Claire Borowik
From Radical Jesus People to Virtual Religion: The Family International
From Radical Jesus People to Virtual Religion: The Family International
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The Family International, formerly the Children of God, was a religious movement established in the late 1960s with communities in ninety countries. It was characterized by controversy and countercultural practices and endured for four decades. In 2010, it transformed into an online community, highlighting the challenges of alternative religions in the digital age.
Format: Paperback / softback
Length: 92 pages
Publication date: 09 February 2023
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
The Family International, formerly known as the Children of God, emerged from the radical fringe of the Jesus People Movement in the late 1960s to establish a new religious movement with communities in ninety countries. Characterized from its early days by controversy due to its unconventional version of Christianity, countercultural practices, and high level of tension with society, the Family International created a communal society that endured for four decades. The movement's reinvention in 2010 as an online community offers insights into the dynamic nature of new religious movements, as they strategically adapt to evolving social contexts and emergent issues, and the negotiations of belief and identity this may entail. The Family International's transformation from a radical communal movement to a deradicalized virtual community highlights the novel challenges alternative religions may face in entering the mainstream and attaining legitimacy within the increasingly globalized context of online information dissemination in virtual spaces.
The Family International, formerly known as the Children of God, emerged from the radical fringe of the Jesus People Movement in the late 1960s to establish a new religious movement with communities in ninety countries. Characterized from its early days by controversy due to its unconventional version of Christianity, countercultural practices, and high level of tension with society, the Family International created a communal society that endured for four decades. The movement's reinvention in 2010 as an online community offers insights into the dynamic nature of new religious movements, as they strategically adapt to evolving social contexts and emergent issues, and the negotiations of belief and identity this may entail. The Family International's transformation from a radical communal movement to a deradicalized virtual community highlights the novel challenges alternative religions may face in entering the mainstream and attaining legitimacy within the increasingly globalized context of online information dissemination in virtual spaces.
ISBN-13: 9781009017602
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