Karma and grace: religious difference in millennial Sri Lanka

"The Easter Sunday bombings in Sri Lanka in 2019, just a decade after the the end of the ethnonationalist insurgency led by the Hindu Tamil Tigers, targeted Roman Catholic and Pentecostal churches. Initially attributed to the Islamic State, they were in fact the work of politicized Sinhala Budd...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Mahadev, Neena (Autor)
Tipo de documento: Print Libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
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Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Publicado: New York Columbia University Press [2023]
En:Año: 2023
Colección / Revista:Religion, culture, and public life
(Cadenas de) Palabra clave estándar:B Sri Lanka / Budismo / Cristianismo / Inter-religiosidad / Comparación de religiones
Clasificaciones IxTheo:AX Relaciones inter-religiosas
BL Budismo
CA Cristianismo
KBM Asia
Otras palabras clave:B Christianity and other religions Buddhism
B Sri Lanka Religión 21st century
B Buddhism Relations Christianity
Acceso en línea: Índice
Texto de la solapa
Literaturverzeichnis
Parallel Edition:Electrónico
Descripción
Sumario:"The Easter Sunday bombings in Sri Lanka in 2019, just a decade after the the end of the ethnonationalist insurgency led by the Hindu Tamil Tigers, targeted Roman Catholic and Pentecostal churches. Initially attributed to the Islamic State, they were in fact the work of politicized Sinhala Buddhist revivalists alarmed by the expansionary encroachment of charismatic Christian groups. These populist Buddhists question the social, political, economic, and religious motives and values of newly converted Sri Lankan Christians, claiming that the vulnerable poor are duped by untrustworthy charismatic "peddlers" of the prosperity gospel as part of a socialization process that transforms them into a fraudulent antinational movement. Conversion itself is a disruptor, a quick-fix radical salvational orientation to god's grace, in direct opposition to the Buddhist trajectory of moral self-betterment that must unfold over many suffering-filled cycles of death and rebirth. Sri Lanka has been the site of religious hostilities since the colonial era, but, as Mahadev argues, the Buddhist-Pentecostal rivalry, exacerbated by savvy use of media on both sides and by the fear that the promise of grace is especially potent and vital, has resulted in a plethora of innovations and adaptations in theology, cosmology, ritual, and partisan politics that are generative of new religious forms"--
Introduction: Inter-Religion in Sri Lanka -- A Note on Terms: Defining Evangelical -- 1. Tangles of Perspectivism: Economies of Conversion and Ontologies of Religious Difference -- 2. Charity and Dāna: The Selfish Gift? -- 3. Mediating Miracles -- 4. A Cacophonous Exuberance: Modulating Miracles, Defending Sovereignty -- 5. Samsaric Destinies and the Maverick Dialogics of Buddhist Publicity -- 6. A Spectrum from Sincerity to Skepticism: Ordinary Biographies of Converts, Apostates, and Dual-Belongers -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
Notas:Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN:0231205287