The Secularization Debate - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

The Secularization Debate

Description:

A decline in the extent to which people engage in religious ... There are many cult movements in Europe and the United States. 1.7 *United States. 3.4 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:422
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: michae142
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Secularization Debate


1
The Secularization Debate
2
Aspects of Secularization
  • The separation of religion from other social
    institutions such as the state and the economy
  • A decline in the social standing of religious
    roles and institutions
  • A decline in the extent to which people engage in
    religious practices, display religious beliefs,
    and conduct various aspects of their lives
    according to those beliefs
  • A shift in the focus of religious organizations
    from otherworldly salvation to worldly problems
    of discrimination, poverty, divorce, abuse, etc.

3
The Process of Secularization
  • See overhead taken from Bruce, Steve. (2002). God
    is Dead Secularization in the West. Blackwell
    Publishing.
  • Bruce concludes that religion diminishes in
    social significance, becomes increasingly
    privatized, and loses personal salience except
    where it finds work to do other than relating
    individuals to the supernatural (30). . . .
    Modernization made religion less arresting and
    less plausible than it had been in pre-modern
    societies. Religious identity has been pushed
    out of the public arena and into the private
    sphere (36).

4
What Secularization Theory does not Assert
(according to Bruce)
  • Secularization is universal and inevitable
  • We are claiming irreversibility, rather than
    inevitability.
  • Secularization will happen evenly across
    societies as they modernize
  • What matters is the overall direction of trends
    and their long-term stability.
  • The endpoint is atheism
  • I expect the proportion of people who are
    largely indifferent to religious ideas to
    increase and the seriously religious to become a
    small minority. He does concede that atheism is
    a secondary indicator of secularization.

5
Stark and Finkes Interpretation of
Secularization Theory
  • Modernization is the causal engine dragging the
    gods into retirement (59)
  • Secularization prophecies are primarily
    concerned with the decline of individual
    religiosity and belief, not institutional
    differentiation.
  • Science has the most deadly implications for
    religion (61).
  • Secularization is irreversible.
  • Secularization will happen globally, not just in
    Christian nations.
  • How well does their interpretation match what
    secularization theorists themselves claim about
    the theory?

6
Critique of Secularization Theory
  • Stark and Finke argue that the secularization
    thesis is not consistent with available data and
    conclude that the theory should be thrown out.
  • Examine the following data for and against
    secularization theory. Do you agree or disagree
    with Stark and Finke?

7
What evidence is there that supports
secularization theory?
8
There are many declining denominations in the
United States (and elsewhere)
9
There is relatively low weekly church attendance
in almost all modernized countries (1991)
10
There are some indications of a less religious
next generation ( of entering college students)
11
Christianity in the United States has changed in
ways consistent with the secularization thesis
  • In 1964 65 of Americans believed the Bible was
    literally true in 1984 or 37 believed this.
  • In the early 1960s, 81 of evangelicals thought
    heavy petting was morally wrong, in the 1980s,
    less than half believed it was wrong.
  • In a survey done in 1924, 94 agreed that
    Christianity is the one true religion and all
    people should be converted to it, in 1977 only
    41 agreed.
  • In a 2000 survey, less than half of born-again
    teenagers claimed to be absolutely committed to
    the Christian Faith, 2/3 rejected the existence
    of Satan, 3/5 rejected the existence of the Holy
    Spirit, and almost half believed that Jesus
    sinned during his lifetime

12
Some Other Arguments
  • In a 2000 survey, less than half of adults and
    only 9 of born-again teenagers were certain of
    the existence of absolute moral truth
  • While church attendance seems high in the U.S.,
    there is evidence that it is often over-reported.
  • Donations to churches as a proportion of
    disposable income have declined.
  • The United States is different because its large
    number of immigrants who keep traditional
    religiosity alive.

13
What evidence is there against secularization
theory?
14
There are many rapidly growing denominations in
the United States (and elsewhere)
15
Rates of church membership have increased as the
United States has become more modern
16
The Princeton Religious Index
  • SCORE OF 100 PERFECT RELIGIOUSITY
  • -Religious Preference
  • -Belief in God
  • -Attendance
  • -Religion important in my life
  • -Religion can solve social problems
  • -Confidence in clergy

17
The Princeton Religious Index scores for the
United States show little variation in levels of
religiosity over time
18
While they do not attend church, most people in
the most secularized countries still believe
and consider themselves to be religious
19
There are high levels of personal religiousness
in modern countries
20
Some other Arguments
  • Financial contributions to churches in net terms
    have remained high over time.
  • Europe never was that religious
  • Parish churches in Europe were only large enough
    to hold a small fraction of local inhabitants.
    Data available suggests that only a small
    percentage of Europeans attended church
    regularly.
  • Clergymen were often absent and uninformed and
    thus the masses knew little about religion
  • In 1800, 12 of the British population belonged
    to a specific congregation, 17 belonged in 1850
    and the same in 1990.

21
Other Arguments against Secularization
  • A study done by Iannaccone (1996) showed that 15
    of 18 nations have seen no decrease in church
    attendance since 1920.
  • A 1914 survey of scientists showed 41.8 believed
    in a God who answers prayers, in 1997 39.3
    believed (no real change).
  • Since the fall of Communism, there is evidence of
    religious revival in Eastern Europe
  • In the United States, 85 who claim no religious
    affiliation, still pray (1996).

22
There are many cult movements in Europe and the
United States
23
What do you think?
  • Which argument do you find more compelling? Why?
  • Which data do you believe are more convincing?
    Why?

24
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com