Open this publication in new window or tab >>2023 (English)In: Homiletic: The Journal of the Academy of Homiletics, ISSN 0738-0534, Vol. 48, no 1, p. 16-31Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
This study examines digitally-mediated sermon listening practices by interviewing twenty-nine listeners from Swedish Protestant congregations. The analysis draws on Theodore Schatzki’s practice theory, focusing on the entanglement of human activity, material arrangements surrounding the preaching event, and the ends of practices—including how changes to any or all of the above impact the practice in question. The study found that listeners strove to uphold the listening practices they were accustomed to from their respective churchesand attempted to carry these over into the digitally-mediated preaching event. To a large extent,they succeeded in opening and managing a “third room of preaching.” Furthermore, the studyhighlighted the importance of knowing the ends of these listening practices. The study alsodemonstrated the significance of material arrangements and how changes in these arrangementssometimes led to the obstruction—or even breakdown—of listening practices. However, changesin material arrangements also inspired new practices—pointing to the need to rethink listeningpractices that are merely borrowed from in-church services.
Keywords
online preaching; sermon listeners, practices. practice theory
National Category
Religious Studies
Research subject
Practical Theology including Religious Behavioural Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:ths:diva-1918 (URN)
Note
Ingår i doktorsavhandlingen (sammanläggning) Co-preaching: The Practice of Preaching in Digital Culture and Spaces.
2023-06-122023-06-122023-10-11Bibliographically approved