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The Reluctance of Churches to Accommodate Adopting or Fostering Families The Reluctance of Churches to Accommodate Adopting or Fostering Families
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Evangelical Populism and Its Consequences for Families in the Orphan Care Movement Evangelical Populism and Its Consequences for Families in the Orphan Care Movement
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Why Evangelical Activism Is Difficult to Sustain Why Evangelical Activism Is Difficult to Sustain
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Cite
Abstract
Chapter 5 examines the ways certain aspects of the evangelical subculture intersect to hinder the sustainability and effectiveness of evangelical attempts at social engagement. It draws on interviews with both movement leaders and grassroots families to show how the evangelical cultural schemas of individualism/anti-structuralism and pietistic idealism, along with the evangelical tendency toward populism, create a situation in which evangelicals are challenged and exhorted to commit to sacrificial forms of activism through shallow theological rhetoric and pietistic pursuits of obedience at the expense of evaluation and research. Moreover, it show how the individualism and pietistic idealism of evangelical congregations makes them unwilling to accommodate for such families to provide the support that they need, having adopted or fostered children with significant health and/or behavioral challenges. This results in families feeling unsupported and in trouble, and ultimately hinders the sustainability of the movement.
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