Poison-drinking in obedience to the faith: a phenomenological study of the experience |
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Authors: | W. Paul Williamson Ralph W. Hood Jr |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Henderson State University, HSU Box 7854, Arkadelphia 71999, USAwilliaw@hsu.edu;3. Department of Psychology, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, Chattanooga, USA |
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Abstract: | In Appalachia, there are certain Christian sects who handle venomous serpents in their church services. Although their serpent handling has received some attention, another of their practices, poison-drinking, has all but escaped the concern of investigators. Addressing this issue, this study included phenomenological interviews with seven believers who ingested strychnine at church. A hermeneutic analysis of their transcribed interviews discovered four major themes that emerged across all protocols to describe the structure of meaning in the experience of poison-drinking: (1) Desire to Drink; (2) “God Moving on Me” (in terms of Anointing and “Insurance” against Harm); (3) Already “Snake Bit”; and (4) “Victory”/“Devil Troubling My Mind”. These interdependent themes are discussed in relation to the existential grounds of body, others, time, and world. |
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Keywords: | serpent handling sects poison-drinking strychnine snake handling phenomenology |
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