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RELIGION, FAITH and Secularization

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Title: RELIGION, FAITH and Secularization


1
RELIGION, FAITH and Secularization
  • Reactions to Modernity

2
We will consider a variety of issues
  • Modernity
  • Faith
  • Religion
  • Secularization
  • Fundamentalism
  • Religion and secularization in Western Europe and
    the USA

3
MODERNITYin the West
  • A result of Renaissance and Enlightenment
  • We use REASON to explain reality
  • An historical-cultural event an ethos that
    replaced the religious-based world view and
    cognitive methods of the Middle Ages

4
(No Transcript)
5
Modernity is characterized by
  • The empirical-scientific method
  • The complex of industrialized nation-states with
    their non-monarchical governments
  • Freedom of religious expression and religious
    pluralism.

6
Modernity and Religion
  • The institutions and the basic ideas of modernity
    proceed without legitimation by a religion.
  • Before modernity, monarchy, class hierarchies,
    jurisprudence, cosmology, and education were very
    much under religious control and justification.

7
FAITH
  • Any faith is a personal and group experience of
    the metaphysical reality described in various
    ways as the Sacred, the Divine, the
    Transcendent, God, Allah, etc. etc.
  • Faith is NOT Religion

8
Examples of the FAITH experience
  • Dag Hammarskjold, in Markings
  • "Somewhere along the line, I said 'yes' to
    Someone or Something -- and that has made the
    difference......we die on the day when our lives
    cease to be illumined by the steady radiance,
    renewed daily, of a wonder, the source of which
    is beyond all reason."
  • Specifically FAITH experience has been variously
    identified in the following ways
  • (1) the awareness of the holy, which evokes awe
    and reverence
  • (2) the sense of being at one with the divine,
    linked with ground of being
  • (3) the encounter with a reality wholly other
  • (4) the sense of a transforming power as a
    presence.

9
  • Faith involves a stance toward some claim that is
    not, at least presently, demonstrable by reason.
  • Faith is a kind of attitude of trust or assent.
    As such, it is ordinarily understood to involve
    an act of will or a commitment on the part of the
    believer.
  • Faith involves a belief that makes some kind of
    either implicit or explicit reference to a
    transcendent source.

10
RELIGION
  • A religion is an INTERPRETATION of the Faith
    Experience
  • INTERPRETATION expressed in an authoritative
    tradition (oral or written texts) sacred places,
    symbols, rituals and an authoritative leadership
    (apostles, priests, bishops, shamans, imams,
    rabbis, lamas, and scholar-monks).
  • RELIGION IS NOT FAITH

11
SECULARIZATION
  • Sociologist Peter Bergers definition By
    secularization we mean the process by which
    sectors of society and cultures are removed from
    the domination of religious institutions and
    symbols.
  • Secularization is a natural development from
    modernity.

12
Not the end of religion
  • Secularization does not mean the END of religion
  • It does challenge religions and their place in
    society.
  • Secularization is simply a fact of life.....
  • How we react to it is the important
    issue.............

13
I think Obama, for example, understands this very
well.....
  • Call to Renewal address in May 2006
  • Democracy demands that the religiously
    motivated translate their concerns into
    universal, rather than religion-specific, values.
  • Democracy requires that their proposals be
    subject to argument, and amenable to reason.
  • I may be opposed to abortion for religious
    reasons, but if I seek to pass a law banning the
    practice, I cannot simply point to the teachings
    of my church or evoke God's will. I have to
    explain why abortion violates some principle that
    is accessible to people of all faiths, including
    those with no faith at all...

14
Possible Responses to Modernity
  • TOTAL rejection of all religion SECULARISM
  • A religion grows in self understanding and adapts
    to the perspective of modernity (RCC Vatican II)
  • The religion rejects some of modernity and lives
    in two worlds (e.g. Amish)
  • The religion rejects all of modernity as evil
    (Benedict XVI ??)
  • The religion closes in on self and becomes
    self-worshiping Fundamentalism

15
FUNDAMENTALISM
  • Fundamentalism arises when a religious group
    fears cultural change and resorts to a form of
    socio-cultural isolation that leads to a
    distortion of their own religious understanding.
  • Fundamentalists, fearful about change in the
    larger culture, revert to a static view of their
    religious tradition and confuse the
    interpretation (RELIGION) with that which is
    interpreted (FAITH).

16
All fundamentalists follow certain patterns
  • Religious ideology is the basis for their
    personal and communal identity.
  • 2.They insist upon one statement of truth that is
    inerrant, revealed and unchangeable
  • 3.They see themselves as part of a cosmic
    struggle between good and evil.
  • 4.They seize on historical moments and
    reinterpret them in the light of this cosmic
    struggle.

17
  • 5. They demonize their opposition.
  • 6. They are selective in what parts of the
    religious tradition and heritage they will
    stress.
  • 7. They despise modern culture.
  • 8. They are MILITANT.............

18
  • Fundamentalist groups are often driven to violent
    social action when their orthodox goals are
    frustrated by the events of changing social and
    political environments in the broader society.
  • They see the world in terms of black and white.
    People are clearly enemies or friends. Actions
    are good or bad.
  • All fundamentalist movements invariably create a
    dual myth the myth links a supposed Golden Age
    in the past with a Utopian future.
  • Fundamentalist groups have a dysfunctional
    relationship with the rest of the world. Working
    constructively healing the dysfunction -- can
    be a long and arduous process.

19
Religion and Secularization in Europe and the USA
  • The United States is a country with the soul of
    a church.
  • Religion in the USA is the social glue that holds
    the country together.
  • Traditional religions sustain and support
    AMERICAN CIVIL RELIGION..........

20
  • America is built on a strong sense of American
    CIVIL RELIGION
  •  
  • Sacred Documents Constitution and Declaration
    of Independence
  •  
  • Sacred People Saints George Washington and
    Abraham Lincoln
  •  
  • Sacred Places Lincoln Memorial, Arlington
    National Cemetery where the martyrs are buried,
    Washington Monument, etc
  •  
  • Holy Days the Fourth of July, Memorial Day,
    Thanksgiving,
  •  
  • Holy objects the American flag, the dollar bill
  •  
  • Americans have turned their country (the land,
    its history and its heroes) into the objects of
    religious devotion.

21
  • A number of sociologists (and religious people!)
    continually point to lower levels of religious
    participation in Western Europe and assert that
    Western Europe is more secularized than the
    United States.
  • I am not in agreement and would agree with other
    sociologists (like Grace Davie, Michael Winter
    and Christopher Short) that
  • (1) The United States in fact is just as
    secularized
  • (2) Many Western Europeans are unchurched
    because institutionalized religion has not come
    to terms with modernity
  • (3) Many Americans have not sufficiently
    reflected on religion and modernity. Nor come to
    understand the ENLIGHTENMENT!
  • Something for our discussion

22
Saint George Washington
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