
Award Of Merit, 2019 Christianity Today Book Awards (history/biography) More Than Forty Years Ago, Conservative Christianity Emerged As A Major Force In American Political Life. Since Then The Movement Has Been Analyzed And Over-analyzed, Declared Triumphant And, More Than Once, Given Up For Dead. But Because Outside Observers Have Maintained A Near-relentless Focus On Domestic Politics, The Most Transformative Development Over The Last Several Decades--the Explosive Growth Of Christianity In The Global South--has Gone Unrecognized By The Wider Public, Even As It Has Transformed Evangelical Life, Both In The Us And Abroad. The Kingdom Of God Has No Borders Offers A Daring New Perspective On Conservative Christianity By Shifting The Lens To Focus On The World Outside Us Borders. Melani Mcalister Offers A Sweeping Narrative Of The Last Fifty Years Of Evangelical History, Weaving A Fascinating Tale That Upends Much Of What We Know--or Think We Know--about American Evangelicals. She Takes Us To The Congo In The 1960s, Where Christians Were Enmeshed In A Complicated Interplay Of Missionary Zeal, Cold War Politics, Racial Hierarchy, And Anti-colonial Struggle. She Shows Us How Evangelical Efforts To Convert Non-christians Have Placed Them In Direct Conflict With Islam At Flash Points Across The Globe. And She Examines How Christian Leaders Have Fought To Stem The Tide Of Hiv/aids In Africa While At The Same Time Supporting Harsh Repression Of Lgbtq Communities. Through These And Other Stories, Mcalister Focuses On The Many Ways In Which Looking At Evangelicals Abroad Complicates Conventional Ideas About Evangelicalism. We Can't Truly Understand How Conservative Christians See Themselves And Their Place In The World Unless We Look Beyond Our Shores.
How does the global expansion of conservative Christianity challenge conventional understandings of American evangelicalism? Melani McAlister, a scholar of American studies and religion, utilizes extensive historical research to argue that the domestic focus of most political analysis obscures the transformative impact of global evangelical movements. By examining the intersection of missionary work, Cold War geopolitics, and international social issues, the author demonstrates that the identity of American evangelicals is fundamentally shaped by their interactions beyond national borders.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and critics recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of American religion, noting its success in shifting the analytical focus toward international contexts. Readers frequently highlight the academic rigor of the prose and the author's ability to synthesize complex geopolitical history with religious sociology.
Page Count:
368
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190213434
ISBN-13:
9780190213435
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