“Thank God, He Didn’t Answer My Prayer!” (Failed) Healing as Boundary Maintenance

Divine healing is an emotionally and theologically conflictive field where actors communicate positions and draw boundaries by engaging in certain practices and renouncing others. In this article, I analyse how a progressive evangelical megachurch, faced with the dominance of conservative evangeli...

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Main Author: Ariane Kovac
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Fribourg 2024-11-01
Series:AЯGOS
Online Access:https://www.journal-argos.org/article/view/6205
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author Ariane Kovac
author_facet Ariane Kovac
author_sort Ariane Kovac
collection DOAJ
description Divine healing is an emotionally and theologically conflictive field where actors communicate positions and draw boundaries by engaging in certain practices and renouncing others. In this article, I analyse how a progressive evangelical megachurch, faced with the dominance of conservative evangelicalism, uses healing and the failure of healing for boundary maintenance and identity construction. Drawing on ethnographic field research, interviews, and the analysis of sermons, I argue that the church develops and communicates its position in the evangelical field by developing and presenting healing practices that directly address the supposed shortcomings of other evangelical churches. To achieve this, the church makes failed healing an integral part of religious practice and encourages its followers to speak openly about this failure while continuously managing their expectations.
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institution Kabale University
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spelling doaj-art-a0664da3d3d34aaa8f8ebb83908d4dd12025-08-20T03:48:57ZdeuUniversity of FribourgAЯGOS2813-41842024-11-01S310.26034/fr.argos.2024.6205“Thank God, He Didn’t Answer My Prayer!” (Failed) Healing as Boundary MaintenanceAriane Kovac0Leipzig University Divine healing is an emotionally and theologically conflictive field where actors communicate positions and draw boundaries by engaging in certain practices and renouncing others. In this article, I analyse how a progressive evangelical megachurch, faced with the dominance of conservative evangelicalism, uses healing and the failure of healing for boundary maintenance and identity construction. Drawing on ethnographic field research, interviews, and the analysis of sermons, I argue that the church develops and communicates its position in the evangelical field by developing and presenting healing practices that directly address the supposed shortcomings of other evangelical churches. To achieve this, the church makes failed healing an integral part of religious practice and encourages its followers to speak openly about this failure while continuously managing their expectations. https://www.journal-argos.org/article/view/6205
spellingShingle Ariane Kovac
“Thank God, He Didn’t Answer My Prayer!” (Failed) Healing as Boundary Maintenance
AЯGOS
title “Thank God, He Didn’t Answer My Prayer!” (Failed) Healing as Boundary Maintenance
title_full “Thank God, He Didn’t Answer My Prayer!” (Failed) Healing as Boundary Maintenance
title_fullStr “Thank God, He Didn’t Answer My Prayer!” (Failed) Healing as Boundary Maintenance
title_full_unstemmed “Thank God, He Didn’t Answer My Prayer!” (Failed) Healing as Boundary Maintenance
title_short “Thank God, He Didn’t Answer My Prayer!” (Failed) Healing as Boundary Maintenance
title_sort thank god he didn t answer my prayer failed healing as boundary maintenance
url https://www.journal-argos.org/article/view/6205
work_keys_str_mv AT arianekovac thankgodhedidntanswermyprayerfailedhealingasboundarymaintenance