Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Chapter 14 Religion.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Chapter 14 Religion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 14 Religion

2 Chapter Outline The Nature of Religion Religious Economies
Church-Sect Theory Secularization and Revival Innovation: Cult Formation Charisma

3 Chapter Outline The American Religious Economy
The Canadian Religious Economy Cult Movements in Europe The Protestant Explosion in Latin America Eastern Revivals The Universal Appeal of Faith

4 Religion and Neanderthals
100,000 years ago, Neanderthals left evidence of a belief in life after death: They buried their dead with care and provided them with gifts and food for the next world. They built small altars out of bear bones.

5 Defining Religion 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.

6 Religiousness Around the World
Nation I’m a religious person (%) I am a convinced atheist (%) Poland 95 2 Italy 84 4 United States 83 1 Mexico 75 Canada 71 3 Spain 68 Russia 56 8 France 51 11 Sweden 31 7 China 6 38

7 Gender and Religiousness in Selected Nations
Women Men Percent who attend church at least monthly. United States 61 54 Canada 44 32 Mexico 70 57 Great Britain 30 17 Germany 36 23 Italy 62 42 Russia 9 3 Japan 16 11

8 Gender and Religiousness in Selected Nations
Women Men Percent who pray. United States 94 87 Canada 88 75 Mexico 95 89 Great Britain 78 54 Germany 74 59 Italy 90 Russia 50 21 Japan 85 China 28 17

9 Gender and Religiousness in Selected Nations
Women Men Percent who say they are “a religious person” United States 86 80 Canada 77 65 Mexico 71 Turkey 78 Great Britain 47 Germany 64 48 Italy 89 Russia 69 39 Japan 32 20

10 Church-sect Theory Religions originate as sects designed to serve the needs of the deprived. If they grow and flourish, these sects are transformed into churches, making them less effective at satisfying the needs of the poor. The conditions that prompted the original sect formation are re-created, a split occurs, and a new sect is formed.

11 Cult Formation Sociologists use “cult” to distinguish new religions from sects arising out of old religions. All religions begin as cult movements.

12 Charisma Greek word meaning “divine gift.”
Weber used it to indicate the ability of some people to inspire faith in others. People accept the claim of a founder of a new faith because they develop strong attachments to the founder.

13 American Denominations with More Than 1 Million Members
Members in 2001 Roman Catholic 62,391,484 Southern Baptist Convention 15,851,756 United Methodist Church 8,377,662 Church of God in Christ 5,499,875 Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 5,149,668 Mormons 5,113,409 Presbyterian Church (USA) 3,561,184 National Baptist Convention 3,500,000 Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod 2,582,440 Assemblies of God 2,574,531 African Methodist Episcopal Church 2,500,000

14 American Denominations with More Than 1 Million Members
Members in 2001 National Missionary Baptist Convention 2,500,000 Progressive National Baptist Convention Episcopal Church 2,317,794 Jehovah’s Witnesses 2,163,602* Greek Orthodox Archdiocese 1,954,500 Pentecostal Assemblies 1,500,000 Churches of Christ American Baptist Churches in the USA 1,454,388 United Church of Christ 1,401,682 Baptist Bible Fellowship 1,200,000 Christian Churches and Churches of Christ 1,071,616

15 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. About 63% are official members of a local congregation or parish.

16 American Denominations and Literal Faith in the Bible
Percent who agree that “the Bible is the actual word of God and is to be taken literally, word for word” Unitarian-Universalist 7 United Church of Christ 12 Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 22 Episcopal Church United Presbyterian Church 25 United Methodist Church 31 Jehovah's Witnesses 51 Church of Christ 56 Southern Baptist Convention 57

17 American Denominations and Literal Faith in the Bible
Percent who agree that “the Bible is the actual word of God and is to be taken literally, word for word” Church of the Nazarene 58 Assemblies of God 68 United Pentecostal Church 69 Church of God 81 All Protestants 43 Roman Catholics 20

18 Declining American Denominations
Members per 1,000 U.S. Population Denomination 1960 2000 % Change Christian Church (Disciples) 10.0 2.7 –71 United Church of Christ 12.4 5.0 –60 Episcopal Church 18.1 8.2 –55 United Methodist Church 58.9 29.8 –49 Presbyterian Church (USA) 23.0 12.7 –45 Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 29.3 18.2 –39 Unitarian-Universalist 1.0 0.8 –20 Roman Catholic 233.0 221.7 –5

19 Some Growing American Denominations
Members per 1,000 U.S. Population Denomination 1960 2000 % Change Southern Baptist Convention 53.8 56.3 +5 Church of the Nazarene 1.7 2.2 +35 Seventh-day Adventist 1.8 3.1 +72 Foursquare Gospel 0.5 0.9 +80 Mormons 8.2 18.2 +122 Jehovah’s Witnesses 1.4 3.5 +150 Assemblies of God 2.8 9.1 +225 Church of God (Cleveland, Tenn.) +244 Church of God in Christ 19.5 +786

20 Eastern Revival In Dagestan, one of the republics in the new Russian Federation: In 1917 there were 1,702 mosques. In 1988, as the Soviet era drew to a close, there were but 27. By 1992 there were 800 mosques in Dagesta and in 1994 nearly 5,000.

21 Nontraditional Beliefs in Fifteen Major Russian Cities
Yes % I believe in the “evil eye” 67 I believe in astrology 56 I believe in UFOs 46 I believe in the abominable snowman 37


Download ppt "Chapter 14 Religion."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google