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21. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 45 > Issue: 3
Natalia E. Tapsak Radical Conversion: Theorizing Catholic Citizenship in the American Liberal Tradition by Christopher M. Duncan
22. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 45 > Issue: 3
Lane Grafton Communication as Transformation: Understanding Effective Human and Divine Communication
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Eric McLuhan’s notion of “transformation theory” remains open for interpretation and analysis. This article provides one such perspective by establishing a process of communication for it. Out of the analysis emerges a key insight: Transformation is the basis for effective communication. Through a transformation into the likeness of the medium of communication, one more effectively transmits their message. This insight not only applies to human communication but also to divine communication with “THE medium,” God Himself. Whether in the human or divine realm, transformation is the marker of effective communication.
23. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 45 > Issue: 4
John A. Fortunato Crisis Framing: One Jesuit University’s Response to the Catholic Priest Sexual Abuse and Cover-Up Crisis
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A 2018 Pennsylvania grand jury report after a two-year investigation documented numerous incidents of sexual abuse by Catholic priests and the cover-up of these crimes by those in positions of leadership. Framing is a critical aspect of crisis response. Framing involves selecting and emphasizing certain attributes of an issue. This article examines the response of one Jesuit university in its attempt to frame itself and the sexual abuse crisis. The value of understanding frameworks for crisis assessment and response, public relations functions, and thinking through an organization’s mission and social legitimacy provides a comprehensive approach that can help an organization properly address a crisis.
24. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 45 > Issue: 4
Katherine R. Cooper, Lynn O. Cooper Inside, Outside, or Constituting Community: Three Perspectives on Religious Congregations
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Religious congregations are prominent in American life as both gatherings of religious people and as community resource. We explore how congregations communicate these multiple identities through qualitative content analysis of clergy interviews and congregational websites. Findings suggest that congregations emphasize religiosity even as they articulate community service and highlight congregations as outside, inside, and constituting community. Although congregations are transparent with respect to their religiosity, we suggest that ambiguity serves not just as a function of multiple identities but as indicative of organizations that justify their work in spiritual terms to multiple audiences.
25. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 45 > Issue: 4
Darius Benton Examining Website-Based Mission Statements of Traditionally Black Methodist Denominational Churches in the Top Ten Cities for African Americans in the United States
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Textual analysis was conducted in order to examine the usage of and messages communicated through mission statements found on the websites of traditionally Black Methodist denominational churches. The churches sampled are in the ten United States cities Forbes cited as being the best economically for African Americans. Although online/web presence was low among churches in the test, findings suggest thematic similarities among the publicly available mission statements. Practical suggestions include training church leaders to craft and communicate effective mission statements and implementing best practices for developing a strategic online/web presence in order to achieve greater organizational goals of access and relevance in a changing society.
26. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 45 > Issue: 4
Luke Winslow, Karen S. Winslow Ecclesiastes and the Rhetoric of Radical Agnosticism
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Employing the critical tools of religious communication scholarship, this essay explores Belief in a Just World Theory as a potent discursive source for unquestioned and oppressive norms of thought and speech. For many social scientists, Belief in a Just World Theory is an elegant, parsimonious, and compelling tool for exploring the sources of our most intractable social challenges. And yet, it seems our world maintains no homeostatic orientation toward justice. To reconcile that paradox, we begin this paper by re-positioning Belief in a Just World Theory as an unfalsifiable pseudo-science drawing rhetorical strength from a reservoir of religious discourse. We then analyze the book of Ecclesiastes in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament as a theoretically rich and politically urgent source of reconciliation, before concluding with a discussion of the wider implications that can be culled from our analysis for building and advancing the stock of knowledge in communication and religion.
27. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 45 > Issue: 4
Leland G. Spencer Constructing a Transgender Version of Jewish Tradition: Joy Ladin’s The Soul of the Stranger
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In 2019, Joy Ladin published The Soul of the Stranger, a book that offers a transgender critical reading of the Torah along with Ladin’s personal reflections as a transgender member of a Jewish community with a background in Torah observance. This essay offers an analysis of The Soul of the Stranger, arguing that Ladin constructs a transgender Jewish tradition in the text. Ladin disavows the ostensible incompatibility of trans and Jewish experiences by showing how her reading of Genesis and Jonah accords with rather than departs from traditional rabbinic approaches to Jewish texts in two key ways: by reinterpreting apparent binaries in the creation narratives and by explaining biblical figures’ trans-related experiences. Ladin’s reimagining of foundational Jewish texts forecloses transphobic Torah interpretations by refusing to allow potential detractors to set the terms of the conversation. By appealing to Jewish tradition and, thereby, simultaneously constituting it, Ladin imagines and creates a trans-inclusive Judaism framed on its own terms rather than in opposition to voices of exclusion.
28. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 45 > Issue: 4
M. Shivaun Corry American Covenant: A History of Civil Religion from the Puritans to the Present, by Phillip Gorski
29. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 2
Shelly Rambo Howard Thurman, Body Memories, and the Power of the Vignette
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Howard Thurman is attuned to bodies under threat. In this article, I argue that his use of vignettes offers a distinctive rhetorical strategy for addressing collective trauma. Through closely examining “The Third Component,” a sermon preached in 1958, I display his distinctive contribution to working with traumatic memories. In relying on a third memory—a memory of communing in the Presence of total regard—he connects religious experience to the somatic efforts to heal bodies from trauma. I make the case that, for Thurman, the work of racial justice depends on spiritual practices to hone attention and enable the awareness necessary for the work.
30. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 2
John Hatch “And If You Must, Use Words”: Indirect Religion Communication in Keaggy’s The Master and the Musician
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Building on Fraser’s account of religious persuasion through indirection, this essay explores how instrumental music can communicate faith, as demonstrated in a groundbreaking album by guitarist Phil Keaggy. I argue that while music functions as pure persuasion in its unfolding form, it can also facilitate ordinary persuasion on matters of faith by evoking particular impressions of religious pathos, ethos, and/or mythos, which may be reinforced in liner notes. When Keaggy, a pioneer of Jesus music, made an album of original instrumentals, a spiritually-themed story was added to ensure acceptance by that audience. This story conveys faith indirectly, while the music itself somewhat evokes the ethos and pathos of the gospel. After the story was dropped in the reissued album, key qualities of Keaggy’s music and ethos helped sustain his art’s potential to convey spiritual meaning. For communication scholars, discerning such potential requires closereading and/or audience studies.
31. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 2
Joshua Hoops Inverting the Bogeyman: Evangelical Constructions of Critical Race Theory
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The United States has witnessed a public display of outrage toward critical race theory (CRT). This opposition has been buoyed by White evangelical Christian polemics. I conducted a discourse-historical analysis of 21 statements, reflecting a diversity of voices within evangelical discourse (ED). First, ED constructs CRT as both bereft of theoretical validity and evil. Second, the discourse inverts the objectives of CRT by claiming those goals for its own. Third, ED seeks to strip CRT of its transformative and emancipatory power. Fourth, ED constructs CRT in ways that diffuse accountability. Finally, ED questions the faith of Christians who seek to learn from CRT. Reflection is offered for how CRT and Christianity might conspire together toward the aims of addressing racial inequity.
32. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 2
Natalia E. Tapsak, Anthony M. Wachs The Consolation of the Topics: Boethius, Dialectic, and a Christian Rhetorical Theory
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In response to an era defined by narrative contention and polarized communication, an increasing number of scholars have called for renewed attention to a Christian rhetorical theory. Such a theory would have to enable the Christian rhetor to articulate the definitive goods and values promoted by a Christian narrative, to identify points of difference with competing narratives, and to ground argument within philosophical reasoning that engages universal and transcendent truths. Therefore, this article suggests that a vibrant Christian rhetorical theory must be complemented by dialectic. Through an analysis of the dialectical topics of Boethius in De topicis differentiis alongside his “masterpiece of rhetorical philosophy” (Verene 2020, 333), The Consolation of Philosophy, dialectic is revealed as a valuable aid to the Christian rhetor seeking to ground argument in philosophical reasoning while being responsive to context, contingency, and difference in the current historical moment.
33. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 2
Brook Crow, Debbie Sellnow-Richmond Faculty Onboarding and Assimilation in the Religious Academic Setting
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Faculty members face a great deal of uncertainty when hired by an institution. With a new work environment and unfamiliar processes, a faculty member can experience stress when starting a new position. To reduce possible feelings of isolation and dissatisfaction, colleges and universities can create onboarding programs that focus on specific needs that should be addressed. Faculty members hired to universities that align with their religious orientations may have nuanced retention and satisfaction experiences. This case study uses Jablin’s organizational assimilation theory (OAT) to understand how faculty members’ onboarding process affects their assimilation in religious colleges and seeks to understand additional factors that may lead to the overall satisfaction of new faculty members.
34. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 2
Eric C. Miller From Color Line to Colorblind: White Evangelical Rhetoric on Race
35. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 3
Mark Ward Sr. "Christian Worldview": A Defining Symbolic Term of the American Evangelical Speech Code
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In the speech code of American evangelicalism, the symbolic term “Christian worldview” and its companion term “biblical worldview” are ubiquitous. Speech codes theory (SCT) holds that symbolic terms simply and quickly communicate complex ideas, values, and meanings that are taken for granted in the shared culture of a speech community. Symbolic terms accomplish this work by activating community members’ cognitive schemata or shared mental organization of cultural knowledge. The present study elaborates the historical and contemporary ideas, values, and meanings tacitly conveyed by “Christian worldview,” reports field observations of a one-year “worldview” small group Bible study and interprets this symbolic term as a defining marker of American evangelical culture. SCT holds that a distinctive culture manifests a distinctive speech code of socially constructed meanings that shape its cultural life. The study argues that the symbolic terms “Christian worldview” and “biblical worldview” shape American evangelical culture life according to meanings essential for interpreting that culture and for the discursive constitution of evangelical subjectivity.
36. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 3
Leland G. Spencer The Iron Lady’s Capitalist Christianity: Margaret Thatcher’s Rhetorical Theology
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Margaret Thatcher made history in 1979 when she became the first woman prime minister in the history of the United Kingdom. Unlike many of her predecessors, Thatcher regularly drew on her religious faith in her rhetoric and her approach to shaping policy. This article argues that Margaret Thatcher’s public speeches, memoirs, and official biographies of her life, when taken together, offer a coherent statement of her understanding of Christianity that we call a rhetorical theology. Thatcher’s rhetorical theology offers a justification for her fiercely individualistic public policies from within her articulated religious perspective. We analyze fragments of discourse by and about Thatcher that we argue constitute her rhetorical theology: an understanding of Christianity that offers a muted British version of the prosperity gospel to justify conservative economic and social policies.
37. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 3
David Errera Religious Communication Scholarship as “Going Nowhere Correctly”: Looking to Augustine and Waiting for Godot
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This article clarifies and extends “going nowhere correctly” (Arnett, 2010) as a metaphor for religious communication scholarship. The temporal context of “going nowhere correctly” is clarified by analyzing Augustine’s philosophy of time in Confessions. The existential conditions are clarified by analyzing the play Waiting for Godot. I propose that in practical religious discourse, “going nowhere correctly” implies a religious discourse of speaking while dwelling, which amounts to a form of epideictic rhetorical discourse. Further, I propose that a turn to this epideictic discourse remedies some problems in contemporary religious communication.
38. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 3
Michael R. Kearney Between Fundamentalists and Funnymonkeyists: Clarence Edward Macartney’s Rhetoric of Moderate Orthodoxy
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“Shall the Fundamentalists Win?” was the title of a 1922 sermon by Harry Emerson Fosdick, announcing a question that fueled public dispute in the fundamentalist–modernist controversy in 1920s America. The question persists today, but this article turns to the metaphors of apocalyptic rhetoric and routine cynicism to suggest a deeper question energizing fundamentalist and antifundamentalist rhetoric: What does the future of faith look like in an era of cynicism? This article brings a philosophical hermeneutic approach to Fosdick’s sermon as well as the rebuttals of John Roach Straton and Clarence Edward Macartney. Macartney’s distinctive form of apocalyptic rhetoric, this article argues, offers a possible way to counter fundamentalism’s dangers without tacitly accepting its methodological premises of marginalization and polarization.
39. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 3
Lakelyn E. Taylor, G. Brandon Knight Challenging #Sermongate Ontology: A Critical Rhetorical Analysis of Plagiarism in Sermonic Discourse
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Even in academic spaces, the ontology of plagiarism is contested, but it is even more so in Protestant evangelical contexts. Thus the very notion of plagiarism in the academy—and now in religious spaces—is unclear and may be subject to criticisms of power and questions of who gets to define what plagiarism means. In this article, we aim to elucidate the reemerging conversation about plagiarism in sermonic discourse captured in the 2021 #Sermongate scandal. We introduce the systematic, histo-cultural factors which have worked to shape these ontological beliefs about sermonic plagiarism and advocate for a general set of plagiarism standards.
40. The Journal of Communication and Religion: Volume > 46 > Issue: 3
John P. Ferré God the Bestseller: How One Editor Transformed American Religion a Book at a Time by Stephen Prothero