Sociology: Secularisation
- Created by: NiamhSharp
- Created on: 06-01-20 14:53
Secularisation in Britain
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Crockett estimates that in 1851, 40% or more of the adult population of Britain attended church on Sundays, which led some to claim that the 19th century was a ‘golden age’ of religiosity
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Wilson argue that Western societies have been undergoing a long-term process of secularisation, where ‘religious beliefs, practices and institutions lose social significance’
It is certainly the case that there have been some major changes in religion in the UK since the 19th century: a fall in the proportion of the population attending church, an increase in the average age of churchgoers, and greater religious diversity
Evaluation
Religion may have declined in Europe but not necessarily in America or elsewhere, so secularisation may not be universal
Church attendance today
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Only about 6% of the adult population attended church on Sundays in 2005, halving since the 1960s and likely to fall further
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Sunday school attendance, church weddings and baptisms are declining
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Overall, religious affiliation (membership) is declining. Since 1983, adults with no religion have risen from a third to a half, and those identifying as christian have fallen by a third
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Some small organisations have grown. The number of Catholics has increased slightly, due to East European immigration. Non-Christian religions have also increased, due to immigration and higher birth rates
Religious belief today
Evidence from 80 years of surveys shows a decline in belief in God, in Jesus as the son of God and in Christian teachings about the afterlife and the Bible
Religious institutions today
Bruce agrees with Wilson that all the evidence on secularisation has shown that ‘there is a steady and unremitting decline’
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The influence of religion as a social institution is declining. Religion once affected every aspect of life, but now is relegated to the private sphere of individual and family
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The state has taken over many of the functions the church used to perform, e.g. schooling
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The number of clergy fell from 45,000 in 1900 to 34,000 in 2000, while the population increased in size, reducing the church’s local, day-to-day influence
Bruce predicts that the Methodist Church will fold by 2030 and the Church of England will be merely a small voluntary organisation with a large amount of heritage property
Evaluation
Although there is an increasing number of “faith schools” in the UK- implying continued religious involvement in education- they are mainly state-funded and must conform to the state’s regulations
Explanations of Secularisation
Secularisation and the decline of religion has often been linked to major social changes such as modernisation (the decline of tradition), industrialisation and its effects, and increased social and religious diversity. Sociologists have developed several explanations of secularisation
Rationalisation
Rationalisation is the process by which rational ways of thinking and acting replace religious ones. Max Weber argues that Western society has undergone a process of rationalisation in the last few centuries
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The 16th century Protestant Reformation undermined the religious worldview of the MIddle Ages, replacing it with a modern rational scientific outlook
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The medieval Catholic worldview saw the world as an ‘enchanted (or magical) garden’ in which God, angels etc. changed the course of events through their supernatural powers and miracle-working interventions
Rationalisation: Disenchantment
The Protestant Reformation brought new worldview that saw God as existing above and outside the world, not as intervening in it. The world had become disenchanted, left to run according to the laws of nature
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Events were thus no longer to be explained as the work of unpredictable supernatural beings, but as the predictable workings of natural forces
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Through reason and science, humans could discover the laws of nature, and understand and predict how the world works. Religious explanations of the world are no longer needed
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This enables science to develop, giving humans more power to control nature, further undermining the religious worldview
Rationalisation: A technological worldview
Bruce argues that a technological worldview has largely replaced religious explanations of why things happen. Religious worldviews only survive in areas where technology i least effective, e.g. praying for help if you are suffering from an incurable illness
Structural differentiation
Parsons defines structural differentiation as a process that occurs with industrialisation as many specialised institutions develop to carry out the different functions previously performed by a single institution, such as the church
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Religion dominated pre-industrial society, but with industrialisation it has become a smaller and more specialised institution
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Bruce agrees that religion has become separated from wider society and privatised in the home and family. Religious beliefs are now largely a matter of personal choice, while traditional rituals and symbols have lost meaning
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Even where religion is involved in education or welfare, it must conform to secular controls; e.g. teachers in faith schools must hold qualifications recognised by the state
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Church and state are usually separate in modern society, so the church loses political power
Social and cultural diversity
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Wilson argues that in pre-industrial society, local communities shared religious rituals that expressed their shared values, but industrialisation destroys these stable local communities and so destroys religion’s base
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Bruce sees industrialisation creating large, impersonal, loose-knit urban centres with diverse beliefs, values and lifestyles. This diversity undermines the believability of religion
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The rise of individualism leads to a decline in community-based religious belief and practice
Evaluation
Aldridge points out that a community does not have to be in a particular locality. Religion can be a shared source of identity on a worldwide scale, e.g. Jewish communities. Also, Pentecostal and other groups often flourish in supposedly ‘impersonal’ urban areas
Religious diversity
Beger argues that another cause of secularisation is the trend towards religious diversity
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In the Middle Ages, the Catholic Church held an absolute monopoly and had no challengers
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Since the 16th century Protestant Reformation, the number and variety or religious organisations has grown, each with a different version of the truth
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Berger argues that this religious diversity undermines religion’s ‘plausibility structure’- its believability. Alternative versions of religion enable people to question all of them and this erodes the absolute certainties of traditional religion
Bruce sees the trend towards religious diversity as the most important cause of secularisation because it is difficult to live in a world containing a large number of incompatible beliefs without concluding that none of them is wholly true
Cultural defence and cultural transition
Bruce identifies two counter-trends that seem to contradict secularisation theory:
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Cultural defence- religion provides a focus for the defence of national or ethnic group identity ina struggle against an external force, e.g. Catholicism in Poland before the fall of communism
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Cultural transition- Religion provides a sense of community for ethnic groups living in a different country and culture
Evaluation
Bruce argues that cultural defence/transition don't contradict secularisation theory, since religion only survives in these situations as a force for group identity and not as an expression of religious faith; e.g. once communism had fallen in poland, church attendance declined
Secularisation in the USA
In 1962, Wilosn found that 45% of Americans attended church on Sundays, but this was more an expression of the ‘American way of life’ than of religious beliefs. For wilson, America in a secular society, because religion there has become superficial
Bruce shares wilson’s view. He uses three sources of evidence to support his claim that America is becoming increasingly secular
Declining church attendance
Opinion polls asking people about church attendance suggest it has been stable at about 40% of the population since 1940. however , this figure may well be an exaggeration
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For example, Hadaway et al found that in one county in Ohio, the attendance level claimed in opinion polls was 83% higher than researchers actually countered going into church
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Evidence suggests that this tendency to exaggerate churchgoing is a recent development
Secularisation from within
Bruce argues that in America, the emphasis on traditional Christian beliefs and glorifying God has declined. Instead,religion has become ‘psychologised’- a form of therapy
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American religion has remained popular by becoming less religious- it has become secularised from within. Its purpose has changed from seeking salvation in heaven to seeking personal improvement in this world
Religious diversity and relativism
Bruce identifies practical relativism among American Christains- i.e. accepting that others are entitled to hold beliefs different to one’s own
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Lynd and Lynd found in 1924 that 94% of churchgoing young people agreed with the statement ‘Christianity is the one true religion’. By 1977 only 41% agreed
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Absolutism has been eroded- we now live in a society where many people hold views that are completely different to ours, undermining our assumption that our own views are absolutely true
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