试试精神:基督教传教中的权力邂逅和反奇迹

Matthew Tomlinson
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在19世纪和20世纪,试图使太平洋岛民皈依新教的传教士经常进行公开比赛,目的是展示耶和华的力量和当地神的弱点。这些所谓的“权力邂逅”,依赖于奇迹和反奇迹之间的关系:传教士完全投入到奇迹的概念中,作为激进的另类,因为他们的努力的成功取决于当地居民的意愿和能力,以开放以前无法想象的;但是,为了让新的奇迹成为可能,传教士必须挑战当地人对精神功效的期望,否认当地遗址唤起奇迹的原始潜力。在本文中,我将首先考察几个发生在大洋洲的权力冲突案例,包括斐济、汤加和所罗门群岛。然后,我特别谈到树木作为精神场所,在古老的斐济是突出的-因此是挥舞斧头的传教士的目标-但今天仍然是一个被认为是基本的,土著的,基于土地的精神功效的场所。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Try the spirits: power encounters and anti-wonder in Christian missions
Abstract Missionaries who attempted to convert Pacific Islanders to Protestant Christianity in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries often engaged in public contests meant to demonstrate the power of Jehovah and the weakness of indigenous gods. These ‘power encounters’, as they came to be called, depended on a relationship between wonder and anti-wonder: missionaries were fully invested in the concept of wonder as radical alterity, as the success of their efforts depended on local populations’ willingness and capacity to open up to the previously unimaginable; but to make new encounters with wonder possible, missionaries had to challenge local expectations of spiritual efficacy, denying local sites’ original potential to evoke wonder. In this article, I begin by examining several cases of power encounters in Oceania, including Fiji, Tonga, and Solomon Islands. I then turn specifically to trees as spiritual sites that were prominent in old Fiji – and therefore the target of ax-wielding missionaries – but remain today as sites of a perceived fundamental, indigenous, land-based spiritual efficacy.
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