The Absorption Hypothesis: Learning to Hear God in Evangelical Christianity
American Anthropologist, Vol. 112, Issue 1, pg. 66-78, 2010.
by Luhrmann, T. M., Nusbaum, Howard, Thisted, Ronald
In this article, we use a combination of ethnographic data and
empirical methods to identify a process called “absorption,” which may
be involved in contemporary Christian evangelical prayer practice (and
in the practices of other religions). The ethnographer worked with an
interdisciplinary team to identify people with a proclivity for
“absorption.” Those who seemed to have this proclivity were more likely
to report sharper mental images, greater focus, and more unusual
spiritual experience. The more they prayed, the more likely they were
to have these experiences and to embrace fully the local representation
of God. Our results emphasize learning, a social process to which
individuals respond in variable ways, and they suggest that
interpretation, proclivity, and practice are all important in
understanding religious experience. This approach builds on but differs
from the approach to religion within the culture-and-cognition school.
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