HomeKarma and Grace: Religious Difference in Millennial Sri Lanka (Religion Culture and Public Life)
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Karma and Grace: Religious Difference in Millennial Sri Lanka (Religion Culture and Public Life)

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Winner 2024 Clifford Geertz Prize in the Anthropology of Religion Society for the Anthropology of Religion Around the turn of the millennium Pentecostal churches began to pepper majority-Buddhist Sri Lanka setting off a sense of alarm among Buddhists who saw Christianity as a neocolonial threat to the nation. Rumors of foul play in the death of a Buddhist monk as well as allegations of proselytizing in the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami and during the final stages of civil war spurred nationalist anxieties moral panics and even episodes of violence by Buddhists against Christians suspected of facilitating unethical conversions. Through vivid ethnography and keen observations of media events Karma and Grace illuminates disputes over religious freedom and pluralism amid the rise of charismatic Christianity in Sri Lanka. Neena Mahadev explores the dueling efforts of Buddhist nationalists and Christian evangelists to reshape Sri Lankas religious economic and political landscapes. She considers theological and political impasses between Buddhisms vast timescales of karma and Christians promises of the immediacy of their Gods salvific grace. While Christian missions spread the Good News subsets of Buddhists produced bad press sting operations and disparaging media to impede born-again churches from taking root. In gripping detail Mahadev recounts how modernist and traditionalist Theravda Buddhists Pentecostal newcomers long-established Christian denominations local deity and spirit cults and the innovations of mavericks intermingle in a multireligious public sphere. Even amid trenchant conflicts Karma and Grace demonstrates that social proximity between rivals is also conducive to religious experimentation and the ambiguities of identity that allow Sri Lankans to live with difference.