Explaining Religious Revival in the Context of Long-Term Secularization
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theory: Modernization, Secularization, and Religious Revival
3. Mechanisms of Revival4
3.1. Crisis
3.2. Reaction
3.3. Transition
3.3.1. Adaptation to Early Modernization
3.3.2. Adaptation to Immigration
3.4. State Intervention
3.4.1. Introduction of Supportive State Regulation
3.4.2. Removal of Suppressive State Regulation
3.5. Composition
3.5.1. Migration
3.5.2. Fertility and Mortality
3.5.3. Background Societal Religiosity
4. Integrating the Mechanisms into a General Theoretical Scheme
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | We define a mechanism as a typical causal relationship in one or several social systems (Hedström 2005; Stolz 2016). |
2 | For our purposes, a religion consists of: (1) an ideology referring to a transcendent (i.e., supernatural) reality; (2) a social group or groups producing and transmitting this ideology; (3) the individual experiences, beliefs, and actions referring to the ideology. Religiosity subsumes individual experiences, beliefs, and actions belonging to one or several religions. Examples of individual religiosity as defined here include attending religious services or a meditation course, praying, going on a pilgrimage, and believing in angels (Stolz 2020a, p. 301). |
3 | Whether we should conceive of one modernity or several modernities is a legitimate question. The idea of multiple modernities was proposed by Eisenstadt (1999, p. 284). Modernization takes on different forms in different countries and regions. In our definition of modernization, we said that modernization is a process that leads societies to a level of greater technological, institutional, and cultural complexity. It is then easy to imagine that modernization could involve all three areas (technological, institutional, and cultural) in one country while being concentrated in only one or two in another. All sorts of dosages and variations of the different elements are imaginable. Depending on the level of abstraction chosen, one might then consider modernization as “one” or “many”. For our purposes here, we take modernization as a single phenomenon and focus on the varying counter-movements and mechanisms. |
4 | This part of the manuscript extends the arguments made in Stolz et al. (2023). |
5 | This point is disputed among secularization theorists, with some arguing that modernization and secularization are irreversible. |
6 | The post-communist traditionally Catholic and Protestant countries do not show the same religious revival as the post-communist traditionally Orthodox and Muslim countries (except, to some extent, Croatia). The rise of Nazism in the early 1930s in Germany, following an extreme economic and political crisis, may also be an example of a form of demodernization leading to religious revival (if Nazism is seen as some kind of quasi-religion). |
7 | Statistical data to demonstrate this return of the Islamic religion (religious beliefs of students) are limited, but an example given by Carvalho concerns the beliefs among students at the University of Ankara in 1978 and 1991. It is clear that belief in God and various other beliefs have increased. |
8 | On the signaling aspect of the veil, see Aksoy and Gambetta (2016). |
9 | Recently, data from the Arab Barometer published in the Economist showed signs of insipient secularization in six countries: Algeria, Egypt, Tunisia, Jordan, Iraq, and Libya. Between 2012 and 2019, trust in Islamic parties and religious leaders declined, the percentage of people attending mosques decreased, and the percentage of people self-identifying as non-religious increased. It is likely too early to say whether this is an indication of genuine secularization, but the finding is interesting, as some authors have argued that Arab countries are “naturally” resistant to secularization. |
10 | While the Islamic revival of the 1970s was primarily caused by “too rapid modernization” and “threat from outside”, there was also an important economic component to it (Carvalho 2009). According to this account, by 1970, rapid modernization from above had created a well-educated middle class. These individuals, however, did not find suitable jobs and were disappointed in their aspirations. As a result, they became open to a religious ideology arguing that self-worth was to be found not in educational and occupational prestige but in religious practice and faith (Glain 2004). |
11 | The rational choice approach to religion, as represented by Stark and Finke (2000) and Iannaccone (1995), has built a whole theory around this possible mechanism, thereby likely exaggerating its importance. For some of the criticism, see Bruce (1999). |
12 | We acknowledge the tremendous inequalities created during this process. |
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Stolz, J.; Voas, D. Explaining Religious Revival in the Context of Long-Term Secularization. Religions 2023, 14, 723. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060723
Stolz J, Voas D. Explaining Religious Revival in the Context of Long-Term Secularization. Religions. 2023; 14(6):723. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060723
Chicago/Turabian StyleStolz, Jörg, and David Voas. 2023. "Explaining Religious Revival in the Context of Long-Term Secularization" Religions 14, no. 6: 723. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060723
APA StyleStolz, J., & Voas, D. (2023). Explaining Religious Revival in the Context of Long-Term Secularization. Religions, 14(6), 723. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14060723