Can We Still Sing the Lyrics “Come Holy Spirit”?: Spirit and Place in Australian Pentecostal Worship

Australian Pentecostals, both Indigenous and non-Indigenous, are speaking new tongues in their worship practices, forming new poetic languages of singing and conversation relevant for spatially dislocated twenty-first-century life. Using Nimi Wariboko’s three-city model offered in Charismatic City a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Pneuma
Main Author: Riches, Tanya (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Brill 2016
In: Pneuma
IxTheo Classification:KBS Australia; Oceania
KDG Free church
RD Hymnology
RJ Mission; missiology
Further subjects:B Worship Hillsong music pneumatology Aboriginal Australian Charismatic City Pentecostalism urban missiology
Online Access: Volltext (Verlag)
Description
Summary:Australian Pentecostals, both Indigenous and non-Indigenous, are speaking new tongues in their worship practices, forming new poetic languages of singing and conversation relevant for spatially dislocated twenty-first-century life. Using Nimi Wariboko’s three-city model offered in Charismatic City and the Public Resurgence of Religion, this article assesses Australian pentecostal worship practice in light of his “Charismatic City.” The article suggests that this emergent, poetic language of Spirit empowerment situates the worshipper in a rhizomatic network that flows with pentecostal energies, forming a new commons or space that is the basis of its global civil society. It presents two local case studies from Hillsong Church’s pneumatological song repertoire (1996–2006), and yarning conversation rituals at Ganggalah Church led by Aboriginal Australian pastors. These new languages identify and attune participants to the Spirit’s work in the world, particularly useful for urban cities and cyberspace.
ISSN:1570-0747
Contains:In: Pneuma
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/15700747-03803004