Biblical and Socio-Scientific Approaches to Religious Enmity

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authoritarianism in religion
Bible
Biblical criticism
Category=QRA
Category=QRM
Category=QRVC
Christianity
Conflict
Enemy
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eq_nobargain
ethnographic case studies
Group
intergroup conflict studies
Neighbour
Outsider
Peacebuilding
postcolonial religious analysis
reconciliation processes
Religion
Religious enmity
religious group dynamics
Scripture
social identity in faith communities
Social Identity Theory
Social science
Socio-cognitive psychology
Socio-scientific
Text
Theology
Violence

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032719894
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book examines how Christian teachings on love and enmity shape group identity and conflict, with scripture and theology used both to justify violence and call for reconciliation. It explores interdisciplinary perspectives that combine socio-scientific approaches with biblical criticism.

By exploring historical, biblical, and contemporary examples, this volume illuminates how religious identity influences the construction of enemies and offers tools for critically engaging with faith-based conflict. Drawing on Social Identity Theory, theological analysis, and interdisciplinary research, the book provides a framework for rethinking community engagement across difference. The contributors examine how Christianity metabolizes neighbor–enemy distinctions, addressing the contemporary re-emergence of sharp divisions despite increased global engagement. The chapters leverage insights from psychology, sociology, anthropology, literary criticism, historical analysis, reception history, and classical studies to understand how group self-identification generates both external conflict and internal conformity. This comprehensive approach helps readers understand the seeming intractability of religious enmity while offering pathways toward reconciliation and constructive dialogue in diverse religious contexts.

Biblical and Socio-Scientific Approaches to Religious Enmity is ideal for scholars, students, clergy, and readers in theology, biblical studies, religious ethics, and political theology who seek to understand the intersection of faith, social identity, and enmity. It serves academics exploring socio-cognitive approaches to religious conflict as well as practitioners working to address religious polarization in contemporary communities and interfaith contexts.

Christopher A. Porter is Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at Trinity College Theological School and Lead Investigator on the Figuring the Enemy project, investigating socio-scientific approaches to religious enmity, along with research focus on the Fourth Gospel and Acts from a social identity perspective.

Elizabeth E. Shively is Professor of Christian Scriptures at Baylor University’s George W. Truett Theological Seminary and co-investigator on the socio-scientific stream of Figuring the Enemy Project. Her research focuses on the Gospel of Mark, narrative and rhetorical criticism, cognitive linguistics, and theological interpretation.

Kenneth I. Mavor is Senior Lecturer and Social Psychologist in the School of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. His research focuses on the nature of the personal and collective self, and how people cognitively manage multiple selves; the implications of social and personal identities for learning, belonging, and wellbeing in higher education; and the role of religious and political ideologies in social conflict and collective action.