

Abstract

AbstractThis essay proposes a moral epistemological explanation for many US evangelicals’ growing unease about proselytizing. Drawing on extensive fieldwork at a church in Nashville, Tennessee, it highlights how a particular kind of epistemological certainty became a driving value of evangelical biblicism when early nineteenth‐century evangelicals attempted to apply the precepts of inductive science to textual interpretation. Members of the church I studied routinely express regret about this historical entanglement, which they blame for their denomination's dogmatic and ultimately unsuccessful fixation on persuading other people to believe the exact same things as they do. Against ‘proselytizing’ driven by ‘the desire to be right’, my interlocutors are trying to develop a practical social ethics whose explicitly biblical inspiration, they hope, will motivate others to want to become Christians. I show that as an analytic, religious suasion makes concepts like ‘proselytizing’ and ‘evangelism’ ethnographic again by sending them back to the field where our interlocutors themselves define and critique them. Doing this allows us to better grasp nuances in evangelicals’ own evolving ideologies and practices for making their religion intelligible to themselves and others.

Funder

Cambridge Trust

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Reference74 articles.

1. Baconianism and the Bible in the Disciples of Christ: James S. Lamar and “The Organon of Scripture”

2. The Ethics of Everyday Life

3. Barnes G.2003.Why don't they listen? John Stott on the most pernicious obstacles to effective world evangelism.Christianity Today 1 September.https://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2003/september/2.50.html.

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