1
Introduction
‘How will we know about God’s love if no-one tells us?’ said a small child in a video clip
that Becky, one of the children’s workers at Riverside evangelical church, was playing at a
meeting for the volunteers and church staff who helped with Kids Church1 one Thursday
evening in May 2013. After a ‘bring and share’ supper of cheese, salad, sausage rolls, vegan
flapjacks, and scones, Becky had turned the lights down to play a short film about churches’
ministry with children on her laptop. The film emphasized the importance of this ministry in
a dechristianizing cultural context, stating that unless children have the opportunity to engage
with faith, they would not end up going to church and will not end up as Christians. After the
film had finished, Becky commented that she found its message ‘very powerful’, and said
that she thought it was also important to think that what they did in Kids Church was about
children ‘being disciples now’, and that by helping at Kids Church, ‘that’s our being
disciples’. Jon, one of the children’s workers, added that children’s ministry is also important
‘because pretty much all the studies show that the majority of people come to faith before
they’re eleven years old’. He repeated this to everyone for emphasis.
Becky and Jon asked everyone to share their stories or experiences from Kids Church
with each other. Gemma, a teaching assistant, began by commenting that one thing she had
noticed recently was how very keen the children were to get out to Kids Church from the
main church service, which, she said, ‘shows how much they feel it is their space’. Joy, the
church’s Community Development Manager, said that she had got to know one girl from
visiting Riverside Primary Academy (the local primary school linked with the church) who
had been having ‘some issues’ at school, and had decided to come to Kids Church. Joy said
that it was ‘amazing’ that from the first session, the girl ‘has been so happy there’, and that
1
‘Kids
Church’ was the term used at Riverside for their Sunday School.
2
this had made a difference not just to her, but also to her family. Becky commented that she
was encouraged by a conversation she had with a mother at the church’s toddler’s group that
week. She said that the mother had ‘got quite emotional’ talking to her, and that she had
wanted to say how much it meant to her ‘that her children were learning about God in Kids
Church, that she worried about passing her beliefs on to her children’, and so it meant a lot to
her ‘that her kids were growing in faith through the church’. Becky told the volunteers that
they shouldn’t underestimate how much the work they did at Kids Church means to the
parents and emphasized again that this mother had been ‘pretty emotional’ when talking to
her about this. Jon commented that he had been talking to a mother at the church who had
been thinking about changing churches and had visited some other churches with her child.
He said that this mother had asked her child what he thought of the other churches, and that
he had replied, ‘I like my church’, referring to Riverside. Jon said he thought it was ‘pretty
great’ that the children thought of Riverside as their church. At the end of the meeting, Becky
introduced a time of prayer. The group closed their eyes and bowed their heads, and everyone
said a prayer except me and a new volunteer. Alice, a young doctor, spoke quickly and
fluently as she prayed, asking that God ‘would really be at work through his Holy Spirit in
Kids Church in drawing the children to him’. Joy thanked God for what they could learn
about him ‘through the children and through their innocence’, while Jon prayed that they
‘would never be satisfied. May we always be working to improve things, to make Kids
Church better’.
Children powerfully embody the future for adults, representing the possible futures or
non-futures of a particular religious culture, and their involvement or non-involvement in
religion can therefore provoke anxiety. The falling numbers of young people identifying with
or practising religion across Europe (Bullivant 2018) can give those involved in working with
children in churches a sense of the importance and urgency of their work, as we see
3
suggested in this meeting, as they seek to stem this flow. At the same time, as numbers of the
avowedly non-religious continue to rise and non-religion comes to replace Christianity as the
cultural default in the UK (Lee 2015, Woodhead 2017), religious institutions’ efforts to
engage with and influence the lives of children, such as through their involvement in
schooling, can also cause concern. Heated public debates about faith schools, for instance,
often invoke fears of indoctrination, with ‘religion’ viewed as threatening the developing
independence and freedom of the child, while concerns are also expressed about whether
faith schools and religious child-raising practices exacerbate forms of religious and classbased social segregation. While the establishment and expansion of state-funded Islamic
schools has been a particular cause for controversy in many Western nations, religious efforts
to engage with children and education more broadly have also generated controversy, with
evangelicals often also singled out as posing a potentially indoctrinatory threat to children or
presented as extremist groups undermining ‘fundamental British Values’2 of freedom and
tolerance.
Contemporary debates about the relationship between children and religion reflect
wider social changes that have, from the late 1960s onwards, repositioned childhood at the
forefront of personal and political agendas, manifested, for example, in what the historian
Raphael Samuel refers to as ‘the middle-class cult of childhood’ (1994: 93). Focus on
children has intensified due to changes in family structure and demographic shifts to an
ageing population, which have imbued the ‘priceless’ child with a unique scarcity value
(Zelizer 1994). Complex, interwoven ideational currents have also sharpened this: the need to
The UK government defines ‘fundamental British values’ as democracy, the rule of law,
individual liberty, and mutual respect for and tolerance of those with different faiths and of
no faith. Teachers in English schools have been required to promote these values since 2014,
in initial response to the ‘Trojan Horse Affair’, when documents were leaked to the media
alleging a plot to ‘Islamise’ twenty-one state-funded schools in Birmingham, although no
evidence was found to support these accusations (Vincent and Hunter-Henin 2018,
Holmwood and O’Toole 2019).
2
4
invest in futures seeming increasingly pressing; the repositioning of personhood as societies
have moved away from traditional categories of identity; and the rapid pace of social and
cultural change readjusting orientations towards time and mortality (James et al. 1998: 5). At
the same time, Western modernization has increasingly emphasized the importance of
providing children with freedoms and rights to lives of their own, celebrating norms of
equality, mutual respect and autonomy between children and adults in the context of the
family and elsewhere (Beck 1997, Giddens 1998, Oswell 2013). We are living in times
marked by both a heightened concern for children – in which the care of children has come to
take on a sacred status (Lynch 2012) – and a sense of childhood as under threat, with children
seen as increasingly ‘confined, trapped indoors, cocooned by anxieties … and by increased
pressures, demands and expectations’ (Thomson 2013: 1). These processes also affect
religion, and as control over what happens to children has moved away from religious bodies
and become concentrated in structures of state education, the media, or commercial interests,
childhood is often a site of particular struggle, anxiety and controversy in relation to religion.
In this wider context, this book explores the lived realities of how different
evangelical churches seek to engage with children across the spaces of church, home, school
and other informal educational settings, how children experience these forms of engagement,
and the meanings and significance of childhood across different evangelical groups. Moving
beyond simplistic portrayals of the evangelical indoctrination of children in which children
are perceived as the passive receptors of religious belief, I argue for attention to be paid to the
multiple registers and formations of children’s agency, addressing how both children and the
idea of childhood act within religious life and engaging with the temporal, spatial, material
and moral complexity of this (Oswell 2013). The book sets out a new, relational approach to
the study of childhood and religion, which invites us to consider how particular forms of
children’s agency are not given a priori but emerge through practices and forms of
5
relationship, how the figure of ‘the child’ exerts agency shaping the hopes, fears, and
imaginations of adults, and how these processes enable or constrain children’s agency in
lived experience. The study of evangelicalism has largely ignored the lives of children,
reflecting a wider historic marginalization of children within the study of religion. Yet as
children and childhood occupy an important place within evangelical imaginaries and
practices, understanding the empirical realities of evangelicalism requires that children – and
adults’ hopes and concerns in relation to them – are integrated more fully into research. As
Priscilla Alderson puts it, ‘childhood, like adulthood, is not a discrete specialist topic to be
flattened, sliced and squeezed into a distinct sub-sociology. Instead, children and adults exist
and interact across practically all social concerns, and are understood through
multidisciplinary research’ (2016). Focusing on children in relation to evangelicalism is,
however, I argue, not only about understanding childhood, but opens up deeper
understanding of the nature of evangelical lifeworlds, of what it is to be a parent, of what it is
to educate, of the place of religion and religious-secular relations in public life, and of wider
questions of personhood, temporality, the nature of authority and moral aspiration in the
contemporary moment. Setting out an approach that explores the interrelations between the
figure of the child, children’s agency, and how adult religious subjectivities are constructed in
both imagined and practical relationships with children, this book aims to demonstrate the
importance of studying children and childhood within the sociology of religion in order to
enrich our understanding of the contemporary social realities of religion.
Evangelicals, childhood and the changing religious landscape
Over the past century and a half, public perceptions of evangelicals’ engagements with
children – and of evangelicalism itself – have shifted radically. While the evangelical Lord
Shaftesbury was romantically celebrated as leading ‘the children of bondage into their
6
Promised Land’ as he took up the cause of factory children and climbing boys and welcomed
‘poor children into his Ragged Schools’ (Cunningham 1991: 9), today evangelicals’
engagements with children in the UK are often regarded with ambivalence, and sometimes as
cause for heightened public concern.3 This shift needs to be located within a wider landscape
of religious change in Britain, a country in which Christianity remains deeply culturally
embedded, but which is also becoming increasingly secular, non-religious and diverse in its
religious profile at the same time (Davie 2015: xii). As formal religious participation has
declined precipitously since the 1960s while affiliation to Christianity is falling, there has
been a significant growth in the number of individuals claiming to have ‘no religion’ (Lee
2015, Woodhead 2017). The fastest-growing forms of religion are no longer those linked
with established political power and prestige, but are more closely associated with minority
groups, such as Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, and Pentecostals ‘forging new forms of identity and
representation in British society’ (Woodhead 2012: 25).
Claims that Britain is a secular nation fail to acknowledge the extent to which religion
has remained embedded in aspects of culture, in institutions associated with government, in
the educational system and in other aspects of public life, as a legacy of the historic and
complex intertwining of the monarchy, the established churches, and the major public
institutions (Johnson and Vanderbeck 2014: 11). In an increasingly religiously diverse
society, a range of faith groups and leaders (including other Christian denominations besides
the established churches) are also now often included within strategies of consultation
seeking to enhance the inclusion of minority interests (ibid.). Religion thus became
‘something to be dealt with by consultations, legislation and policy’, with a distinction
increasingly made between ‘socially useful “faith” initiatives, and dangerous forms of
“religion” which put the claims of God above those of citizenship’ (Woodhead 2012: 2).
3
See, for example, BBC 2013, Independent 2013, Spielman 2018.
7
Alongside these changing modes of religious engagement with governance and policy, the
growing salience of different forms of religion in the public sphere, together with its
unavoidable prominence in global politics relayed across omnipresent news channels and
social media, has often provoked strong reactions from secular groups and elites. Religion is
now often viewed as ‘a “toxic brand”, prejudiced and illiberal at best, divisive and destructive
at worst’ (Woodhead 2016: 258).
Against this backdrop of longer-term religious decline and the growth of forms of
non-religion, evangelicalism has become an increasingly prominent force within the
Protestant churches. In the post-war era, as Linda Woodhead argues, evangelicalism’s social
conservatism in terms of gender roles and the nuclear family resonated with the Christian
‘revival’ of the immediate post-war years, and as the post-war era continued, the more
friendly, personal God known directly in Jesus Christ that evangelicalism emphasized ‘would
eclipse the sterner God of civic tradition’ (2012: 13). The mood of national revival and
Christian confidence of the 1950s was however replaced by a progressively more secular era
(ibid.). Some commentators present this as a rapid process, with the repressive and
puritanical ethos of Christian moral narratives overturned by the 1960s counter-culture and
the ‘vigorous promulgation of new narratives which, with amazing suddenness, swept liberal
culture: postcolonial narratives, feminism, gay liberation, the green movement and narratives
of sexual freedom’ (Brown 2009: 232, see also Brown and Lynch 2012). Other historians
(e.g. McLeod 2007) portray this shift as ‘more gradual than that, … in which the churches
were willing partners rather than reactionary critics’ (Woodhead 2012: 13).
Yet while much of mainstream Protestantism became increasingly liberalized, a subcultural perspective became dominant amongst evangelicalism, with evangelical worship
songs from the 1980s onwards, for example, increasingly portraying followers of Christ using
military imagery, as an army or stronghold against a prevailing culture of unbelief (Brown
8
and Lynch 2012: 341). Religious responses opposing liberalizing moral currents are often
presented as ‘patriarchal protest movements’ against modernity (Riesebrodt 1998), and the
strength of global evangelicalism is often explained in at least partly these terms.
Conservative evangelical teachings on gender difference and emphasis on certain truths as
revealed in the Bible has been portrayed as a response to a growing fluidity of meaning and
existential anxieties, as traditional sources of authority and security are overturned through
globalization and the extension of impersonal market forces across ever-greater areas of life
(Strhan 2015: 8). Yet while norms of submission, the acceptance of religious and scriptural
authority and the traditionalist re-inscription of gender difference prevalent in many
evangelical churches grew increasingly countercultural, in other ways, evangelicalism
chimed well with cultural trends emerging over this period. As Grace Davie notes, late
modern currents such as an emphasis on expressivism, self-awareness and reflexivity may be
seen as aids rather than barriers to the evangelical movement, especially in its charismatic
expressions (2015: 143). At the same time, the entrepreneurial ethos and emphasis on the
individual (situated within tight social networks of family and faith) resonated well with the
Thatcher era and beyond, in which evangelicalism was one of the fastest growing forms of
religion in the UK (Woodhead 2012: 19).
It is difficult to ascertain the precise number of evangelicals in the UK today, with
estimates varying widely according to different forms of measurement and identification used
(Smith 2015: 17). However, they make up an increasing proportion of church-goers in the
UK (forty per cent according to the 2005 English Church Census, Brierley 2006: 51), spread
across a variety of denominations, including roughly a third belonging to the Church of
England (Smith and Woodhead 2018: 210). The only large-scale survey data on evangelicals
in the UK derives from the ‘21st Century Evangelicals’ research programme, carried out by
the Evangelical Alliance since 2010. The data from the 2016 panel survey for this programme
9
suggests that the majority identify as ‘white British’ (ninety-three per cent of the sample),4
with an older population (fifty-eight per cent having been born before 1960, thirty-two per
cent in the 1960s or 1970s, and only ten per cent since 1980) (Smith and Woodhead 2018:
210). The evangelicals surveyed in the programme were predominantly middle to upper
class, with the 2012 survey revealing seventy per cent with a university degree and forty-one
per cent with postgraduate qualifications, probably reflecting the socio-economic profile of
evangelicals in Britain more generally (Smith and Woodhead 2018: 211).
The term ‘evangelical’ is broad, and scholars – as well as evangelicals themselves –
disagree about the question of definition. I use ‘evangelical’ in what follows to refer,
following David Bebbington, to the tradition existing in Britain since the 1730s, marked by
characteristics of conversionism, Biblicism, activism and crucicentrism (Bebbington 1989:
3). I use the term ‘conservative evangelical’ for the tradition emerging within British
evangelicalism following a rift with liberal evangelicals in the 1920s, with differing estimates
of the Bible a central point of tension (pp. 181-228). I use ‘charismatic’ to refer here to those
evangelicals who place an emphasis on the gifts of the Holy Spirit and practice spiritual gifts,
but retain their membership in older, established congregations, rather than participating in
Pentecostal or neo-Pentecostal churches (Coleman and Hackett 2015: 9). I use ‘open
evangelical’ to describe a culture united in dissatisfaction with dominant evangelical culture’s
focus on personal salvation and propositional beliefs, critiquing conservative evangelical
teachings on gender, sexuality, and the exclusivity of salvation in Christ. They have close
links with – and many describe themselves as part of – the ‘emerging Church/emerging
evangelical’ movement (Bielo 2011, Engelke 2013, Marti and Ganiel 2014). However,
Smith notes however that BAME groups may be under-represented in the sample, because
while a high proportion of such groups may in many ways be evangelical in terms of their
theology, they may not themselves self-identify as ‘evangelical’, and are more likely to use
the term ‘Pentecostal’ (2015: 21).
4
10
understanding what it means to be ‘evangelical’ today means holding each these definitions
loosely, and examining the range of people and organizations who claim these terms for
themselves, exploring both what they share and points of difference and tension, and the
ways in which the meanings of these terms can shift over time.
It is worth noting that it is the more theologically conservative forms of
evangelicalism that are often the most culturally prominent, in the UK and elsewhere. These
groups have acquired a media and public significance greater than their numbers through, as
Brown and Lynch comment (2012: 341), generating conflicts within religious institutions
(e.g. over LGBTQ clergy, same-sex marriage and women’s ordination in the Church of
England and the Anglican Communion5), and through their participation in particular forms
of religious activism and protest in public life. It is more conservative forms of
evangelicalism that especially generate media attention because of the tendency of news
media to be drawn to stories which frame social life is terms of conflict and controversy
(Brown and Lynch 2012: 341). This situation, however, skews wider public perceptions of
contemporary evangelicalism, leading to stereotypes of evangelicals as reactionary
fundamentalists who feel themselves increasingly oppressed and marginalized by a hostile,
secular state, and fails to appreciate the diversity of those who identify as ‘evangelical’. In the
decade following the financial crisis, some evangelicals’ social activism in responding to
poverty and social need has also captured public attention, such as their engagement in food
banks or the initiatives to address financial exclusion set in motion by the Archbishop of
Canterbury – whose background is charismatic evangelical – following his well-publicized
critique of the payday loans company Wonga. However, it is worth noting that in media
portrayals of these kinds of social engagement, churches’ and individuals’ ‘evangelicalism’ is
rarely mentioned.
5
See discussion in Brittain and McKinnon (2018).
11
Seeking to move beyond well-worn stereotypes of evangelicals, this book uses
‘childhood’ as a lens through which to explore the contemporary realities of evangelicals’
lives and concerns. While tensions related to gender and sexuality have frequently
commanded the attention of sociologists of religion, parent-child relations and
understandings of the family are also a fundamental aspect of wider social changes in relation
to religion and have thus far received relatively little empirical attention (in contrast with the
burgeoning literature on religion in the public sphere). At the same time, focusing on how
evangelicals seek to engage with children allows insight into the lived realities of the
relationship between religion and education. A side-effect of neoliberal and postwelfarist
policies has been the increased opportunities afforded for faith groups in educational
provision (Dinham and Jackson 2012), and it is thus not surprising that faith-based schooling
has attracted growing scholarly attention over the past decade or so.6 However much of this
data has been either theoretical or based on quantitative analysis, and we know relatively
little about how religion and the secular are located and negotiated within the mundane
micropractices of everyday school life, or about what the links between schools and religious
institutions look like in practical terms.
Focus on the lived realities of how evangelicals engage with children and the agency
of childhood across church, school and home life also opens onto broader questions
surrounding the place of religion in modernity. Popular cultural conceptions of ‘childhood’,
‘education’ and ‘adulthood’ bear the traces of emancipatory Enlightenment ideals, in which
what it is to be an adult and what it is to be educated are held to entail the development of
individual autonomy and self-determination. Concepts of freedom, self-determination, and
tolerance acquired a new centrality in visions of social progress as Enlightenment thinkers
See, for example, Halstead and McLaughlin 2005, Gardner et al. 2005, Allen and West
2009, 2011, Andrews and Johnes 2016, Clayton et al. 2018.
6
12
sought to move beyond what they saw as the destructive legacy of obedience to earlier social
and political institutions and the religious orders that legitimated them, and ideas of collective
belonging became oriented around the nation-state rather than the churches. A secular-liberal
vision of an ideal society of autonomous actors (Seligman 2014: 14) became over time
closely linked with understandings of Enlightenment modernity as the ‘autonomous
adversary of “revealed religion”’ (Rose 1995: 127). If the path to Enlightenment or
modernity was perceived to be about becoming determined by one’s own mind, this was
often seen at odds with a religious ethic of submission to a divine Other. While religion had
remained central for many Enlightenment thinkers, they also advocated a stronger separation
of religion and the state. As Calhoun et al. argue, many
preferred a ‘reasonable’ religion, as John Locke put it, opposing excessive
‘enthusiasm’. They sensed a need to think of religion as a social construct that was
potentially limited and controllable – something, in brief, that could be dominated by
a different way of thinking. This new way of thinking was characterized by reason
and secular ideals.
(2011: 7)
This Enlightenment vision worked its way out in Euro-American contexts in different
configurations of the relations between education and religion.7 However, the Enlightenment
emphasis on autonomy also shaped modern understandings of education as concerned with
the progressive development of autonomy. In this narrative, children are implicitly
heteronomous, to be developed into autonomous, rational citizens through education and
Adam B. Seligman’s excellent Religious Education and the Challenge of Pluralism (2014)
provides a comparative analysis of religious education and state policies towards religious
education across seven different countries and in the European Union as a whole.
7
13
child-raising practices. Many Enlightenment advocates of autonomy were also pioneers of
educational theories that have been enormously influential in shaping dominant theories of
education. Kant, for example, emphasized the idea of education as about the formation of the
rational, autonomous subject, and he saw the moral subject as one who is free to obey the
dictates of reason without being affected by anything else, rejecting heteronomy as ‘the
source of all spurious principles of morality’ (Kant 1998: 47). Children, in Kant’s view, were
not yet capable of submitting to the dictates of reason, and the educator’s role was therefore
to lead them towards reason and autonomy (Strhan 2012: 84). Religion seemed in these wider
narratives to stand for all that ‘secular modernity’ was supposed to have left behind, with
children and infants understood as not yet capable of determining their own minds. It is thus
easy to see why religious child-raising practices and religious institutions’ involvement in
education can become subject to contestation, prompting fears that children’s developing
independence, freedom and autonomy are under threat. Political theorist Matthew Clayton,
for instance, argues that in accounts of liberal legitimacy, infant baptism is an illegitimate
practice, as a non-voluntary enrolment of a child into a ‘particular comprehensive doctrine’,
which violates the principle of autonomy (2006: 88), while Richard Dawkins, arguing that it
was ‘preposterous to speak of “Christian children” or “Muslim children” (2015), states that
labelling children as religious ‘negates the ideal, held by all decent educationists, that
children should be taught to think for themselves’. However, by attending to the specific
modalities of children’s agency, including how norms of self-determination are promoted
within some evangelical churches and in schools linked with them, this book challenges
simplistic notions of religion as fundamentally opposed to ideals of autonomy that still
abound in many debates about education. The picture that emerges reveals how while some
evangelicals emphasize norms of submission, other aspects of evangelicals’ work with
14
children are shaped by broader contemporary ideational currents and processes, such as
neoliberalism, individualization and an emphasis on reflexivity.
Attending to how ideas of autonomy and agency are implicated in evangelical
constructions of the child, the book argues that the ways in which some conservative
evangelicals understand childhood today enacts a narrative of declinism, in which a
dechristianizing British society is understood to be in a downward moral and cultural spiral.
Within this narrative, my conservative evangelical interlocutors describe themselves as
increasingly countercultural, moving against the grain of pervasive norms of individual
agency and autonomy as they prioritize norms of submission and obedience not only for their
children, but also in family life and in how individuals should relate to God. At odds with
this, charismatic and open evangelicals’ engagements with children are increasingly shaped
by wider democratizing cultural norms that seek to allow children to ‘be themselves’, and for
adults to learn from the ‘wisdom’ and ‘innocence’ of children. My interlocutors in these
churches express their desires for children to be regarded as equal to adults in the church,
although the children themselves do not necessarily experience this to be the case. Across all
these evangelical lifeworlds however, engagements with children become laden with moral
meanings for adults, as the figure of the child within each embodies not only the possible
futures of evangelicalism but also their hopes to engage with and influence the future of
British society.
Researching Evangelicals and Childhood
My initial plan for this research was to focus on childhood in relation to conservative
evangelicalism. My previous research had been an ethnographic study of how conservative
evangelicals negotiated their faith – including their countercultural teachings on gender,
sexuality, and other religions – across different urban spaces, revealing the processes through
15
which they learnt to understand themselves as an alienated minority in contemporary British
society. Although the book based on this research (Strhan 2015) did not focus on children or
childhood, questions surrounding child-rearing and religious socialization frequently arose
during my fieldwork. I became increasingly aware of how childhood seemed to be a site of
anxiety for some conservative evangelicals, reflected in the emergence of church-run
parenting courses, and evangelicals’ visibility in highly publicized national campaigns on
issues such as the sexualization of childhood and sex education. These initiatives were
attracting wider public attention, generating criticism both of the rise of a politicallyinfluential conservative Christian movement, with links to generous donors in the United
States and fears about the effects of religiously separatist child-raising practices. My intention
was therefore to open up understanding not only of the contemporary significance of
childhood within evangelicalism but also how ‘religious’ subjects are formed in ‘secular’
times and the changing place of children within this. When I began to investigate possible
fieldsites for this research, however, I soon discovered that the ways in which other churches
were engaging with children also illuminated important questions about childhood,
evangelicalism and the contemporary nature of children’s formation. Since there had been so
little empirical research into childhood and/or children’s lives in relation to evangelicalism, I
decided to broaden my focus to include charismatic and open evangelicals to add to the small
but growing literature on childhood and religion, using ethnography to enable insight to the
everyday practices shaping children’s experiences and the concerns of adults in relation to
them.
Ethnography has become a privileged method in the sociological study of children’s
lives and culture. James and Prout argue that ethnography has a particular part to play in
attending to children as social actors in their own right, allowing them ‘a more direct voice in
the production of sociological data’ than is possible through surveys or experimental styles of
16
research, and enabling insight into how children play particular roles and to ‘the meanings
that they themselves attach to their lives’ (1997: 4-5). In relation to the study of religion and
childhood, Robert Orsi highlights the practical issues that might seem to be involved in
carrying out fieldwork with children, asking: ‘Is it possible to know their religious worlds
from the inside? How can adults be present in such conversations without being
overwhelming?’ (cited in Bales 2005: 54). Yet, as Bales notes, these concerns about what it is
to know another’s world and the power dynamics implicated in forms of research apply to all
ethnographic research. I decided to use ethnography in this research not only because it
allows us to hear children’s voices more directly, but because it also enables insight into the
subtleties of how people – both adults and children – move and act across different times and
spaces, such as how the church and school spaces afford different ways of speaking, acting
and locating religion, each shaped by their own institutional cultures.
This book draws primarily on ethnographic fieldwork conducted with three
evangelical churches, which I call ‘Riverside’ (open evangelical), ‘St George’s’ (charismatic
evangelical), and ‘St John’s’ (conservative evangelical). I had already amassed a significant
amount of relevant data during my research with the conservative evangelical ‘St John’s’
over nineteen months’ ethnographic fieldwork there (February 2010-August 2011). I
therefore decided to conduct secondary data analysis of this material8 and supplement this
data with further fieldsite visits, interviews and observations where there were specific issues
or questions I wanted to investigate further in relation to children’s experiences. This then
enabled me to extend the scope of the research through conducting new ethnographic
This comprised 777 single-spaced typed pages of detailed fieldnotes, together with
transcripts of formal, open-ended interviews with thirty-one church members, and of sermons
and talks given in the church during this period.
8
17
research with a charismatic evangelical church, ‘St George’s’, and an open evangelical
congregation, ‘Riverside’, between January 2013 and June 2015.9
I chose to approach Riverside and St George’s because, like St John’s, they were each
regarded as important and influential representatives of their style of evangelicalism. Each
church had close links with other prominent doctrinally-similar evangelical churches and
leaders across different global contexts (especially the US) and were regarded by other
evangelical churches of their type as leading the way in areas of theological controversy.
David, the rector of St John’s emphasized to me that in his view, a key feature of St John’s
was its ‘church planting and pioneering agenda’, and St George’s likewise had a programme
of ‘church planting’. Riverside was not involved in church planting in the same way, but was
developing a national network of churches, and, like St John’s, hosted regular national
conferences and events examining particular theological issues, aimed at other church
leaders. All three are large churches, located in central London: St John’s the largest, with
three Sunday services each averaging about five hundred in attendance; St George’s
attracting around two hundred to each of its two Sunday services, and Riverside also drawing
around two hundred to its Sunday morning service, and around fifty to its Sunday evening
service. I make no claims as to their national representativeness as churches, but rather aim to
draw out similarities and differences between their respective cultures that provide insight
into the varied textures and moral rhythms of contemporary evangelicalism, and how this
relates to their processes of engaging with children. However, it is worth noting that while
evangelicalism has often flourished in suburban and rural settings, in the contemporary UK,
9
I conducted the majority of my fieldwork with Riverside between January 2013 and October
2014, and with St George’s, between March 2013 and June 2015. The greater length of time I
spent with St George’s was in part due to my regular participation in Kids Church (as an
extra adult present) being helpful to the church. This form of ongoing immersion in the
everyday ‘duties’ of church life enriched the depth of this research, but also made leaving
difficult (Day 2017: 16).
18
urban settings – and specifically London – are of strategic importance for understanding the
potential futures of evangelicalism. In the twenty-first century, Greater London is the only
county to have witnessed an overall increase in church attendance (Brierley 2006) and is
home to twenty-three percent of evangelical churchgoers and fifty-seven per cent of all
churchgoers aged twenty to twenty-nine (p. 249-50).10
Ethnographic comparisons of conservative and progressive religious groups are rare.
Therefore conducting fieldwork across different evangelical churches appealed for theoretical
reasons, drawing attention to ‘unexpected parallels between the groups while also casting
subtle differences between them into clearer relief’ (Braunstein 2017: 13) and affording
insight into how each negotiated their position in relation to wider cultural, social and
political contexts. Comparison is, as Michael Herzfeld suggests, useful as a heuristic device
and it is important to recognize that the process of comparison takes place not only across
fieldsites, but also in relation to the ethnographer’s own professional and personal trajectory
(2001: 262). Here, it is worth underscoring that the fact I conducted fieldwork with St John’s
before I began fieldwork with Riverside and St George’s meant that I was perhaps more
struck than others with less immersion in conservative evangelicalism would have been by
differences between these churches and St John’s. I was, for instance, conscious of how some
members of St George’s and Riverside at times ‘othered’ conservative evangelicals, as those
at St John’s had also distinguished themselves from charismatics (Strhan 2015: 185). Yet I
also observed fluidity across these groups, with some individuals who had previously been at
With more resources, it would have been useful to also include a black majority
congregation in this research. However the time-intensive nature of fieldwork meant
including a fourth church was beyond the comparative scope (and funding) of this project. It
is worth noting that while many black majority churches may be evangelical in terms of their
theology, they are more likely to identify as Pentecostal rather than evangelical (Smith 2015:
21).
10
19
St John’s now regular attendees at St George’s, while a couple of individuals also
simultaneously attended morning services at Riverside and evening services at St George’s.
My own personal history was also relevant to the process of comparison. My decision
to begin researching evangelicals can, as I have discussed elsewhere (2015: 25) be linked to
my teenage involvement in and subsequent path away from the charismatic evangelical
movement. This teenage experience of evangelicalism in part motivated my initial desire to
understand the social and cultural effects of evangelicalism better. But it is also worth noting
that my own personal experience meant that I was especially struck by how attitudes to issues
such as women’s leadership in the church and the acceptance of LGBTQ identities and samesex relationships at St George’s were shifting rapidly away from the more conservative
teachings I had encountered in the late 1990s. These are themes I explore in the later chapters
of this book.
All three churches were located in inner urban areas of heightened socio-economic
polarization and this shaped their congregational dynamics in somewhat different ways. The
congregation of St John’s was predominantly (but not exclusively) white, affluent, educated
and middle-class, with a high proportion of students, single graduates in their twenties and
thirties, and married couples and young families with children, with many of its members
working in fields such as law, finance, medicine and teaching. There was a relatively low
proportion of teenage children, as a significant number of families with children ended up
moving out to more suburban churches, and those with teenage children who did stay at St
John’s were often wealthy enough to send their children to fee-paying schools. The
membership of St George’s was also young, with a high proportion of students and
professionals working in the creative arts, media and new technology industries. Although
many of children at St George’s were from white, middle-class families, the church also had
a significant proportion of children (and of its adult membership) from a diverse range of
20
ethnic and national backgrounds, including Nigerian, Rwandan, South African, Chinese,
Brazilian, Japanese and Polish. Although there were certainly well-heeled members of St
George’s, the overall culture of the church was not ‘posh’ middle-class as it was at St John’s
(see Strhan 2015: 15), with emphasis instead placed on the idea of the church as ‘creative’. A
few of the children attended fee-paying schools, but the majority did not.
Riverside’s membership was diverse in terms of ethnicity and social class, with the
majority of those attending services living in the local area surrounding the church, in
contrast with both St John’s and St George’s, which both drew a significant proportion of
their membership from further afield in London. Many of Riverside’s most prominent
members (who were involved in leading services, speaking in various capacities at the front
of the church and leading work with children) were young, white, and middle-class, and
tended to work in the public or third sector or in Christian ministry. It is worth noting,
however, that Riverside’s church leadership, in contrast with St John’s and St George’s, had
largely not been educated at elite universities, and although the majority were white, there
were also BAME leaders. Those who attended church services were from a more diverse
range of social class and ethnic backgrounds, working in a range of fields (including politics,
education, catering, and the civil service), with some currently unemployed, and a small
handful of regular attendees either homeless or living in temporary hostel accommodation.
My fieldwork with the children also made me aware of how several of the families at
Riverside were affected by the impact of economic recession and austerity policies, with
children sometimes saying prayers telling God that they needed money in their houses
because the previous week they ‘couldn’t buy a lot of shopping so the fridge was nearly
empty’. Only a small minority of children and local families were white and middle-class,
with the majority from African, Afro-Caribbean, Latin American, white-working class, and
mixed heritage backgrounds.
21
St John’s and St George’s are both Anglican, while Riverside is Baptist. St John’s
however did not have an easy relationship with the Church of England, and was closely
linked with the Global Anglican Futures Conference (GAFCON), a movement which grew
out of transnational alliances that had developed since the mid-1990s in opposition to the
growing acceptance of homosexual relationships in some Anglican provinces (GAFCON
2009, Sadgrove et al. 2010, Brittain and McKinnon 2018) and was critical of liberalism
within the Anglican Communion more broadly. As is typical of GAFCON-supporting
churches, St John’s opposed same sex relationships and the ordination of LGBTQ bishops in
the Anglican Communion. The church was also representative of the conservative
evangelical wing of the Church of England in opposing women bishops and not accepting the
ordained ministry of women in the Church. St George’s had an easier relationship with the
Church of England, but placed little overt emphasis on its Anglican identity, describing the
church as ‘religion-free’ and trying to ‘do church’ in a way that is accessible to ‘everyone,
whatever your experience of church and whatever you believe’. While the ordained ministers
at St George’s were men, the church supported the ordination of women and sought to
encourage the participation of more women in leadership roles in the church and more
BAME leaders, acknowledging that their current staff leadership team did not reflect the
diversity of the congregation in this sense. The only time I ever saw a minister at either St
John’s or St George’s in clerical dress was when Alex, the curate, wore a clerical shirt and
dog collar, with black skinny jeans, to lead occasional services at St George’s Primary
School. Riverside’s formal affiliation was Baptist, although this was rarely explicitly alluded
to, except at infant thanksgiving services or adult baptisms. Members of the congregation had
previously attended a range of other churches, including other evangelical churches,
Anglican, and Roman Catholic churches. Riverside encouraged the leadership of women in
22
the church, supported same-sex marriage and had established an LGBTQI group in the
church shortly before I began conducting fieldwork.
During my fieldwork with Riverside and St George’s, I spent time following church
staff who worked with children (e.g. children’s workers) in order to gain insight into the
range of ways in which these churches were engaging with children and to build relationships
with children and their families over time. I carried out participant observation every Sunday
at church services and Sunday School/Kids Church, alternating each week between Riverside
and St George’s. Over half these Sundays also involved attending additional activities
organized for children or their families, such as Messy Church or Family Kitchen at
Riverside, or a monthly lunch and Bible study group for single mothers at St George’s. To
get to know parents and to gain insight into the everyday rhythms of life at both these
churches beyond the specific activities involving children, I also attended a range of other
activities over the course of fieldwork. These included a toddlers’ group and groups and
seminars for parents, a weekly small group for church members, some Sunday evening
services (for which I volunteered on the coffee rota), and a range of other events the churches
organized, such as local community fairs and public debates. I also carried out fieldwork in
the schools linked with both churches, following the children’s workers in their engagements
with local schools in order to gain insight into what the links between churches and schools
looked like in practice. This included attending weekly assemblies and lunch time clubs at St
George’s and weekly lunch time clubs at Riverside, and two week-long holiday clubs run by
each church. I also went along to two annual weekend trips to a large camp, organized by a
national evangelical youth organization, attended by members of Riverside’s Kids Church
with their leaders.
The children I worked with were aged between six and eleven years old, although I
also carried out fieldwork with Year 7 children (aged 11-12) at Riverside Secondary
23
Academy, since the establishment of this school was important to how the church understood
its relationships with local children and families, and I draw on this fieldwork in Chapters 4
and 5. My decision to focus on this period of ‘middle childhood’ was in order to address the
neglect of this particular age range within the growing literature on religion and youth
(Scourfield et al. 2013: 18).
During my fieldwork with St John’s, I attended two services every Sunday (morning
and evening), participated in two small Bible study groups on a weekly basis, volunteered on
the coffee rota, helped prepare and serve food at ‘guest events’, attended mid-week lunch
time services, went on a ‘church family’ weekend away conference. I was also often invited
to church members’ homes for suppers or Sunday lunch, and met up with people for tea or
coffee, in cafes or at their workplaces. Through this immersion in the church, I had regular
contact with a range of parents in the church and got to know some of their children. My
overall focus in this fieldwork was the difference that faith made to the everyday lives of
church members, and the question of what it meant to be a parent and the everyday realities
of bringing up children were frequent themes that arose in the course of exploring this
question. I discussed the development of this project on childhood with several members of
the congregation and church leaders, and interviewed several children’s workers during this
initial period of fieldwork. Where there were specific issues I wanted to explore more fully
subsequently, I carried out further interviews with parents and children and those involved in
children’s work at St John’s. I also carried out short periods of observation at two further
conservative evangelical churches and interviews at three further conservative evangelical
churches in different areas of the UK to get a sense of how the modes of practice I was seeing
at St John’s related to other conservative evangelical congregations. To get a feel for how my
fieldwork with St George’s related to other charismatic churches, I also interviewed adults
involved in children’s work at three other charismatic evangelical churches and attended a
24
national conference about children’s ministry organized by the Kingsway Trust (which was
also attended by those involved in children’s ministry at Riverside).
I carried out thirty-one formal, open-ended interviews during my initial period of
fieldwork with St John’s, and was expecting to carry out a similar number of interviews at St
George’s and Riverside. In practice, while I did carry out interviews with twenty-two
children and twelve adults as part of this project, I found that the more informal, casual
conversations I had with children and adults about my research in the everyday course of my
fieldwork, together with my observations of informants’ modes of practice and interaction,
provided more valuable insights about the everyday realities of how these churches engaged
with children. In particular, this allowed the children to express their voices in their own
social context and afforded them more freedom in the production of data, such as allowing
them to write notes or draw pictures for me or express their opinions directly to my digital
voice recorder, as and when they often wanted to.
Throughout my fieldwork, I kept a detailed fieldnote diary, which I completed in a
notebook during the day and typed up later in the day or evening or the following morning.
These fieldnotes included detailed descriptions of specific encounters and records of event,
conversations and interactions that had occurred, and my own reflections on and emotional
reactions to these events.11 I also collected many hundreds of pages of print and digital
materials, such as Kids Church and Sunday School plans, assembly scripts, flyers,
newsletters, and training materials that circulated during the groups during the period of
fieldwork, and recorded and transcribed relevant sermons and talks in each of the churches.
Full ethical approval was obtained through the University of Kent, and ethical issues were
taken seriously. Standard ethical procedures were followed in relation to ensuring the
Overall, these fieldnotes collected between January 2013 and June 2015 comprised 666,376
words, in addition to the 557,958 words of fieldnotes produced during my original period of
fieldwork at St John’s.
11
25
informed consent, privacy, confidentiality, and avoidance of harm of adult participants.
Within ethnography, the negotiation of ethical issues is an ongoing, relational process over
time, and I was conscious of the importance of maintaining an ethics ‘embedded in a
continuous awareness of your participants, your relationship to others throughout the process,
and how you choose to commit accounts to paper’ (Kulz 2017: 32). The same ethical issues
also arise in research with children. However, there were further considerations which needed
to be addressed sensitively, including ensuring that children were able to give consent
through presenting information about the project to them in child-friendly language, and
confirming children’s consent by parental and school consent, as well as church leaders’
consent (Alderson and Morrow 2011, Allerton 2016). Children were given opportunities to
choose their own pseudonyms, although because of their often imaginative choices (e.g.
‘Burger’), I have sometimes replaced these with alternatives. Church and school safeguarding
procedures were always followed. The names of the churches and all individuals here are
pseudonyms, except the speakers at the public events described in Chapter 1.
I was fortunate that each of the churches’ openness to newcomers helped me gain
entry to their groups relatively easily. When initially visiting each church, individuals I sat
next to offered to put me in touch with church leaders, who were each, in turn, very willing to
host a researcher. Participant observation at St George’s and Riverside was undertaken from
the role of a Kids Church/Sunday School helper, and within this role, I worked together with
and following guidance from other church volunteers to facilitate activities such as
discussions and games (both in Kids Church sessions and in the holiday, lunchtime and after
school clubs they ran), but did not lead teaching activities or prayers. In my fieldwork with
schools, when I was not accompanying the children’s workers, I undertook participant
observation from the role of classroom assistant, which allowed me insight not only into
formal lesson times but also other informal spaces. Within child-centred research, the idea of
26
the researcher adopting the ‘least-adult’ role has been very influential. In practice, it was
impossible to rid myself of adult status (Bales 2005, Shillitoe 2018). However, I found that
because the children had relaxed, friendly relations with the churches’ children’s workers,
whom they perceived not as teachers but as other adults who were concerned for them and
were especially interested in their lives, this mode of interaction shaped how the children
expected to relate to me. For example, the desire of the younger children in the primary
schools to include me in their games and discussions during lunch and play time suggested
that they perceived my role there as different from their teachers.
Across all the fieldwork settings I spent time in, I treated both my own engagements
with children and adults and their responses to me as data relevant for understanding the
formation of their identities and their different modes of relationality. It is worth noting that
my own religious identity was something that my interlocutors at St John’s were interested in
but those at St George’s and Riverside only very rarely inquired about. My having had a
liberal Anglican upbringing, and teenage immersion in and subsequent path away from
evangelicalism (while retaining a commitment to an Anglican identity) positioned me as
‘other’ for those at St John’s, but not at St George’s or Riverside, where, as I explore in
Chapter 7, there was a self-conscious movement away from a traditional evangelical
emphasis on adjudicating clearly-demarcated theological and moral boundaries of
inside/outside. I should underscore that none of the children (in any of the fieldsites) ever
asked about my religious identity or beliefs, but they did ask lots of questions about aspects
of my identity that they were more interested in, such as gender (‘are you a tomboy, Anna?’),
or national identity (‘Are you Italian?’, ‘Where are you from?’, ‘What is your country?’).
They also often crossed boundaries that adults carefully observe (Allerton 2016: 8), such as
asking personal questions about my appearance or crossing physical boundaries (pinching my
cheeks affectionately or clambering over me to get to a favoured spot on a sofa).
27
Book Aims and Outline
Overall, the book aims both to situate childhood as an important area of study in the
sociology of religion and to spark a long overdue conversation about how we should
approach childhood within this field, both theoretically and methodologically. The chapters
that follow can be seen as a mapping exercise, identifying and examining particular sites of
encounter or spaces of ‘sociation’ (Simmel 1964) in which the question of what a child is (or
should be) is in play. The questions addressed in relation to each space of encounter –
surrounding what it is to learn a (religious) form of life, the contested nature of authority in
relation to parenting, the moral ambitions of religious institutions in engaging with both
schooling and informal educational spaces, the marking of times of transition, and normative
conceptions of order and disorder – are of wider relevance beyond evangelicalism for the
study of children in a broad range of religious contexts. The book sets out and is underpinned
by a relational approach to the study of children and religion that aims not only to address the
particular modalities of children’s agency and the ways in which this is afforded or
constrained in particular settings, but also to demonstrate the ways in which ‘childhood’ is
significant in shaping the lives, hopes, concerns, and desires of adults in religious contexts.
Threaded throughout the volume is the central question of the meaning and significance of
the figure of the child, and the differing ways in which this is articulated, imagined,
experienced and contested within and beyond contemporary evangelicalism.
Rather than providing a comparative focus on each of conservative, charismatic and
open evangelicalism in every chapter, I zero in on particular ethnographic examples and
theoretical issues that are revealing of the spaces, times, and meanings of childhood in
relation to evangelicalism, and are of wider analytical significance in understanding the
location of religion in contemporary society. The chapters address the techniques through
28
which evangelicals seek to form children as believers within the space of church, cultures of
parenting, evangelical organizations’ provision of state-funded schooling, churches’ practical
modes of engaging with schools and other informal activities for children such as holiday and
after-school clubs, and the practical marking of time and transitions in children’s lives.
Chapter 1 reviews dominant theoretical approaches to the study of childhood and religion and
critically assesses the understandings of childhood and religion they index, situating these in
relation to two different approaches taken to children’s agency in wider Childhood Studies.
The chapter then examines different understandings of children’s agency in conservative and
charismatic evangelicalism through comparing two different national events focused on
childhood. Turning to the space of churches, Chapter 2 explores the practices through which
adults sought to form children as subjects able to ‘engage with God’ in Sunday School and
Kids Churches and the ways in which the children responded to these practices. Focusing on
the desired formation of children provides insight into the morally-charged ideals of
personhood articulated in each church, and draws out the particular emphasis on biblical
literacy and ideals of submission to God expressed in conservative evangelicals’ work with
children in comparison with the emphasis on ideals of friendship with Jesus that is privileged
at St George’s and Riverside. I argue that despite these differences, the techniques of
formation used in each church aims to shape the children as reflexive individuals, able to
reflect on their actions in the light of church teachings.
Chapter 3 takes as its ethnographic focus ideals and practices of ‘parenting’ by
examining the normative constructions of parenthood articulated at parenting classes run by
St John’s and St George’s, in which the parent-child relationship and its relationship with
wider social norms was in question. The chapter explores how leaders at St John’s situated
their ideals of children’s obedience to the father and understanding of children as inherently
sinful as countercultural and outlines the techniques of parenting that were encouraged here. I
29
then describe how, in contrast, ideas about parenting at St George’s drew on psychoanalytic
literature and encouraged parents to learn from secular expertise on parenting and consider
how these differing ways of understanding what it is to be a parent are shaped by processes of
individualization, and open onto wider questions about the agency of the child, human
agency and the social and existential order.
Turning to evangelicals’ engagements with children in education, Chapters 4 and 5
focus on the lived interrelations between the churches and the schools that are linked with
them. Chapter 4 focuses on the relations between Riverside Church and the local schools it is
involved in running, situating this in relation to broader debates about faith schools,
neoliberalism and social class in relation to education. The chapter examines how members
of Riverside church described the moral and religious significance of their engagement with
these schools, drawing on a romanticized narrative of evangelicals’ historic work with the
children of the urban poor. The chapter demonstrates how these schools are of central moral
significance for the church’s aspiration to affect both the local area and wider British society,
and explores how the ways in which those at Riverside talk about the work of these schools at
times enacts moralizing power relations that are simultaneously held in tension with their
inclusivist aspirations and self-understanding. Against the backdrop of public concerns raised
about the role of external evangelical visitors in state-funded schools, Chapter 5 examines the
mundane realities of the relationships that children’s workers and volunteers from the
churches developed with local schools. Focusing on the visits made by children’s workers to
deliver assemblies, and the after-school, lunch-time and holiday clubs they ran, this chapter
considers how children’s agency was either limited or enabled across these different spaces.
Examining how the adults involved in these engagements with children spoke about the
moral significance of their work, I argue that these kinds of engagement offered adults a
30
sense of meaning and hope, allowing them to understand themselves as agents of change at a
time when the public sphere often seems unwieldy and beyond individuals’ control.
Living through times in which traditional religious rites of passage are in question in
Western societies, Chapter 6 focuses on what rites of passage in relation to childhood looked
like at each of the three churches and examines how particular moments of transition were
being constructed and marked in children’s lives. The chapter explores the different ways in
which those at St John’s, St George’s, and Riverside engaged with traditional rites of passage
such as infant baptism and often demonstrated ritual creativity in their marking of other
moments of transition, such as the move from primary to secondary school, and examines
how these rites reveal different understandings of children’s agency. Through ethnographic
focus on Riverside’s ‘Messy Church’, which was aimed at local children and families,
Chapter 7 turns to examine shifting ethical currents within conservative, charismatic and
open evangelical cultures. Considering the contemporary significance of ideas of ‘mess’ and
‘messiness’ at Riverside and St George’s, the chapter argues that this turn to ‘mess’ at both
churches is shaped by both a strategy of differentiation from conservative evangelicalism –
which emphasizes a desire for hierarchical order within church, self, and society – and by an
ethics of responsiveness to the everyday needs of those in their local area, marked by
heightened socio-economic polarization. How groups engage with ideas of ‘order’ and
‘mess’, I suggest, is significant for understanding how different groups respond to
fragmented experiences of social life, and how they enact modes of difference and belonging
in the contemporary moment. The conclusion draws together the book’s key findings and
contributions and reflects on the importance of attending to the agency of children in
deepening our understanding of religion in the contemporary world.