This article explores how Christian clergy in Ireland have framed their adoption of online ministries during the COVID-19 pandemic as opportunities for the churches to retain some significance, even in secularizing societies. It is based on an island-wide survey of 439 faith leaders and 32 in-depth, follow-up interviews. The results of this study are analysed in light of scholarship in three areas: (1) secularization in Ireland, informed by Norris and Inglehart’s evolutionary modernization theory; (2) cross-national research that has found increasing interest in spirituality or religion during the pandemic (with the UK as the main point of comparison); and (3) wider pre-pandemic scholarship on digital religion. The article concludes by argu...
The restrictions on in-person church services in response to the Covid-19 pandemic have posed consid...
Ireland is considered by international adepts of new religious movements and Celtic Christians alike...
This study draws on data provided to the Covid-19 & Church-21 Survey by 2,017 Anglicans (clergy and ...
This article proposes to study the changing relationship between religion and the digital continent ...
This thesis analyses the negative and positive effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the religious pra...
Drawing on thirty in-depth interviews with faith leaders in the UK (including Islam, Christianity, J...
The disruptions of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the year 2020 reshaped all aspects of life...
Within the one Church, the Church of England holds together in tension two distinctive streams, one ...
The aim of the present study was to analyse the comments made by 133 rural lay people who voiced the...
Inspired by the objectives of the Church of England’s Living Ministry Research Project (to understan...
For some church members the pandemic may have been a challenge to faith, while for others the pandem...
This study draws on data provided to the Covid-19 & Church-21 Survey by 2,017 Anglicans (clergy and ...
Is the church in XIX century ready to enter virtual reality? How does the evangelization of "virtual...
Using a transcendental phenomenology approach, six Filipino chaplains in Italy were interviewed as t...
Covid-19 provides lessons for society, especially believers. The real fellowship must be limited, an...
The restrictions on in-person church services in response to the Covid-19 pandemic have posed consid...
Ireland is considered by international adepts of new religious movements and Celtic Christians alike...
This study draws on data provided to the Covid-19 & Church-21 Survey by 2,017 Anglicans (clergy and ...
This article proposes to study the changing relationship between religion and the digital continent ...
This thesis analyses the negative and positive effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the religious pra...
Drawing on thirty in-depth interviews with faith leaders in the UK (including Islam, Christianity, J...
The disruptions of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the year 2020 reshaped all aspects of life...
Within the one Church, the Church of England holds together in tension two distinctive streams, one ...
The aim of the present study was to analyse the comments made by 133 rural lay people who voiced the...
Inspired by the objectives of the Church of England’s Living Ministry Research Project (to understan...
For some church members the pandemic may have been a challenge to faith, while for others the pandem...
This study draws on data provided to the Covid-19 & Church-21 Survey by 2,017 Anglicans (clergy and ...
Is the church in XIX century ready to enter virtual reality? How does the evangelization of "virtual...
Using a transcendental phenomenology approach, six Filipino chaplains in Italy were interviewed as t...
Covid-19 provides lessons for society, especially believers. The real fellowship must be limited, an...
The restrictions on in-person church services in response to the Covid-19 pandemic have posed consid...
Ireland is considered by international adepts of new religious movements and Celtic Christians alike...
This study draws on data provided to the Covid-19 & Church-21 Survey by 2,017 Anglicans (clergy and ...