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Independent charismatic churches in a period of post-modernisation – a case study of the Christian Outreach Centre Movement

Hey, Sam (2006) Independent charismatic churches in a period of post-modernisation – a case study of the Christian Outreach Centre Movement. In Proceedings Social change in the 21st century conference 2006, Queensland University of Technology.

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Abstract

The period from the mid 1960s to the present has witnessed a decline in many established churches. At the same time, it also saw the emergence of new religious groups, and within Christianity, the blossoming of revival movements. This paper describes a case study of an independent charismatic church, the Christian Outreach Centre (COC), and the denomination that grew from it during this period of rapid social change. It seeks to illuminate the particular appeal of new charismatic Christian churches, and to show how their innovative religious and organisational practices buttressed their growth during this period. The COC was an Australian religious group that was founded in Brisbane in 1974, before growing into a national and international movement with over 700 member churches. It was a local development that interacted with, and adapted, overseas religious models as an aid to developing contemporary avenues for religious expression. The COC developed innovative responses to the changes associated with advancing suburbanisation, de-institutionalisation and post modernity. It encouraged greater involvement of laity, the working class, women, and youth, and sought to give these religious consumers greater choice appropriate to increased market options. The COC was quick to use new technologies and media, including television, to start religious schools and a tertiary college, to expand into welfare programs, overseas aid agencies and political lobbying. Through merging socially conservative Christian beliefs with creative responses to local and global developments the COC grew into one of Australia’s larger mega churches by the late twentieth century. In conclusion we suggest that the particular appeal of the COC lies in its experiential (rather than creedal or dogmatic) theology, and in its adaptive religious and social practices. Its rapid growth allowed it to maintain organisational flexibility appropriate to these practices, but its long term sustainability is, as yet, untested in the face of organisational stagnation or decline.

Item Type:Conference Paper
Status:Published
Keywords:Australian Christianity; Social Change; Pentecostalism; Charismatic Movement; Postmodernity
Subjects:370000 Studies in Human Society > 370100 Sociology > 370107 Social Change
440000 Philosophy and Religion > 440200 Religion and Religious Traditions > 440207 Religion and Society
ID Code:6298
Deposited By:Willans, Bernadette
Deposited On:22 February 2007
Copyright Owner:Copyright 2006 Sam Hey