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When God Talks Back

Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God

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3 of 3 copies available
3 of 3 copies available

            How does God become and remain real for modern evangelicals? How are rational, sensible people of faith able to experience the presence of a powerful yet invisible being and sustain that belief in an environment of overwhelming skepticism? T. M. Luhrmann, an anthropologist trained in psychology and the acclaimed author of Of Two Minds, explores the extraordinary process that leads some believers to a place where God is profoundly real and his voice can be heard amid the clutter of everyday thoughts.
            While attending services and various small group meetings at her local branch of the Vineyard, an evangelical church with hundreds of congregations across the country, Luhrmann sought to understand how some members were able to communicate with God, not just through one-sided prayers but with discernable feedback. Some saw visions, while others claimed to hear the voice of God himself. For these congregants and many other Christians, God was intensely alive. After holding a series of honest, personal interviews with Vineyard members who claimed to have had isolated or ongoing supernatural experiences with God, Luhrmann hypothesized that the practice of prayer could train a person to hear God’s voice—to use one’s mind differently and focus on God’s voice until it became clear. A subsequent experiment conducted between people who were and weren’t practiced in prayer further illuminated her conclusion. For those who have trained themselves to concentrate on their inner experiences, God is experienced in the brain as an actual social relationship: his voice was identified, and that identification was trusted and regarded as real and interactive.
Astute, deeply intelligent, and sensitive, When God Talks Back is a remarkable approach to the intersection of religion, psychology, and science, and the effect it has on the daily practices of the faithful.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 13, 2012
      Psychological anthropologist Luhrmann (Of Two Minds) offers an extended case study examining how believers come to have faith in an active, present God despite secular pressures in contemporary America. Drawing on extensive interviews and personal experience among Vineyard Movement members, Luhrmann focuses on the use of prayer among charismatic evangelical Christians. Her work combines personal narratives and excerpts from bestselling evangelical how-to guides with theories and data from psychology. While maintaining a stance both sympathetic to the evangelical position and scientifically rigorous, these different modes of writing do not always mesh well. For instance, the largely narrative mode gives way in the middle to an extended description of methods and data from her psychological research. In addition, Luhrmann opens and closes with a brief sketch of the history and politics of the evangelical movement, although her focus is on personal belief, not the political engagement of evangelicals. Such material partially distracts from the clear, extensive view into the prayer life and interior world of evangelicals. Luhrmann’s intended audience is skeptics attempting to understand the evangelical approach to God. Her work will also appeal to believers curious about psychological research on prayer. Agent: Jill Kneerim.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2012
      A simultaneously scholarly and deeply personal analysis of evangelical communities in America. Luhrmann (Anthropology/Stanford Univ.; Of Two Minds: An Anthropologist Looks at American Psychiatry, 2000) entered the Vineyard Christian Fellowship openly--declaring herself an anthropologist who wanted to understand the evangelical way and mind--and she was both welcome and eventually somewhat transformed. Near the end Lurhmann writes that although she's not sure she'd call herself a Christian, she has "come to know God." She begins by describing the current evangelical movement--how widespread it is, how God has become an intimate friend rather than a harsh judge and how evangelicals largely avoid theodicy. She sketches the history of the Vineyard and attributes to the 1960s counterculture some of the spiritual energy that animates the evangelical movement. As the title suggests, the author devotes much of her discussion to the conversation between believers and their God, a conversation facilitated by specific techniques of prayer. She spends many pages talking about the problem of hearing God's voice, and attempts to cover all bases. For example, she includes major passages about the long history of the phenomenon, schizophreniaand skeptics' reservations and disdain. Lurhmann underwent extensive prayer training, and her research is substantial--years of commitment, countless interviews, extensive endnotes and a vast bibliography. She accords deep respect for those whose religious experiences are scientifically unverifiable, and she concludes that evangelicals have, to a great extent, reprogrammed their brains and that they and skeptics live in alternate universes. One topic she does not raise: the economics of the movement. Who's getting rich in the evangelical world? Does it matter? An erudite discussion both profoundly sympathetic and richly analytical.

      COPYRIGHT(2012) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2011

      Stanford psychological anthropologist Luhrmann truly throws herself into her studies. To understand the depth of evangelical belief and its consequences for believers, she not only conducted experiments to determine how extended prayer affects the mind but also joined an evangelical congregation. The result is reportedly a fair and balanced study on why people believe and what religion can do. I'd like to push this toward thinking folks.

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from March 15, 2012
      In the astonishment of a typical California evangelical at receiving a direct message from the Lord ( Whoa, the voice of God spoke to me ), Luhrmann identifies an emotional experience central to a new paradigm in American Protestantism. In that paradigm, readers learn, evangelical believers school their minds to defy a culture of doubt and so feel God as a living, speaking presence. Writing as a fascinated outsider, Luhrmann gives unbelievers an anthropological perspective on this new mode of religious belief. Extensive fieldwork, chiefly among worshippers at the Vineyard Christian Fellowship, endows this new mode of belief with compelling human faces and stories. Resistant to the scornful stereotypes of the New Atheists, evangelicals who share their spiritual lives with the author come across as complex men and women whose faith reflects intense emotional and mental commitment. Readers listen, for instance, to Jane, a sober yet engaging university graduate who follows the divine voice to the scene of an accident, where a prostate woman needs her intercessory prayers. In this sympathetic yet probing analysis, the evangelical spiritual dialogue with the deity emerges as the consequence of a surprisingly self-conscious strategy for finding meaning in a whirlwind of postmodern uncertainty. Much here for curious skeptics to ponder.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      March 15, 2012

      Understanding evangelical Christianity can be difficult for those of a skeptical or agnostic bent. How can evangelicals persist in their beliefs today, when information from science and other fields seems to render such faith anachronistic or naive? Luhrmann (anthropology, Stanford Univ.; Of Two Minds), a psychological anthropologist, set out to examine the faith of evangelicals by actively participating, long term, in services at evangelical churches in Chicago and California. This resulting book is based on a decade of research. Interestingly, she finds that evangelical believers are not narrow-minded; they wrestle with doubt and uncertainty, but their faith nonetheless remains strong. She also finds that these believers practice certain disciplines and customs that enable them to experience God in a vital way. VERDICT While this book is particularly helpful in explaining evangelicalism to those not affiliated with it, it also provides insights that those within evangelical Christianity will find of interest. Readers interested in evangelicalism as well as researchers in the sociology of religion will find this book helpful.--John Jaeger, Dallas Baptist Univ. Lib., TX

      Copyright 2012 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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