Conversion to Christianity
Conversion to Christianity is the religious conversion of a previously non-Christian person that brings about changes in what sociologists refer to as the convert's "root reality" including their social behaviors, thinking and ethics. The sociology of religion indicates religious conversion was an important factor in the emergence of civilization and the making of the modern world. Conversion is the most studied aspect of religion by psychologists of religion, but there is still very little actual data available.
Christianity is growing rapidly in the global South and East, primarily through conversion. Different methods of conversion have been practiced historically. There is evidence of coercion by secular leaders in the Early and Late Middle Ages, though coercion as a method has never been approved or even supported by any majority of Christian theologians.
Different Christian denominations may perform various different kinds of rituals or ceremonies of initiation into their community of believers. The primary ritual of conversion is baptism, while different denominations differ with regards to confirmation.
According to a 2001 study by religion professor David B. Barrett of Columbia University and historian George Thomas Kurian, approximately 2.7 million people were converted to Christianity that year from another religion, while approximately 3.8 million people overall were converting annually.[2][3] In the first decades of the twenty-first century, Pentecostalism is the largest and fastest growing form of Christianity;[4] this growth is primarily due to religious conversion.[5][6]
Individual conversion
[edit]James P. Hanigan writes that individual conversion is the foundational experience and the central message of Christianity, adding that Christian conversion begins with an experience of being "thrown off balance" through cognitive and psychological "disequilibrium", followed by an "awakening" of consciousness and a new awareness of God.[7] Hanigan compares it to "death and rebirth, a turning away..., a putting off of the old..., a change of mind and heart".[8] The person responds by acknowledging and confessing personal lostness and sinfulness, and then accepting a call to holiness thus restoring balance. This initial internal conversion is followed by practices that further the process of conversion, which according to Hanigan, will include ethical changes.[9]
In examples of conversion from the New Testament, such as Peter's conversion[10] and Paul's,[11] Hanigan perceives this same common "death and rebirth" experience. He says these individuals did not respond out of a sense of guilt, but from awe, reverence, and holy fear of what they perceived as God's presence.[12]
Comparative studies of the early twenty-first century offer the insight that religious conversion provides a new locus of self-definition, moral authority and social identity through the acceptance of religious actions that seem more fitting and true to the recipient.[13]
Anthropologist Robert Hefner adds that "Conversion assumes a variety of forms... because it is influenced by a larger interplay of identity, politics and morality".[14] The message of Truth, a redemptive identity, and acceptance into a social organization whose purpose is the propagation of that message has proven to be a revolutionary force in its own right.[15]
Theology
[edit]According to sociologist Ines W. Jindra, there is a "theological dimension" to conversion.[16] Avery Dulles quotes Bernard Lonergan saying "The subject of theology, then, is the person undergoing conversion to God".[17] The conversion experience is basic and has the characteristics of being "concrete, dynamic, personal, communal, and historical." Through this focus on the individual, theology of conversion is provided with the same characteristics in its foundation.[18]
Religious historian David W. Kling's History of Christian Conversion lists nine broad themes common to conversion narratives.[19] Jindra describes the first theme as "human cognizance of divine presence," while Kling says, "God becomes real to people" through conversion.[20][21] Conversion always has "context": humans are "socially constituted" beings and religious conversion always occurs in a social context.[20] Jindra writes that, while all conversion accounts vary, they all show evidence of being based upon personal internal experiences of crisis expressed through the specific historical context in which the converts lived.[22]
There are aspects of both "movement and resistance" in conversion. Christianity has, from its beginnings, been an evangelical mission oriented religion which has spread through conversion. However, people naturally tend toward inertia, toward the familiar, unless otherwise motivated toward change, making conversion the exception not the rule in history.[20]
There is both "continuity and discontinuity" in the conversion process. Conversion can be disruptive and cause a rupture with the past, but rupture is rarely complete. Aspects of the past are frequently kept, resulting in a kind of "hybrid" faith.[23] Gender also plays a direct role in how people do or do not convert.[24]
Testimonies and narratives provide the vocabulary of conversion.[25] In the more famous conversion stories, such as Augustine's and Martin Luther's, it is apparent the conversion story was later used, not only for personal insight and transformation, but also for drawing in potential converts.[26] Kling writes that "the influence of [such] personal testimonies on the history of conversion cannot be over-estimated."[25] Indications from Jandra's twenty-first century research indicates this is also true for more ordinary, less famous, conversions.[27] Conversion produced change in the lives of most converts in important and positive ways: Jindra says "they became more stable, found meaning in life, tackled their former problematic biographical trajectories, and improved their relationships (Jindra, 2014)".[26]
Conversion has historically been impacted by how personal "identity" and sense of self is defined. This can determine how much intentional action on the part of the individual convert has directed outcome, and how much outside forces may have impinged upon personal agency instead.[24] In Christian conversion, there is nearly always a network of others who influenced the convert prior to conversion.[26] Jindra writes that the specific context, which includes the ideology of the group being joined, the individual convert's particular crisis, "and the degree of agency vs. the influence of others" are important aspects influencing whether converts change or do not change after a conversion.[21][21]
These factors overlap with research psychologist Lewis Rambo's stages of conversion.[16] Rambo's model of conversion includes context, crisis (involving some form of searching by the prospective convert), encounter, and interaction, (with someone who believes in the new religious belief system). This is followed by commitment and its results.[16]
Social science
[edit]In his book Sociology of Religion, German sociologist Max Weber writes that religious conversion begins with the prophet, as the voice of revelation and vision, calling others to break with tradition and bring their lives into conformity with his "world-building truth."[28] Weber believed that prophetic ideals can become, through the conversion of a community of followers, "a force for world transformation as powerful as anything in human history.[29]
Calling conversion and Christianization "twin phenomena", Hefner has written that religious conversion was an important factor in the emergence of civilization and the making of the modern world.[30] According to Hefner, the "reformulation of social relations, cultural meanings and personal experience" involved in conversion carries with it an inherent "world building aspect".[31]
In the late nineteenth century, the development of world religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam and Buddhism) was seen as part of the inevitable march toward human enlightenment in a linear upward evolution.[32] Anthropology effectively demonstrated the failure of this model to provide explanation for religious variations.[33]
The world religions developed institutions capable of standardizing knowledge and some have argued that this helped them survive while "empires and economic orders have come and gone".[34] But in fact, only a few religions have been successful in propagating themselves over the long term, and standardized doctrine does not necessarily impact individual conversion and belief.[35]
One of the most influential works in sociology of religion from the 1960s is Robert Bella's (1964) Religious Evolution, which argued that world religions all proclaim the existence of a transcendental realm that is superior to everyday reality, thereby legitimizing salvation/conversion experiences designed to link humans with that world.[36] Bella describes the possibility of redemption/conversion under these terms as "world-shaking in its consequences".[37] The tension between ordinary reality and the transcendent creates recognition of a need for social reform, driven by a redemptive vision, that remakes the world rather than passively accepting it.[38] In this way, Hefner says, world religions loosened the grip of tradition and laid the foundation for human freedom.[39]
Psychology
[edit]While conversion is the most studied aspect of religion by psychologists of religion, there is little empirical data on the topic, and little change in method since William James' classic Varieties of Religious Experience in 1902. [40] James Scroggs and William Douglas have written on seven current concerns in the psychology of conversion.
- Definition. Calling this the "oldest issue in the field", Scroggs and Douglas indicate psychologists ask whether conversion requires a sudden about-face or gradual change. There is no consensus.[41] The word connotes a sudden about-face, but psychologists are unwilling to let go of the possibility of gradual conversion.[41]
- Pathology. Freud saw religion as a pathology, and those who follow his school of thought have continued to do so.[42] Empirical studies indicate religion is associated with good mental health among women, that it aids with depression and overcoming serious problems like heroin addiction, and that generally, there are significant links between religion and spirituality and good physical and mental health.[43][44][45] In Scroggs and Douglas's view, which view a psychologist takes depends on their training and personal commitment to faith or non-faith.[46]
- Type of person. Many wonder if there is one kind of person that is more likely to be converted than others.[47] Sociologists stress the importance of such variables as social class, group expectations, and social change (as in American frontier society or contemporary China). According to Scroggs and Douglas, William "James regarded the sick soul as the most likely candidate for conversion. The sick soul lives 'close to the pain threshold.' He is generally introverted and pessimistic in outlook, taking the evil of the world profoundly to heart. The sick soul is brooding, steeped in existential angst. He is Kierkegaard's man who is in despair and knows he is in despair".[47]
Trauma and existential crisis can lead to conversion. For the already converted, trauma is also often associated with "beneficial changes in self-perception, relationships, and philosophy of life, and positive changes in the realm of existential, spiritual, or religious matters" according to a study by psychologists Rosemary de Castella and Janette Simmonds.[48][49]
A 2011 study indicates conversion can take either an inward form, wherein religion becomes the primary guiding principle and goal of the convert's life, or it can take an outward form where religion mostly serves other purposes, such as political or economic goals, which are more important to that individual than religion. For those who experience inward conversion, lower levels of depression, anxiety and stress are associated, while higher levels are associated with those who practice outward conversion only. [50]
- Age. Scroggs and Douglas say that early writers on the psychology of conversion were unanimous in regarding adolescence as the most probable age for conversion.[51]
Accordingly Ferm writes that, "It is probably fair to conclude from Erikson's theories that both the identity crisis in adolescence and the integrity crisis in the middle years constitute ripe moments for conversion".[52]In surveys of three churches, psychologist Robert Ferm found the average age of conversion to be 43, 46, and 41 years respectively.(Ferm, Robert, The Psychology of Christian Conversion. Westwood, N. J., Fleming Revell, I959,p. 218.) Converts made by Graham's first British campaign averaged in their middle twenties.[52] Jung emphasized mid to late thirties... Hiltner writes that conversion "is most important, most likely, and most cultivatable in the thirties, rather than being regarded primarily as an adolescent phenomenon".[52]
- Conscious or unconscious. Exactly how much of the conversion experience is brought on by conscious control, and how much by unconscious factors behind or even beyond an individual, is also a matter of debate.[52] Forces beyond conscious control are cited by the majority of converts. Scriggs and Douglas wrote that "most psychologists agree the role of unconscious factors is extensive and often decisive in conversion, and that a long period of subconscious incubation precedes sudden conversions".[52] Allport, Maslow, Rogers, and others stress the role of conscious decision.[53]
- Science-versus-religion. Psychologists as social scientists tend to operate according to a nothing-but reductionism. Conversion must be described as a natural process. Theologians and others who accept the possibility of the supernatural, have tended to take a something-more, hands-off-the-sacred-preserve approach to studying conversion.[54] Different worldviews can bias interpretations. Scroggs and Douglas write that "No solution to this very difficult problem appears in the immediate purview", but they do suggest that acknowledging bias and incorporating both views in "not only interdisciplinary but interbias research is necessary".[55]
- Which approach? Because there are different schools of psychology with conflicting theories, determining which is most appropriate to the study of conversion is one of the issues Scroggs and Douglas perceive.[56] "Behaviorism, operationalism, and learning theory have rarely been applied to the study of religious conversion," and the overwhelming majority of works have been written from a single perspective: "functionalism" which defines what is true as what works.[56]
Neurology
[edit]Kelly Bulkeley in The Oxford Handbook of Religion Conversion has written that, as of 2014, no neuro-scientific research focused specifically on religious conversion has been done.[57] Nor is there a single consensus on how the brain/mind system works, and researchers take many different approaches.[58] There is controversy over the mind/body problem, as well as whether the brain is simply modular (composed of separate parts), or if that is too limited an explanation for what Bulkeley calls the complex, "global, synthetic, whole-is-greater-than-the-sum-of-its-parts aspects of brain function".[59] There is disagreement over determinism vs. free will, the use of brain imaging, first-person reports of conversion, and the applications of quantum physics.[60][61]
The phenomenon of conversion is based on the belief that humans have the ability to change the way they mentally perceive and experience the world. Research on the plasticity of the brain has shown that the brain's ability to create new neural pathways remains with someone throughout their life.[62] Bulkeley writes that "Cognitive neuroscience in relation to religious conversions, where people undergo a basic reordering of the assumptions and expectations that frame their perceptions of the world, may lead to new evidence regarding the latent potential of brain/mind development".[63]
Studies on prayer and meditation show they alter the brain's functioning in measurable, material, ways:
Several implications flow from that basic finding. One is that at least some aspects of religion are not generated by pathological brain functioning. Current [cognitive neuroscience] research refutes the idea that religion [...] stems from faulty brain/mind processes. The best available scientific evidence indicates that people who engage in religiously motivated contemplative practices have normal, healthy brains. Perhaps other forms of religion can be more directly tied to neuropathology, but in the case of meditation and prayer the CN literature supports a pragmatic appreciation of the effectiveness of religious practices in shaping the healthy interaction of brain and mind.[63]
Statistics
[edit]According to a 2001 study by religion professor David B. Barrett of Columbia University and historian George Thomas Kurian, approximately 2.7 million people were converted to Christianity that year from another religion, while approximately 3.8 million people overall were converting annually.[2][3] In the first decades of the twenty-first century, Pentecostalism is the largest and fastest growing form of Christianity.[4] Professor of religion Dyron B. Daughrity quotes Paul Freston: "Within a couple of decades, half the world's Christians will be in Africa and Latin America. By 2050, on current trends, there will be as many Pentecostals in the world as there are Hindus, and twice as many Pentecostals as Buddhists".[64] This growth is primarily due to religious conversion.[5][6]
Historian Philip Jenkins observes that Christianity is also growing rapidly in China and some other Asian countries.[65][66] Sociologist and specialist in Chinese religion Fenggang Yang from Purdue University writes that Christianity is "spreading among the Chinese of South-East Asia", and "Evangelical and Pentecostal Christianity is growing more quickly in China".[67] More than half of these converts have university degrees.[67]
Social Anthropologist Juliette Koning and sociologist Heidi Dahles of Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, agree there has been a "rapid expansion of charismatic Christianity from the 1980s onwards. Singapore, China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Indonesia, and Malaysia are said to have the fastest-growing Christian communities and the majority of the new believers are "upwardly mobile, urban, middle-class Chinese". Allan Anderson and Edmond Tang have reported in their book Asian and Pentecostal: The Charismatic Face of Christianity in Asia that "Asia has the second largest number of Pentecostals/charismatics of any continent in the world, and seems to be fast catching up with the largest, Latin America."[69] The World Christian Encyclopedia estimated 135 million in Asia compared to 80 million in North America.[69]
It has been reported also that increasing numbers of young people are becoming Christians in several countries such as China,[70][71] Hong Kong,[72] Indonesia,[73] Iran,[74][75] Japan,[76] Singapore,[77][78][79] and South Korea.[80]
The Council on Foreign Relations says the "number of Chinese Protestants has grown by an average of 10 percent annually since 1979".[81] Award-winning historian of Christianity, Todd Hartch of Eastern Kentucky University, has written that by 2005, around 6 million Africans were converting annually to Christianity.[82] According to Iranian historian Ladan Boroumand "Iran today is witnessing the highest rate of Christianization in the world".[83]
While the exact number of Dalit converts to Christianity in India is not available, religion scholar William R. Burrow of Colorado State University has estimated that about 8% of Dalits have converted to Christianity.[84] According to a 2021 study by the Pew Research Center, Christianity has grow in India in recent years due to conversion. Most converts are former Hindus, though some are former Muslims.[85][86]
Since the 1960s, there has been a substantial increase in the number of conversions from Islam to Christianity, mostly to the Evangelical and Pentecostal denominations of Christianity.[87] The 2015 study Believers in Christ from a Muslim Background: A Global Census estimated that 10.2 million Muslims converted to Christianity.[88] Countries with the largest numbers of Muslims converted to Christianity include Indonesia (6,500,000), Nigeria (600,000), Iran (500,000 versus only 500 in 1979), the United States (450,000), Ethiopia (400,000), and Algeria (380,000).[89] Indonesia is home to the largest Christian community of converts from Islam. Since the mid and late 1960s, between 2 and 2.5 million Muslims converted to Christianity.[90][91][92] According to the Council on Foreign Relations in 2007, experts estimated that thousands of Muslims in the Western world converted to Christianity annually, but were not publicized due to fear of retribution.[93]
Methods of conversion
[edit]Coercion
[edit]While Christian theologians, such as the fourth century Augustine and the ninth century Alcuin, have long maintained that conversion must be voluntary, there are historical examples of coercion in conversion to Christianity.[94][95] Constantine used both law and force to eradicate the practice of sacrifice and repress heresy though not specifically to promote conversion.[96][97] Theodosius also wrote laws to eliminate heresies, but made no requirement for pagans or Jews to convert to Christianity.[98][99][100] However, the sixth century Eastern Roman emperor Justinian I and the seventh century emperor Heraclius attempted to force cultural and religious uniformity by requiring baptism of the Jews.[101][102][103][104] In 612, the Visigothic King Sisebut, prompted by Heraclius, declared the obligatory conversion of all Jews in Spain.[105] In the many new nation-states being formed in Eastern Europe of the Late Middle Ages, some kings and princes pressured their people to adopt the new religion.[106] And in the Northern crusades, the fighting princes obtained widespread conversion through political pressure or military coercion even though the theologians continued to maintain that conversion must be voluntary.[107]
Baptism
[edit]In most varieties of Christianity, baptism is the initiation rite for entrance into the Christian community.[108] Almost all baptisms share in common the use of the Trinitarian formula (in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) by the minister while baptizing the convert.[109] Two aspects of baptism are sources of disagreement: mode and meaning. In Understanding Four Views on Baptism editors have written that Christians disagree on the meaning of baptism and whether it is a necessary aspect of conversion or simply demonstration of a conversion that has already taken place.[110]
There are also different modes of baptism in Christianity. These include immersion (dunking), affusion (pouring), and aspersion (sprinkling). The most common practice in the ancient church was baptism by immersion of the whole head and body of an adult.[111] It remained common into the Middle Ages and is still found in the Eastern church, the Anglican and Roman Catholic Churches, and in most Protestant denominations.[112]
Historian Philip Schaff has written that sprinkling, or pouring of water on the head of a sick or dying person, where immersion was impractical, was also practiced in ancient times and up through the twelfth century, and is currently practiced in most of the West.[113] However, according to the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church affusion has become the most common practice of the Western churches.[114]
Infant baptism was controversial for the Protestant Reformers, and remains so for some Protestants, but according to Schaff, it was practiced by the ancients and is neither required nor forbidden in the New Testament.[115]
The mode of baptism often depends on the denomination one enters, and in some cases, personal choice. Many Anglicans and Lutherans baptize by affusion. Presbyterians and Congregationalists accept baptism by pouring or sprinkling. Steven W. Lemke writes that the Presbyterian Westminster Confession says, "Dipping of the person into the water is not necessary".[116] Baptists disagree. Many Evangelical Protestants, such as Baptists, insist that only full immersion baptism is valid. The Second London and Philadelphia confessions of the Baptists affirm that "immersion, or dipping of the person in water, is necessary". Baptism by immersion is again affirmed in Article 7 of the BF&M [Baptist Faith and Message]".[116] Others, like Methodists, may conduct all three forms of baptism.[117] Yet others, like Quakers, do not practice water baptism, believing that Jesus baptizes his followers in the Spirit while John baptized his followers in water.[118]
Denominational switching
[edit]Switching from one Christian denomination, such as Presbyterianism, to another Christian denomination, such as Catholicism, has not generally been seen by researchers as conversion to Christianity. Mark C. Suchman says this is because most sociologists and other scientists have defined conversion as "radical personal change, particularly change involving a shift in one's sense of 'root reality'."[119] However, in Suchman's view, this produces a form of 'selection bias' within the research.[120] He writes that the study of "everyday" religious mobility is not a substitute for analyses of "true conversion," but the denominational switching that he refers to as "religious mobility" can be seen as an aspect of conversion.[121]
Suchman describes six types, or causes, of "religious mobility" as a supplement and complement to the more traditionally limited concept of conversion.[122] He draws on theories from the sociology of deviance where there is some recognition that "a change of religious affiliation generally represents a break with previous norms and a severing of social commitments—even when it does not involve a radical personality realignment".[123]
Theories of deviance define what can be considered as the variables and determinants involved and what kind of mobility can be seen as random.[124] "Strain theory" argues that those who are unhappy in their religious affiliation will generally "engage in deviance" from that group.[125] Those who are not well integrated in their religious social group, those who become enmeshed in social relations outside the group with participants in deviant cultures, and those whose ethnicity and traditional background differs from their current affiliation are candidates for switching.[126] Intermarriage, with partners of different religions and/or denominations, is also associated with religious switching.[127]
Confirmation
[edit]Theologian Knut Alfsvåg writes that confirmation was first introduced by Pope Innocent I in the 5th century as part of the unified sacrament of baptism, chrismation (confirmation) and first communion that was commonly accepted by the 12th century. It was formally designated a sacrament in 1274 by the Council of Lyon.[128][129] Baptism, along with the declaration and instruction involved in confirmation, and the Eucharist, have remained the essential elements of initiation in all Christian communities, however, Alfsvåg writes that confirmation has differing status in different denominations.[130]
Some see baptism, confirmation, and communion as elements of a unified sacrament through which one becomes a Christian and part of the church.[130] Also known as Chrismation by eastern Christians, under some circumstances, confirmation may be administered immediately after baptism. When an adult decides to convert to the Catholic or Orthodox Church, they become a "catechumen" and attend classes to learn what conversion means and requires. Once classes are completed and the candidate is baptized, adults can then be confirmed immediately following baptism. A clergy member will anoint their forehead, (or in the case of Byzantine Christians, the forehead, eyes, nostrils, mouth, ears, breast, hands, and feet), with the chrisma (oil) calling upon the Holy Spirit to seal the convert with the gifts of the Spirit.[131]
In Western churches that practice infant baptism (Catholic Church, the Church of England, Anglicans, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Methodists, Nazarenes, Moravians, and United Protestants), infants who are baptized are not generally confirmed immediately except in cases of emergency such as illness or impending death. Otherwise, child candidates must wait till they are old enough to make a decision for themselves. Confirmation cannot occur until the candidate has participated in confirmation classes, demonstrated an adequate understanding of what they are agreeing to, and are able to profess "with their own mouth" their desire to be confirmed in their faith.[132] In the Eastern Churches (Eastern Orthodoxy, Oriental Orthodoxy, and the Church of the East), the rite is called chrismation, and is done immediately after baptism, regardless of age.
To be fully in communion with the Catholic Church (a phrase used since c. 205), the Catholic Church requires a convert to have professed faith and practice the sacraments—baptism, confirmation and the Eucharist.[133] The Orthodox Church also maintains the tradition of baptism, chrismation and first communion as a united rite till this day, referring to chrismation as "the Pentecost of the individual" (a reference to the Holy Spirit).[134]
The practice of confirmation was criticized during the Reformation by those who do not consider confirmation a condition for conversion to Christianity or being a fully accepted member of the church.[135] Luther saw confirmation as "a churchly rite or sacramental ceremony," but for Luther, it was baptism that was necessary and not confirmation.[129] John Wesley removed the rite altogether leaving Methodism with no rite of confirmation from 1785 to 1965.[136] These see confirmation as a combination of intercessory prayer and as a graduation ceremony after the period of instruction.[130]
See also
[edit]- Christianization
- Conversion of the Jews
- Credo
- Engel scale
- Forced conversion
- List of converts to Christianity
- Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults (RCIA)
References
[edit]- ^ Acts 9:1–22
- ^ a b Barrett, Kurian & Johnson 2001, pp. 4, 360.
- ^ a b Rambo & Farhadian 2014, p. 59.
- ^ a b Daughrity 2010, pp. 14–15.
- ^ a b R. G. 2017, p. n/a.
- ^ a b Makabenta 2017, p. n/a.
- ^ Hanigan 1983, pp. 25, 28–29.
- ^ Hanigan 1983, pp. 25–26.
- ^ Hanigan 1983, pp. 25–28, abstract.
- ^ Luke 5:1–11, Matt. 4:18–22
- ^ Acts 9
- ^ Hanigan 1983, pp. 25–28.
- ^ Hefner 2023, p. 17.
- ^ Hefner 2023, p. 4.
- ^ Hefner 2023, p. 20.
- ^ a b c Jindra 2021, p. 148.
- ^ Dulles 1981, p. 175.
- ^ Dulles 1981, pp. 175, 176.
- ^ Kling 2020, pp. 20–23.
- ^ a b c Kling 2020, p. 21.
- ^ a b c Jindra 2021, p. 147.
- ^ Jindra 2021, pp. 147, 148.
- ^ Kling 2020, pp. 21–22.
- ^ a b Kling 2020, p. 23.
- ^ a b Kling 2020, p. 22.
- ^ a b c Jindra 2021, p. 149.
- ^ Jindra 2021, pp. 149–150.
- ^ Hefner 2023, pp. 12, 13.
- ^ Hefner 2023, p. 13.
- ^ Hefner 2023, p. 3.
- ^ Hefner 2023, pp. 3–4.
- ^ Hefner 2023, pp. 6, 13–14.
- ^ Hefner 2023, p. 7.
- ^ Hefner 2023, pp. 17–20.
- ^ Hefner 2023, pp. 3, 4, 5.
- ^ Hefner 2023, pp. 7, 8.
- ^ Hefner 2023, p. 8.
- ^ Hefner 2023, pp. 8, 9.
- ^ Hefner 2023, p. 9.
- ^ Scroggs & Douglas 1967, pp. 204–206.
- ^ a b Scroggs & Douglas 1967, p. 206.
- ^ Scroggs & Douglas 1967, pp. 208–210.
- ^ Ng & Shek 2001, abstract.
- ^ Hill & Pargament 2008, abstract.
- ^ Shaver, Lenauer & Sadd 1980, abstract.
- ^ Scroggs & Douglas 1967, p. 208.
- ^ a b Scroggs & Douglas 1967, p. 209.
- ^ Tedeschi, Park & Calhoun 1998, p. 13.
- ^ de Castella & Simmonds 2012, abstract.
- ^ Bazmi & Khalil 2011, abstract.
- ^ Scroggs & Douglas 1967, p. 210.
- ^ a b c d e Scroggs & Douglas 1967, p. 211.
- ^ Scroggs & Douglas 1967, pp. 211–212.
- ^ Scroggs & Douglas 1967, p. 213.
- ^ Scroggs & Douglas 1967, pp. 213, 215.
- ^ a b Scroggs & Douglas 1967, p. 214.
- ^ Bulkeley 2014, p. 240.
- ^ Bulkeley 2014, Reading the Cognitive Neuroscience Literature.
- ^ Bulkeley 2014, Conceptual Polarities and Methodological Challenges in Cognitive Neuroscience.
- ^ Bulkeley 2014, The Mind/Body Problem.
- ^ Bulkeley 2014, The value of introspection.
- ^ Bulkeley 2014, Brain Development.
- ^ a b Bulkeley 2014, Vision and Meditation.
- ^ Daughrity 2010, p. 15.
- ^ Jenkins 2011, pp. 89–90.
- ^ Zurlo 2020, pp. 3–9.
- ^ a b Yang 2017, p. 237.
- ^ "Global Christianity – A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World's Christian Population" (PDF). Pew Research Center.
- ^ a b Anderson & Tang 2005, p. 2.
- ^ "Why the Chinese government is targeting young Christians in its latest crackdown". America magazine. 14 May 2018.
A study of the religious lives of university students in Beijing published in a mainland Chinese academic journal Science and Atheism in 2013 showed Christianity to be the religion that interested students most and the most active on campuses. It concluded there was a "religious fever" in society and "religious forces were infiltrating colleges." With the support of "overseas religious forces," it said, there was a rapid growth in Christianity among university students. It said Christian fellowships on campus mostly refused to succumb to the leadership of the state-backed churches and thus posed "a problem" in the government's administration of religious affairs.
- ^ "Conversions to Christianity Among Highly Educated Chinese". Training leaders. 14 May 2018.
- ^ Tan, Chee-beng (2014). After Migration And Religious Affiliation: Religions, Chinese Identities And Transnational Networks. World Scientific. p. XXV. ISBN 9789814590013.
They also point out that more educated migrants and those from Hong Kong are more likely to become Christians than those from mainland China.
- ^ "Religion and Education in Indonesia" (PDF). eCommons Cornell University. 30 January 2017.
Finally, during this century there has been a rapid growth in the number of Chinese Christians. Very few Chinese were Christians at the turn of the century. Today Christians constitute approximately 10 or 15 percent of the Chinese population in Indonesia, and probably a higher percentage among the young. Conversion of Chinese to Christianity accelerated in the 1960s, especially in East Java, and for Indonesia as a whole the proportion of Chinese who were Catholics rose from 2 percent in 1957 to 6 percent in 19.
- ^ Taher, Amir (2020). The Persian Night: Iran Under the Khomeinist Revolution. Encounter Books. p. 343. ISBN 9781594034794.
The reason is that a growing number of Iranians, especially the young, are converting to Zoroastrianism or Christianity.
- ^ "Report: Iran: Christian converts and house churches (1) –prevalence and conditions for religious practice Translation provided by the Office of the Commissioner-General for Refugees and Stateless Persons, Belgium" (PDF). Office of the Commissioner-General for Refugees and Stateless Persons, Belgium. 22 February 2009.
P.15: Chiaramonte (2016), that it is young people in particular who convert to Christianity in today's Iran
- ^ W. Robinson, David (2012). International Handbook of Protestant Education. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 521. ISBN 9789400723870.
A 2006 Gallup survey, however, is the largest to date and puts the number at 6%, which is much higher than its previous surveys. It notes a major increase among Japanese youth professing Christ.
- ^ S. Chin, Clive (2017). The Perception of Christianity as a Rational Religion in Singapore: A Missiological Analysis of Christian Conversione. Routledge. p. 166. ISBN 9781498298094.
This socio-demographic characterizes Christian converts as mostly .. (2) well-educated, (3) belonging in higher-income brackets, (4) switching their religion between ten and twenty-nine years of age
- ^ "Religious Revival Among Chinese in Singapore" (PDF). SSA1201 Assignment. 14 May 2018.
Converts to Christianity tend to come from the young, educated, English-speaking Chinese generation
- ^ Goh, Daniel P. S. (21 April 2010). "State and Social Christianity in Post-colonial Singapore". Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia. 25 (1). Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia: 54–89. doi:10.1355/SJ25-1C. JSTOR 41308136. S2CID 144235936.
Christianity has flourished in post-colonial Singapore, especially attracting conversions from among young, urbanized and English- educated.
- ^ Sukman, Jang (2004). "Historical Currents and Characteristics of Korean Protestantism after Liberation". Korea Journal. 44 (4): 133–156.
- ^ Albert 2018, p. n/a.
- ^ Hartch 2014, p. 1.
- ^ "Iranians Turn Away from the Islamic Republic". Journal of Democracy. 20 January 2020.
- ^ Burrow 2009, p. 201.
- ^ SAHGAL et al. 2021, p. n/a.
- ^ Frykenberg & Low 2003, p. 228.
- ^ Miller & Johnstone 2015, abstract.
- ^ Miller & Johnstone 2015, p. 8.
- ^ Pipes 2021, p. n/a.
- ^ Anderson 2013, p. 145.
- ^ Bresnan 2005, p. 107.
- ^ Daniels 2017, p. 102.
- ^ "Religious Conversion and Sharia Law". Council on Foreign Relations. 6 June 2007.
In the West, experts estimate thousands of Muslims switch to Christianity every year but keep their conversions secret for fear of retribution. "Converts from Islam, especially those who become involved in Christian ministries, often use assumed names, or only their first names, in order to protect themselves and their families," writes Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, a Washington-based terrorism analyst in Commentary.
- ^ Allott 1974, p. 72.
- ^ Brown 1963, pp. 107–116.
- ^ Leithart 2010, p. 302.
- ^ Lim 2012, p. 498.
- ^ Brown 1963, p. 286.
- ^ Sáry 2019, pp. 72–74, 77.
- ^ Hebblewhite 2020, p. 82, chapter 8.
- ^ Kaldellis 2012, p. 3.
- ^ Irmscher 1988, p. 166.
- ^ Sharf 1955, pp. 103–104.
- ^ Lichtenberger & Raja 2018, pp. 85–98.
- ^ García-Arenal & Glazer-Eytan 2019, pp. 5–6.
- ^ Štefan 2022, p. 101.
- ^ Fonnesberg-Schmidt 2007, p. 24.
- ^ Inbody 2005, pp. 284–285.
- ^ Stookey 1982, p. 27.
- ^ Armstrong & Engle 2009, p. 163.
- ^ Jensen 2012, p. 371.
- ^ Cross & Livingstone 2005, p. 827.
- ^ Schaff 1882, p. 469.
- ^ Cross & Livingstone 2005, p. 24.
- ^ Schaff 1882, p. 470.
- ^ a b Lemke 2008, p. 31.
- ^ Jagger 1971, p. 407.
- ^ https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?httpsredir=1&article=1016&context=ccs [bare URL]
- ^ Suchman 1992, p. S15.
- ^ Suchman 1992, p. S16.
- ^ Suchman 1992, pp. S16–S17.
- ^ Suchman 1992, pp. S17–S18.
- ^ Suchman 1992, p. S18.
- ^ Suchman 1992, pp. S18–S19.
- ^ Suchman 1992, pp. S19–S20.
- ^ Suchman 1992, pp. S20–S21.
- ^ Suchman 1992, p. S21.
- ^ Alfsvåg 2022, pp. 1, 6.
- ^ a b Warnke 1971, p. n/a.
- ^ a b c Alfsvåg 2022, p. 1.
- ^ Cabasilas, p. n/a: "Holy Baptism is the first of seven Sacraments in the Orthodox Christian Church. Together with the Sacrament of Holy Chrism (anointing with oil) it joins the candidate to the Mystical Body of Christ, the Church."
- ^ Osmer 1996, pp. 197–202.
- ^ Jakubiak 2021, p. 164.
- ^ Alfsvåg 2022, p. 5.
- ^ Alfsvåg 2022, pp. 1, 7.
- ^ McAlilly 2019, p. iv.
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