Contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology

The thesis explores the question of the contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to cosmologically-oriented Christian theology. The basic assumption underpinning the study is that a ‘cosmological orientation’ – that is, the way people enact and perceive their participation in the world – con...

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Main Author: Johnsen, Tore
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: The University of Edinburgh 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/814
https://era.ed.ac.uk/handle/1842/37530
id ftdatacite:10.7488/era/814
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collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
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language English
topic Sami theology
contextual theology
Indigenous theology
World Christianity
Indigenous knowledge
Christian cosmology
the Great Chain of Being
Lutheran theology
lived religion
indigenous methodology
theological decolonization
Sami people
spellingShingle Sami theology
contextual theology
Indigenous theology
World Christianity
Indigenous knowledge
Christian cosmology
the Great Chain of Being
Lutheran theology
lived religion
indigenous methodology
theological decolonization
Sami people
Johnsen, Tore
Contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology
topic_facet Sami theology
contextual theology
Indigenous theology
World Christianity
Indigenous knowledge
Christian cosmology
the Great Chain of Being
Lutheran theology
lived religion
indigenous methodology
theological decolonization
Sami people
description The thesis explores the question of the contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to cosmologically-oriented Christian theology. The basic assumption underpinning the study is that a ‘cosmological orientation’ – that is, the way people enact and perceive their participation in the world – constitutes a deeply theological matter closely associated with their worldview. I argue that such worldview assumptions are not entirely given within the Christian faith itself but depending in part on the basic religio-philosophical dialogue partners informing a theological tradition. The study explores the cosmological orientation of Christian theology by privileging the tradition of North Sami everyday Christianity. The Sami are the indigenous people of Sápmi, a vast region in today’s northern Norway, Sweden, Finland, and north-west Russia. Despite the colonial ways in which Christianity was introduced, the North Sami developed a Christian culture informed by indigenous ways of relating to the world. The material core of the study is based on a qualitative insider’s study of lived religion among North Sami everyday Christianity in four municipalities in Finnmark, Norway. Twenty-eight research participants of reindeer herding, settled inland / river Sami, and sea Sami backgrounds are interviewed in depth about the spiritual traditions they grew up with, and how they reflect on these today. The dominant overarching cosmological orientation coming out of the qualitative study (Chapters 4-5) is captured in the phrase ‘nature-centered Ipmiláhčči-faith’ (God the Father-faith). The overarching discussion is supported by diachronic analysis; that is, a critical deconstruction of historic Lutheran theological discourses on the Sami tradition from the Lutheran Reformation onwards (Chapter 3). The cosmological orientation of North Sami everyday Christianity is unpacked and theologically engaged through the lens of African and Native American theologies (Chapter 6). Its intersections with contemporary Norwegian Lutheranism is critically explored through a case study of a blessing ritual (Chapter 7). The thesis scrutinizes the complex negotiations between North Sami everyday Christianity and official Norwegian Lutheranism, informed by the historical encounter between two rather different cosmological orientations: Sami historical reception of Christianity, primarily filtered through the Sami indigenous tradition; official Norwegian Lutheran theology, primarily filtered through the philosophical traditions held by a European elite. The latter is seen as indebted to the medieval reception of the Greek Great Chain of Being conceptuality which sees the cosmos as a hierarchically ordered chain from ‘God’ on the top, downwards through ‘spirts’, ‘humans’, ‘animals’, ‘plants’, to ‘dead matter’ on the bottom. Foundational to this conceptuality is the spirit/matter divide at the middle of the chain, where the human being is located as the only being in cosmos being both spiritual and material. The Conclusion (Chapter 8) sums up the findings of the study in a discussion structured around the above-mentioned components of the Great Chain of Being. It is argued that the contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology is that the world is not seen as ordered along the same cosmological hierarchy and divisions. The indigenous imagination of North Sami everyday Christianity envisions spirit-matter relationships, visible-invisible relationships, human-nature relationships, and God-world relationships in a different way. A Sami perspective calls for a decolonization of Lutheran theology. An ontological turn in Christian theology is invited, where largely unquestioned, ontological taken-for-granted premises of hegemonic theologies are critically reconsidered. Indigenous methodology and contextual theology inform the overarching methodological framework of the study. Theoretical perspectives, methodological framework, qualitative methods, reflexivity, and ethical concerns are explained in a separate methodology chapter (Chapter 2).
format Other/Unknown Material
author Johnsen, Tore
author_facet Johnsen, Tore
author_sort Johnsen, Tore
title Contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology
title_short Contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology
title_full Contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology
title_fullStr Contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology
title_full_unstemmed Contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology
title_sort contribution of north sami everyday christianity to a cosmologically-oriented christian theology
publisher The University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/814
https://era.ed.ac.uk/handle/1842/37530
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Finnmark
North-West Russia
Northern Norway
sami
sami
Finnmark
genre_facet Finnmark
North-West Russia
Northern Norway
sami
sami
Finnmark
op_rights 2030-11-30
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7488/era/814
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spelling ftdatacite:10.7488/era/814 2023-05-15T16:13:48+02:00 Contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology Johnsen, Tore 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/814 https://era.ed.ac.uk/handle/1842/37530 en eng The University of Edinburgh 2030-11-30 Sami theology contextual theology Indigenous theology World Christianity Indigenous knowledge Christian cosmology the Great Chain of Being Lutheran theology lived religion indigenous methodology theological decolonization Sami people Other article Thesis or Dissertation CreativeWork 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7488/era/814 2022-04-01T10:34:12Z The thesis explores the question of the contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to cosmologically-oriented Christian theology. The basic assumption underpinning the study is that a ‘cosmological orientation’ – that is, the way people enact and perceive their participation in the world – constitutes a deeply theological matter closely associated with their worldview. I argue that such worldview assumptions are not entirely given within the Christian faith itself but depending in part on the basic religio-philosophical dialogue partners informing a theological tradition. The study explores the cosmological orientation of Christian theology by privileging the tradition of North Sami everyday Christianity. The Sami are the indigenous people of Sápmi, a vast region in today’s northern Norway, Sweden, Finland, and north-west Russia. Despite the colonial ways in which Christianity was introduced, the North Sami developed a Christian culture informed by indigenous ways of relating to the world. The material core of the study is based on a qualitative insider’s study of lived religion among North Sami everyday Christianity in four municipalities in Finnmark, Norway. Twenty-eight research participants of reindeer herding, settled inland / river Sami, and sea Sami backgrounds are interviewed in depth about the spiritual traditions they grew up with, and how they reflect on these today. The dominant overarching cosmological orientation coming out of the qualitative study (Chapters 4-5) is captured in the phrase ‘nature-centered Ipmiláhčči-faith’ (God the Father-faith). The overarching discussion is supported by diachronic analysis; that is, a critical deconstruction of historic Lutheran theological discourses on the Sami tradition from the Lutheran Reformation onwards (Chapter 3). The cosmological orientation of North Sami everyday Christianity is unpacked and theologically engaged through the lens of African and Native American theologies (Chapter 6). Its intersections with contemporary Norwegian Lutheranism is critically explored through a case study of a blessing ritual (Chapter 7). The thesis scrutinizes the complex negotiations between North Sami everyday Christianity and official Norwegian Lutheranism, informed by the historical encounter between two rather different cosmological orientations: Sami historical reception of Christianity, primarily filtered through the Sami indigenous tradition; official Norwegian Lutheran theology, primarily filtered through the philosophical traditions held by a European elite. The latter is seen as indebted to the medieval reception of the Greek Great Chain of Being conceptuality which sees the cosmos as a hierarchically ordered chain from ‘God’ on the top, downwards through ‘spirts’, ‘humans’, ‘animals’, ‘plants’, to ‘dead matter’ on the bottom. Foundational to this conceptuality is the spirit/matter divide at the middle of the chain, where the human being is located as the only being in cosmos being both spiritual and material. The Conclusion (Chapter 8) sums up the findings of the study in a discussion structured around the above-mentioned components of the Great Chain of Being. It is argued that the contribution of North Sami everyday Christianity to a cosmologically-oriented Christian theology is that the world is not seen as ordered along the same cosmological hierarchy and divisions. The indigenous imagination of North Sami everyday Christianity envisions spirit-matter relationships, visible-invisible relationships, human-nature relationships, and God-world relationships in a different way. A Sami perspective calls for a decolonization of Lutheran theology. An ontological turn in Christian theology is invited, where largely unquestioned, ontological taken-for-granted premises of hegemonic theologies are critically reconsidered. Indigenous methodology and contextual theology inform the overarching methodological framework of the study. Theoretical perspectives, methodological framework, qualitative methods, reflexivity, and ethical concerns are explained in a separate methodology chapter (Chapter 2). Other/Unknown Material Finnmark North-West Russia Northern Norway sami sami Finnmark DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Norway