Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Postsecularity and Religious and Spiritual Capital – Locating the Faith and Social Welfare Debate University of Warwick, 6 th May, 2009 Dr Chris Baker.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Postsecularity and Religious and Spiritual Capital – Locating the Faith and Social Welfare Debate University of Warwick, 6 th May, 2009 Dr Chris Baker."— Presentation transcript:

1 Postsecularity and Religious and Spiritual Capital – Locating the Faith and Social Welfare Debate University of Warwick, 6 th May, 2009 Dr Chris Baker William Temple Foundation University of Manchester Manchester Research Institute for Religion and Civil Society

2 William Temple Foundation/Leverhulme Trust Research – visit www.wtf.org.uk Faith and Traditional Capitals – defining the public scope of religious capital (2007 – 2010) Aims  Map the existing literature on the public role and identity of faith groups in civil society in the UK and US (including ideas of religious and spiritual capital)  Test out how useful the concepts of spiritual and religious capital are to faith groups  See if there are more authentic alternative or supplementary concepts that better describe from the perspective of faith groups themselves, what they do and why they do it

3 Outline of the Faiths and Social Welfare debate The new social policy space – the post secular space which is now shared by secularism and religion/spirituality How do we negotiate this new postsecular space – new tools/new language? – Religious and Spiritual capital Opportunities and challenges of sharing this new space which can lead to blurred encounters– do we eat well or are we eaten?

4 From Secularisation ….  Berger – secularisation = ‘process by which sectors of society and culture are removed from the domination of religious institutions and symbols’ (The Social Reality of Religion 1973:113)  Wilson ‘ process by which religious institutions, actions and consciousness lose their significance’ (Religion in Sociological Perspective 1982: 149)

5 To Desecularisation Berger – ‘desecularisation’ – the re-emergence of ‘furious, supernaturalist, fundamentalist or conservative expressions of religion in politics/public life’ (1999: 6) Habermas – ‘a postsecular self-understanding of society as a whole… the vigorous continuation of religion in a continually secularising environment …’ (2005; 26)

6 Religious and Spiritual capital – as subsets of Social capital - the Theoretical dimension. Social Capital – the importance of relationships, networks and norms that can be used to enrich individuals and communities (Putnam, 2000) Religious Capital: ‘… is the practical contribution to local and national life made by faith groups’ i.e. faith-based participation (Baker and Skinner, 2006) i.e. The ‘What’ Spiritual Capital: ‘ energises religious capital by providing a theological identity and worshipping tradition, but also a value system, moral vision and a basis for faith… is often embedded locally within faith groups, but also expressed in the lives of individuals’ (Baker and Skinner, 2006, 2009: 110) i.e. The Why and How

7 Bringing spiritual and religious capital together – is this the source of faith-based added value The interaction of religious and spiritual capital – a virtuous cycle of capital production? S CR C Ethos Moods Figure 5: The virtuous cycle of spiritual and religious capital

8 The Vocabulary of Spiritual Capital (WTF – Faith in Action: the dynamic connection between spiritual and religious capital - 2006) Christian based expressions:  Focuses on transforming people personally and spiritually as well as improving their area physically  Values personal stories  Believes implicitly or explicitly that God is at work in regeneration  Accepts strong emotion expressed and experienced – anger, frustration, cynicism, weariness etc – importance of feelings  Introduces values of self-emptying, forgiveness, transformation, risk-taking and openness to learning  Begins with intention of accepting those who have been rejected elsewhere  Values people’s inner resources and capacity to create their own solutions based on intangibles such as ideas and visions not exclusively claimed by a specific religious tradition  (close links to ‘secular spirituality’)

9 7 Sources of Spiritual Capital – secular research into happiness and wellbeing – Diener, Layard, Swinton Comforting Beliefs  Positive emotions such as forgiveness, hope transformation Connecting to a realty greater than self Experience of ritual Regulation of lifestyle and behaviour Social support and networking Growing up religiously Philosophy of life

10 Health warning – it may be desirable (to engage faith in social policy/partnership working in a postsecular), but is it possible? Problem of Blurred Encounters?*  Mutually beneficial overlaps of ethos, philosophies and methods of working – a place at the table?  OR: a loss of essential identity or ethos/moral bearing and energising ethos  Derrida (1996) – the act of ‘hospitality’ (encountering the Other) involves risk: ‘Eating well or being eaten?’  Concept of regeneration – a linguistic space of blurred encounter – an elastic yet opaque word – semi-spiritual yet also utilitarian ‘They have stolen our words and not recognised us, not recognised what we are doing’. (Baker, 2009:108)  Exacerbated by a residual hostility to FBOs in LSPs for example (CUF, 2006), and a lack of religious literacy ‘Blurred Encounters? Religious Literacy, spiritual capital and language’ in Dinham, A, Furbey, R. and Lowndes, V. (eds.) Faith in the Public Realm – Controversies, policies and practices (Bristol: Policy Perss, 2009)

11 Transcendent vs. Immanent world views James Hopewell: Congregation: Stories and Structures (London: SCM Press, 1987) - Romantic, Tragic, Comic and Ironic types of story  First two categories see the self as part of a wider canvas of destiny, often involving a sense of sacrifice of will to a higher force – a Transcendent frame of reference in respect of authority as a basis for action  Other languages look to empirical evidence and humanly defined legal structures - a more Immanent frame of reference  Are we destined to work in parallel languages that rarely cross-over and connect? Or can we create a more dynamic and equal space where values and norms as well as policies and strategies can be explored?  The blurring of boundaries in a postsecular world, where we try and borrow each other’s languages for example) can be a frustrating, but also a creative process which holds promise for a better quality of discourse and politics because values and visi ons matter (to all of us)


Download ppt "Postsecularity and Religious and Spiritual Capital – Locating the Faith and Social Welfare Debate University of Warwick, 6 th May, 2009 Dr Chris Baker."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google