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121. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 42 > Issue: 3
Douglas Johnson Recommendations for Crisis Planning in Faith-based Organizations
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Often, faith-based organizations are unprepared for crisis situations; and when they occur, disaster for the organization soon follows. Using an analysis of the situational crisis communications theory (SCCT) by Timothy Coombs, this paper will illustrate the impact of crisis events to faith-based organizations. This paper will then provide direction to changes for communication planning to be used in faith-based organizations by using Matthew Seeger’s Best Practices in Crisis Communication: An Expert Panel Process. This direction, provided with best practice examples, should assist faith-based organizations in preparing a strategic crisis communications plan.
122. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 42 > Issue: 3
Ben Brandley Gay Rights and the Mormon Church: Intended Actions, Unintended Consequences by Gregory Prince
123. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Annette M. Holba Groundwork for an Ethics of Death: Leisure, Faith, Resilience
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This essay seeks to identify a groundwork for an ethics of death in response to existential questions that concern moving forward after the loss of a loved one. In doing so, considering perspectives on death from Martin Heidegger, Jacques Derrida, and Josef Pieper, ethical implications of death are revealed and lead to identifying the coordinates of leisure, faith, and resilience coming together to weave a faith-based resilience. Faith-based resilience prepares one to be able to respond to an ethics of death in ways that forge new meaning after the death of a loved one disrupts personal existential meaning.
124. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Jouni Tilli The Construction of Authority in Finnish Lutheran Clerical War Rhetoric: A Pentadic Analysis
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Finland's Winter War (1939–40) against the Soviet Union had been defensive, but the so-called Continuation War that broke out in June 1941 was not. This offensive operation demanded thorough justification, because neither the troops nor the public were unanimous about embarking on an offensive campaign in alliance with Nazi Germany. The Lutheran clergy were important in legitimizing the war because priests had formal power deriving from the peculiar relationship between the Finnish state and the Lutheran Church, whereby they were de jure officials of the state as well as of the church. Drawing on Christian and biblical imagery to support the war, they reached a receptive audience, as nearly 96 per cent of Finns belonged to the Lutheran Church. This article uses Kenneth Burke’s dramatistic pentad to analyze how the Lutheran clergy constructed their authority rhetorically during the Continuation War 1941–1944, strategically shifting the grammatical and theological foundation of that authority as the war progressed.
125. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Amorette Hinderaker, Johny T. Garner Speaking Up on My Way Out the Door: A Close Examination of Church Exit and Members’ Dissent
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This narrative study examines the lived experience of leaving a church and the members’ communication of dissatisfaction as part of that experience through participant stories. Situated within Jablin’s (2001) organizational exit framework, this study included interviews (N = 22) with former members of multiple denominations of Christian churches. Results suggest several theoretical implications. First, the findings of this study suggest that narrative of the exit experience is excluded from grand organizational narratives within faith communities. Second, as members exit a faith community, they experience a tension between wanting to express dissent and a pressure to leave silently. Third, findings challenge current models of organizational exit, suggesting a view of exit that is tied both to organizational form and to the reach of the organization into the members’ lives.
126. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Barbara Little Liu Richard John Neuhaus, Immigration, and the Potential for a Revitalized American Public Square
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This article argues that a model for Christian participation in political debate can be gleaned from the work of Richard John Neuhaus. I articulate key characteristics of this model, then use it to evaluate Christian rhetoric favoring Comprehensive Immigration Reform (CIR). I find that while Christian pro-CIR rhetoric exemplifies a Neuhausian approach in many ways, it falls short with regard to its eschatological vision. Nonetheless, I argue that a Neuhausian model has the potential to revitalize Christian rhetoric in the public sphere and American political rhetoric as a whole.
127. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Jeanine Kraybill Evaluating Policy Differences Between Male and Female Religious Groups: A Study of Social Policy Statements by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious
128. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Ethan Stokes, Rebecca Schewe Framing from the Pulpit: A Content Analysis of American Conservative Evangelical Protestant Sermon Rhetoric Discussing LGBT Couples and Marriage
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Despite the Supreme Courts’ June 26, 2015, ruling, which nationally legalized same-sex marriage, many conservative evangelical Protestants continue to oppose equal marriage rights for LGBT couples. Through a content analysis of online sermon transcripts, this project examines major themes in American conservative evangelical Protestant pastors’ rhetoric surrounding LBGT rights and marriage. Using framing theory and subcultural identity theory, three primary themes emerge from this sermon rhetoric: 1) alienating the LGBT community as a dangerous out-group, 2) enhancing in-group evangelical Protestant identities by emphasizing solidarity, and 3) mobilizing those identities to call for political action. The study’s results and implications for future research are discussed at length.
129. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Adam J. Gaffey Lincoln’s Bishop: A President, A Priest, and the Fate of 300 Dakota Sioux Warriors by Gustav Niebuhr.
130. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 39 > Issue: 3
Brian Fehler Sympathetic Puritans: Calvinist Fellow-Feeling in Early New England by Abram Van Engen.
131. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 1
Andrea W. D. Savage Voicing the Sacred: Polyphony and the (re)creation of Sacred Church Texts through Storytelling
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Religious faith is rooted in the teachings of sacred, and often ancient, texts. These texts are taught from, talked about, and integrated into the core of religious organizing and personal meaning-searching for citizens around the world. In many cases, a larger religious entity dictates and utilizes the various sacred texts of a faith to communicate with and teach local members of that faith. This article examines the relationships between religious organizations, local members, and Christian church texts by combining the methodological concerns of Institutional Ethnography with Bakhtin’s theory of polyphony in order to understand how religious texts are invoked as sacred by organizational members in talk about their congregation, and how they are created and recreated through storytelling.
132. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 1
Ann Strahle Finding Belief Systems in Modern War Movies: An Analysis of the Film The Messenger Through the Lens of the American Civil Religion
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Films are a way to communicate the human experience, sometimes uniquely representing the current mood of a populace or political movement of the time. This research explores how the film The Messenger, released during the American wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, portrayed the religious and spiritual elements of American society and the experience of the soldier during wartime. It did this by employing a study of dialogue, signs, and symbols popularized by scholar Robert Bellah and his theory of the American Civil Religion. This article explores how both overt and embedded messages of religion and spirituality are intrinsically tied with the American military experience.
133. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 1
Brian Gilchrist Papal Media Ecology: Laudato Si’ as a Medium of Technocratic Resistance
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This article frames Pope Francis’ encyclical Laudato Si’ as papal media ecology, religious communication that invites interpretations using media ecology. First, a media ecological analysis of Laudato Si’ articulates concerns about the global, environmental impact of the technocratic paradigm. Second, Martin Heidegger’s definition for ge-stell is examined to consider the effects of technology on existence. Third, Heidegger’s methods for rejecting ge-stell are compared to Pope Francis’ plans for replacing the technocratic paradigm. Pope Francis offers a superior approach because a combined top-down and bottom-up approach in a community committed to social change is more likely to enact a paradigm shift.
134. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 1
Judith Roads ‘Us’ and ‘Them’: Early Quakers and the ‘Establishment’
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The emergence of the early Quaker movement in England has been well documented. This paper focuses on Quakers’ confrontation with the establishment and with both Christian mainstream writers and other dissenting Christians. My discourse-analytic case study makes use of corpus-based techniques to uncover how Quakers and their adversaries spoke and wrote about themselves in relation to the other. I draw on theoretical studies within the field of pragmatics to show how these two groups unconsciously used markers of clusivity and stance. Results indicate a strong sense of Quaker separateness within seventeenth-century society, with implications for religious minorities today.
135. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 1
Brandon Knight Superchurch: The Rhetoric and Politics of American Fundamentalism by Jonathan J. Edwards
136. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 1
Leland G. Spencer Our Lives Matter: A Womanist Queer Theology by Pamela R. Lightsey
137. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 1
Harry Archer, Matthew Bradney A Pilgrim’s View of Communication: Pathways to a Meaningful Politics
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The pilgrim’s view is a foundational lens on human communication that operates as an alternative to information centered models and symbolic constitutive views of communication. We draw together thinkers on pilgrimage in a discussion that foregrounds the significance of shared paths as embodied narratives in a movement towards justice and the good life. Such a vision for communication engages with and builds upon the work of the Rev. James W. Carey in his conceptualization of a ritual view of communication that explicitly addresses religious community. A concept of pilgrimage is emboldened in this essay by recourse to theologians, most notably William T. Cavanaugh.
138. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 1
Alexander L. Lancaster, Christine E. Rittenour Parishioners’ and Non-Parishioners’ Perceptions of Priests: Homilies Informed by an Intergroup Perspective are Linked to More Positive Perceptions
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Guided by the common ingroup identity model (CIIM; Gaertner & Dovidio, 2000; Gaertner, Dovidio, Anastasio, Bachman, & Rust, 1993), this study utilized a sample of undergraduate students (N = 175) who identified as Catholic or non-Catholic, and who were assigned randomly to one of the three homily conditions (i.e., “you” language, “we Christians” language, or “we everyone” language). Consistent with predictions, the results indicated that, compared to non-Catholics, Catholics had significantly more positive perceptions of the priest, as did individuals—Catholic and non-Catholic—who read the “we Christians” language homily as compared to those who read the “you” language homily.
139. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 2
Gilad Elbom The Rabbinical Rhetoric of Jesus
140. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 40 > Issue: 2
John E. Koban “Guard Your Tongue:” Lashon Hara and the Rhetoric of Chafetz Chaim
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This article explores an understudied aspect of Jewish rhetoric—restrictions against speaking lashon hara (evil speech, libel, gossip)—to contribute to the field’s understanding of Jewish rhetorical traditions. In reading Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan’s (1838-1933) treatise Chafetz Chaim (1873), this article shows how Jewish speech laws function as an ontological, nonagonistic, and ethical community-oriented rhetoric. In reading the Chafetz Chaim, this article shows that Kagan’s exigency in compiling the speech laws was in response to anti-Semitism and Enlightenment era Haskalah Judaism. The dialogic rhetoric found in Chafetz Chaim provides ethical and methodological lessons for contemporary rhetorical scholars, lessons that resonate with important twentieth century Jewish rhetorics.