Sociology-Beliefs-Secularisation Flashcards
What are the three subtopics of secularisation?
Secularisation in Britain, explanations of secularisation and secularisation in America
What does Crockett say religion was like in the past?
Based on evidence from the 1851 Census of Religious Worship, it is estimated that in that year, 40% or more of the adult population in Britain attended church on Sundays, which is much higher than today
What major changes have happen in religion in the UK since the 1851 census?
A decline in the proportion of the population going to church or belonging to one, an increase in the average age of churchgoers, fewer baptisms and church weddings, a decline in the numbers holding traditional Christian beliefs, and greater diversity including more non Christian religions
What does Wilson argue about secularisation?
Western societies have been undergoing a long-term process of secularisation, which he defined as the process whereby religious beliefs, practices and institutions lose social significance eg church attendance fallen from 40% to 10-15% from mid 19th century to the 1960s. Also church weddings, baptisms and Sunday school attendance has declined
What was church attendance like in 2015?
About 5% of the adult population attended church on Sundays, meaning in Britain, attendance has halved since Wilson’s research in the 1960s
What did the English Church Census 2006 show?
Attendances at large organisations such as the Church of England and the Catholic church has declined more than small organisations, some of which are remaining stable or have grown. However, the growth of these small organisations has not made up for the decline of the large ones, so the overall trend is a decline
What are the statistics on church weddings and baptisms?
Church weddings and baptisms are still more popular than Sunday services but there has still been a decline. In 1971 60% of weddings were in a church but only 30% in 2012. Infant baptisms have fallen steadily and Catholic baptisms today is under half of those in 1964
What are ‘bogus baptisms’?
While infant baptisms have declined, those of older children have increased in recent years. Research indicates that this is because many faith schools, which tend to be higher-performing schools, will only take baptised children. Baptism thus becomes an entry ticket to a good school rather than a sign of Christian commitment
What is religious affiliation?
A person’s religious affiliation refers to their membership of or identification with a religion. The evidence indicates a continuing decline in the number of people who are affiliated to a religion eg between 1983 and 2014 the percentage of adults with no religion rose from a third to a half, and those identifying as Christian fell by a third (British social attitudes survey 2015)
How has immigration affected religious affiliation today?
The number of Catholics rose slightly but due to East European immigration. Those belonging to a non-Christian religion (mainly Islam) also increased due to immigration and higher birth rates
What is religious affiliation like today for other Christians?
Other Christians include denominations such as Methodists and Baptists. This category has remained static since 1983 at 17% of the population. But while over four fifths of them identified with a specific denomination in 1983, only a fifth are now attached to a group
How has religious belief changed?
Evidence about religious beliefs from 80 years of survey research shows that religious belief is declining as well as church attendance and membership. Eg surveys show s significant decline in belief in a personal God, in Jesus as the son of God and in Christian teachings about the afterlife and the Bible
How have religious institutions been affected by secularisation?
The influence of religion as a social institution has declined. The Church has some influence on public life eg in law making, but this has declined significantly since the 19th century. The state has taken over many functions that the church used to provide eg education but now even faith schools are state funded
What is a way to measure the institutional weakness of churches?
The number of clergy. During the 20th century this fell from 45,000 to 34,000. If it kept pace with population growth, the clergy would now be over 80,000 (over double what is is). Also the number of catholic priests fell by a third between 1965 and 2011
What are other changes in the clergy, apart from decline in numbers?
They are now an ageing workforce. Only 12% of Anglican clergy are under 40
What does Woodhead conclude about the clergy?
As a result of the decline, churches have reached a tipping point, with a sharp decline in the number of clergy to be expected in the near future meaning the day-to-day influence of the churches is reduced
How does Bruce sum up the overall trend?
Agrees with Wilson that all evidence on secularisation has been pointing int he same direction for many years. If the current trends continue, the Methodist Church will fold around 2030 and by then the Church of England will be merely a small voluntary organisation with a large amount of heritage property
What are the explanations of secularisation?
Rationalism (including disenchantment and a technological worldview), structural differentiation, social and cultural diversity, religious diversity and cultural defence and transition
What is rationalisation in relation to secularisation?
It refers to the process by which rational ways of thinking and acting come to replace religious ones. Many sociologists believe Western society has undergone a process of rationalisation in the last few centuries
What is the main sociologist when talking about rationalisation?
Weber. He argued that the Protestant Reformation, begun by Martin Luther in the 16th century, started a process of rationalisation of life in the West which undermined the religious worldview of the Middle Ages and replaced it with the rational scientific outlook found in modern society
How does Weber view religion in the past?
The medieval Catholic worldview that dominated Europe saw the world as an ‘enchanted garden’. God and other spiritual beings and forces, such as angels, the devil and so on, were believed to be present and active in this world, changing the course of events through their supernatural powers and miraculous interventions in it. Humans could try to influence these beings and forces by magical means such as prayers and spells, fasts and pilgrimages, the wearing of charms etc in order to ensure a good harvest, protect against disease and so on
How did the Protestant reformation view differ from the medieval catholic worldview?
Instead of the interventionist God of medieval Catholicism, Protestantism saw God as transcendent God existing above and beyond, or outside, this world. Although God had created the world, he did not intervene in it, but instead left it to run according to its own laws of nature
How did the Protestant reformation bring a new worldview?
Their differing explanation of God meant that events were no longer to be explained as the work of unpredictable supernatural beings, but as the predictable workings of natural forces. All that was needed to understand them was rationality-the power of reason. Using reason and science, humans could discover the laws of nature, understand and predict how the world works and control it through technology. There was no longer a ned for religious explanations
What did Weber call the process of the Protestant reformation bringing a new worldview, replacing the medieval catholic worldview?
Disenchantment of the world-it pushes out magical and religious ways of thinking and starts off the rationalisation process that leads to the dominance of the new rational mode of thought. This enables science to thrive and provide a basis for technological advances that give humans more and more power to control nature. In turn, this further undermines the religious worldview