Playing for God: Evangelical Women and the Unintended Consequences of Sports Ministry (North American Religions) Buy on Amazon
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Playing for God: Evangelical Women and the Unintended Consequences of Sports Ministry (North American Religions)

Author Annie Blazer
Publisher NYU Press
Category Religion
30.00 USD

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Book Details
Author(s) Annie Blazer
Publisher NYU Press
ISBN / ASIN 1479818135
ISBN-13 9781479818136
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #1,772,812
Category Religion
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
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Description
When sports ministry first emerged in the 1950s and 1960s, its founders imagined male celebrity athletes as powerful salespeople who could deliver a message of Christian strength: “If athletes can endorse shaving cream, razor blades, and cigarettes, surely they can endorse the Lord, too,” reasoned Fellowship of Christian Athletes founder Don McClanen. But combining evangelicalism and sport did much more than serve as an advertisement for religion: it gave athletes the opportunity to think about the embodied experiences of sport as a way to experience intimate connection with the divine. As sports ministry developed, it focused on individual religious experiences and downplayed celebrity sales power, opening the door for female Christian athletes to join and eventually dominate sports ministry. Today, women are the majority of participants in sports ministry in the United States. 
 
In Playing for God, Annie Blazer offers an exploration of the history and religious lives of Christian athletes, showing that evangelical engagement with popular culture can carry unintended consequences. When sport became an avenue for embodied worship, it forced a reckoning with evangelical teachings about the body. Female Christian athletes increasingly turned to their own bodies to understand their religious identity, and in so doing, came to question evangelical mainstays on gender and sexuality. What was once a male-dominated masculinist project of sports engagement became a female-dominated movement that challenged evangelical ideas on femininity, marriage hierarchy, and the sinfulness of homosexuality. Though evangelicalism has not changed sporting culture, for those involved in sports ministry, sport has changed evangelicalism.
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