Religion,Conversion, and Rehabilitation |
| |
Authors: | Andrew Skotnicki |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. andrew.skotnicki@manhattan.edu |
| |
Abstract: | Rehabilitation and conversion within the penal context are deeply ambiguous concepts. This ambiguity stems in part from the fact that little consensus has been reached among scholars as to the meaning of the terms beyond their ability to foster adjustment to institutional rules and obedience to law. This paper argues that each concept receives greater clarity and practical significance when understood in terms of moral transformation. The article will utilize the methodological framework of social scientific studies to underscore a contention, most commonly found in theological literature that conversion, and a fortiori rehabilitation, signal a shift from a divided to a unified consciousness based upon the experience of unconditional acceptance and, ultimately, its bestowal upon others and upon all forms of life. |
| |
Keywords: | religion conversion rehabilitation consciousness contemplation |
|
|