Influence of American Culture on American Christianity: A Critical Analysis

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This content explores the relationship between American culture and American Christianity, discussing how religion reflects the cultural values of individualism, optimism, and the concept of a blessed nation. It delves into the concept of Biblical individualism, the influence of prosperity gospel, and the implications of irrational optimism on American society. The emphasis on personal gain in Christianity and the shift towards a celebrative encounter with God in evangelical churches are also examined.


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  1. American culture and American Christianity CHONG HO YU

  2. American culture and American Christianity Does religion reflect the culture in which the religion is situated? Characteristics of the US culture/Christianity Individualism / Biblical individualism: personal gain Optimism / Positive thinking: everything is possible Blessed nation / Bootstrapping Christianity (one can pull oneself up by personal effort alone) : those who achieve a higher status are hardworking, self-sufficient, and morally superior to those who remain in the lower classes ; attribute our blessed lives to our personal spirituality

  3. Prosperity Gospel When I was a young boy, one of the most influential books at that time was Positive thinking by Pastor Robert Schuller, the founder of the Crystal Cathedral in California, the host of the program Hour of Power. The message is simple: always be positive; with God s help you can make it. In 2000 the spokesman of the White House said: The president (George Bush) believes that we are a blessed nation.

  4. Bright-sided Ehrenreich, B. (2010). Bright-sided: How positive thinking is undermining. America. New York: Picador. Evangelical mega-churches preach the good news that you only have to want something to get it, because God wants to prosper you. Major religious leaders, especially on the Christian right, buttress this conceit with the notion that Americans are God s chosen people and that America is the designated leader of the world.

  5. Irrational optimism British observer Godfrey Hodgson has written that the American sense of exceptionalism has become harder and harder. Those who set themselves up as instructors in the discipline of positive thinking coaches, preachers, and gurus of various sorts have described this effort with terms like self-hypnosis, mind control, and thought control. In other words, it requires deliberate self- deception, including a constant effort to repress or block out unpleasant possibilities and negative thoughts. Irrational optimism would result in disasters.

  6. Russell Jeung: Biblical individualism Today evangelical churches emphasize more the personal gains of Christianity and less the fear of God s judgment. The goals center on bringing people into a celebrative encounter with God and helping them grow in personal lives. Churches provide the audience with worship experiences that are uplifting and intimate, as well as programs to help an individual's own spiritual development. The Gospel is customized to fit into the postmodern American culture by placing personal autonomy and individual fulfillment before God s demands.

  7. Bruggemann: A deeper root beyond post-modernism Since the Enlightenment the self has become the center of everything. The notion of individual freedom was further reinforced by Descartes s establishment of the human doubter as the norm of epistemology. Later Freudian psychoanalysis promoted removing self-repression as the path of mental health. These cultural trends facilitate a self-centered religion.

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