Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Gerardo Martí
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Department of Sociology Davidson College
ANO 2017
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
ISSN 0021-8294
E-ISSN 1468-5906
DOI 10.1111/jssr.12325
CITAÇÕES 3
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 31d4b985a475719ee17582475afe0a11

Resumo

The Emerging Church movement (ECM) is sociologically interesting—not due to the size of its membership or the centrality of its congregations. Rather, the ECM is significant because it provides an opportunity to generate new concepts for the study religious innovation and social change. Using theoretical language, the ECM consists of institutional entrepreneurs who drive their religiously concerned movement by continually deconstructing and reframing beliefs, practices, and identities from 'mainstream' Christianity while at the same time promoting newly formulated and broadly resonant religious imperatives. As Emerging Christians cultivate new or altered religious practices, these must be continually legitimized. Furthermore, their renegotiated beliefs (heterodoxies) require new forms of organization (alternative congregations). Such action is not the work of isolated individuals, nor is it independent of societal conditions. Ultimately, the ECM consists of Emerging Christians who creatively operate through diffuse network structures across wide geographic spaces and among disparate social groups to enact a collective institutional entrepreneurship that seeks to reimagine the assumptions of conventional Christian congregational life.

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