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Religion

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Title: Religion


1
Chapter 14
  • Religion

2
Probably the central theme that has dominated the
sociology of religion.
  • Secularization process by which a society or an
    institution becomes more worldly and the
    supernatural becomes less important
  • Secularization Theorists argue religion dying
  • Functionalists focus on the role of religion in
    providing answers to lifes ultimate questions
  • Challenge secularization theorists
  • Substantive definitions of religion (what
    religion is) vs. functional definitions (what
    religion does)

3
Defining Religion A substantive definition
  • ultimate meaning and answer ultimate questions
  • Socially organized patterns of belief and
    practices that concern ultimate meaning and
    assume the existence of the supernatural.
  • The belief in the supernatural sets religion
    apart from other aspects of social life.

4
Secularization is a real process
  • Darwin did influence view of creation
  • Important to distinguish between societal and
    institutional
  • Institutions do tend to become for secularized
    over time
  • But they are replaced by less secularized
    institutions
  • Perrin and Stark are

5
Distinguishing Sect from Church A church is
  • Formal, accepted, well established
  • Intellectualize religious teaching trained
    clergy
  • Bureaucratic
  • Officials ordained
  • Culture affirming
  • More this-worldly in focus
  • Born into
  • less emotional, less spontaneous (read prayers),
    orderly worship
  • Middle-class

6
A sect is
  • less formalized, less accepted and
    well-established, more fringe
  • Emphasize personal experience and emotion
  • Hostile to surrounding society
  • Converted into
  • Charismatic leader less formalized training
  • Lay involvement everyone is a minister
  • More otherworldly in focus (rewards come in
    afterlife)
  • More likely to believe we have the whole truth
  • Lower-class
  • Conservative theology

7
Church-like vs. Sect-like
  • We typically discuss differences as ideal types
    that do not actually exist in pure form
  • Examples of sect-like include Jehovahs
    Witnesses, Vineyard, Calvary Chapel, and C of C
    to some degree
  • Example of church-like include United
    Methodist, Presbyterian, Episcopalian
  • Single best distinction between church and sect
    according to Benton Johnson?

8
Church-sect Theory
  • Religions tend to become more secularized over
    time
  • That is, as they grow and flourish, these sects
    are transformed into churches
  • The conditions that prompted the original sect
    formation are re-created, a split occurs, and a
    new sect is formed.
  • Sect is a revival attempt to return to ideal

9
Why does sect tend to become church?
  • Weber success bureaucracy
  • Charismatic leadership becomes bureaucratic
    leadership
  • Success means church buildings, and budgets, and
    committee meetings, and fundraisers
  • Richard Neibuhr sect tends to be lower-class,
    radically otherworldly
  • Rich men and needles, first and last, suffering
    in this world, rewarded in afterlife, meek shall
    inherit, etc. etc.
  • Success growth higher of MC more
    this-worldly focus (M-C may not want to hear
    about separation from evils of this world)

10
Cult Formation
  • Sociologists use cult to distinguish new
    religions from sects arising out of old
    religions.
  • All religions begin as cult movements.
  • Cult is innovation
  • Cult especially dependent on charismatic
  • Sociologist uses world cult without prejudice

11
Secularization and revival
  • Old institutions may weaken (secularize) and
    will be replaced by new
  • New might come in the form of sects (revival)
    or cults (innovation)
  • Cults will arise where churches and sects weakest
  • Irreligious more likely to join cults

12
The American Religious Economy
  • More than 1,500 separate denominations exist in
    the United States.
  • 22 American denominations enroll more than 1
    million members each.
  • In any given week, about 40 of Americans attend
    services.
  • Some have questioned this number
  • About 63 are official members of a local
    congregation or parish.

13
Which American Institutions more or less
secularized?
  • Churches more likely to be secularized
  • E.g., Literal interpretation of the Bible

14
American Denominations and Literal Faith in the
Bible
15
American Denominations and Literal Faith in the
Bible
16
Which American Institutions growing?
  • Theory predicts that otherworldly, less
    secularized will grow
  • Dean Kelley Why the Conservative Churches are
    Growing
  • People drawn by the commitment of others
  • Who is and is not convinced about answers to
    ultimate questions
  • Which churches costs the most answers come
    cheaply?

17
Declining American Denominations
18
Some Growing American Denominations
19
What is Rational Choice Theory?
  • Within the limits of their information and
    understanding, restricted by available options,
    guided by their preferences and tastes, humans
    attempt to make rational choices
  • Rationality the subjective weighing of
    anticipated rewards and costs when making choices

20
Religious behavior rational behavior?
  • Troubling to many
  • Sacrifice, denying oneself, etc. questioned
  • But if religious behavior is not rational, what
    is it? Irrational?
  • Bible certainly talks of rewards
  • Bible teaches us to seek rewards i.e., in
    heaven and in meeting the needs of others

21
Reward anything we willing pay to attain 2
broad categories of religious rewards?
  • This-worldly, direct rewards
  • Friendship, happiness, social status and material
    rewards
  • Otherworldly, ultimate rewards

22
Institutional Implications
  • Religion in the business of providing ultimate
    meaning/rewards
  • But answering other-worldly questions risky
    business empiricism cannot verify ultimate
    answers

23
Certainty found in commitment and convictions
of others
  • Berger plausibility structure
  • Dean Kelley Why the Conservative Churches are
    Growing
  • Demanding, costly, otherworldly grow
  • Costs make free-riding difficult
  • Shift from otherworldly to this-worldly weakens
    churches

24
Effects of this-worldly reward structure? R-C
theory predicts
  • Tainted witness
  • When a witness has much to lose, or at least
    little to gain, his/her assurances powerful.
  • Powerful witness of early Christians, who
    followed at great cost
  • Stark Affluent clergy are never a match for lay
    preachers and impoverished ascetics in
    head-to-head credibility contests.
  • Dilution effect
  • Religious meanings produced collectively
  • Presence of those who seek this-worldly brings
    down the overall level commitment

25
Rational Choice Conclusion
  • Religious behavior, like all human behavior,
    tends toward rationality. People will choose
    religious commitment only if they perceive that
    the rewards outweigh the costs.
  • Rewards, which can come in many forms, can be
    reduced to two broad categories this-worldly and
    otherworldly.
  • The primary purpose of religion is to provide
    otherworldly rewards, which can be produced only
    with the help of the supernatural.

26
Rational Choice Conclusion
  • Because supernatural explanations are
    unverifiable, they are risky. Humans will thus
    seek assurances in the commitment of others.
  • The employment of a this-worldly reward structure
    reduces the percentage of people in a church who
    are intensely seeking otherworldly answers.
  • Because religious meaning is produced
    collectively, a reduced level of religious
    commitment makes it more difficult for a church
    to provide otherworldly rewards. A shift from an
    otherworldly to a this-worldly reward structure
    thus weakens a church.

27
Interesting Issues in the Soc of Religion
  • Gender and religion
  • Brainwashing debate
  • Satanism scare

28
Gender and Religiousness in Selected Nations
29
Gender and Religiousness in Selected Nations
30
Gender and Religiousness in Selected Nations
31
Why are women more religious?
  • Gender trends essentially universal
  • Women socialized to care for family/religious
    needs of family?
  • Pascals wager non-belief is risky behavior
  • But belief does involved costs deny oneself
    look to rewards in heaven
  • Men engage in more risky behavior, less willing
    to delay gratification

32
Why is the US more religious?
  • No easy answer in many ways US is unique in
    industrialized world
  • Science and empiricism has been hard on religion

33
Brainwashing?
  • 1960s and 1970s new religions grow
  • Brainwashing coercive persuasion mind control
  • Deprogrammers become big in 1980s and 1990s
  • Sociologists tend to defend new religions
  • Radical conversion, yes
  • Brainwashing, no

34
Satanism Scare
  • Proctor and Gamble
  • Gloria Vanderbilt
  • Conspiracy theories become more and more popular
  • Satanic Ritual Abuse
  • Abuse of children
  • Repressed memories
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