Read The Blackwell Companion to Sociology Online
Authors: Judith R Blau
research on tolerance is one area in which scholars have consistently analyzed
religious effects. The general relationship between religiosity and racial prejudice in the USA seems to be curvilinear. Those who are only peripherally involved in
religion are the most racially prejudiced, and both the non-religious and those
who are heavily involved in religion are among the least prejudiced. People's
motivations for attending religious services are also important. Those who
report attending for religious reasons are less prejudiced, those who attend for social reasons more prejudiced (Gorsuch, 1988).
Most past research on tolerance suggests that CPs are less tolerant than other
North Americans. However, a number of scholars suggest that most tolerance
scales (for example, on the General Social Survey) are biased against conserva-
tive religionists because they primarily test tolerance for left-wing and secular groups (atheists, feminists, communists, homosexuals) and exclude most right-wing and religious groups (fundamentalists, anti-abortion protesters, gender-
role traditionalists, ``creationists''). Some evidence supports this claim. For
example, an analysis of the 1987 Freedom and Tolerance Survey, which gave
respondents open-ended questions about their outgroups and intolerance, shows
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that CPs are just as tolerant as other religious or non-religious groups (Busch, 1998). Certain groups within CPism are extremely intolerant, but they are not
large enough to influence the overall CP mean significantly. Furthermore, CP
intolerance seems to work against not only liberal and secular groups like
atheists, feminists, and homosexuals, but also some right-wing groups such as
militarists and racists. Generally, CPs are not less tolerant of Jews, blacks,
Asians, Catholics, Hispanics, or immigrants than other Americans (Woodberry
and Smith, 1998; Smith, 2000).
Religion and Social Justice
An important emerging dimension of recent work in the sociology of religion has
focused on religion's role in movements of social justice. Moderns have inherited from the skeptical and revolutionary Enlightenment (May, 1976) the view that
religion is naturally conservative, defensive, and allied with ruling elites ± as, for example, the French Catholic Church was in the eighteenth century. Certainly in
many cases religion has proved to be conservative, elitist, and allied with forces of oppression. But religion can cut both ways. It also readily inspires, mobilizes, and supports movements for social justice and democratization (Smith, 1996a).
Historically, in the USA, religious actors and organizations were crucial in the fight for religious freedom in the eighteenth century and against slavery in the nineteenth century. In the mid-twentieth century, the black church in America
was central in mobilizing and sustaining the black civil rights movement. People and organizations of faith in the USA in the decades since then have also played crucial roles in the anti-Vietnam War movement and in the Sanctuary movement
that protected illegal Central American refugees, and were active in the nuclear freeze movement, the Central America peace movement against Ronald Reagan's sponsored wars in El Salvador and Nicaragua, the environmental move-
ment, various progressive organizations such as Amnesty International, Habitat
for Humanity, the American Friends Service Committee, and other peace, anti-
poverty, and anti-discrimination movements and organizations.
Around the world, religion has played a significant role in the liberation
theology movement in Latin America, Africa, and parts of Asia, the overthrow
of the Somoza dictatorship in Nicaragua in 1979, the insurrection against El
Salvador's military regime in the 1970s, Solidarity's resistance to the Polish
communist state, the toppling of the Marcos dictatorship in the Philippines,
resistance to the Pinochet dictatorship in Chile, the anti-Apartheid movement
in South Africa, and the fall of the East German regime in 1989. In many
movements for peace and justice, religion has often been crucial in providing
activists with legitimation for protest rooted in the sacred, supplying insurgents with moral imperatives for love, justice, peace, freedom, and equality, and
offering activists powerfully motivating icons, rituals, songs, testimonies, and oratory. Religion can secure in movements self-discipline, sacrifice, and altruism, furnish movements with trained and experienced leadership and financial
resources, and supply congregated participants and solidarity incentives.
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Movements often reduce start-up costs by using pre-existing religious commun-
ication channels, authority structures, and social control mechanisms. Religion
can also provide potential common identification among gathered strangers, and
shared transnational identities beyond nation and language. Finally, religion can offer movements transnational organizational linkages, provide the protection
of `òpen spaces'' in civil society, and provide activists with political legitimacy in public opinion (Smith, 1996a). Much exciting work remains to explore the role
of religion not only in sustaining, but also often in challenging, social injustice around the world.
Improving Religion Measures
Many of the standard religion measures used in survey research have become
inadequate for the task. The significance of denominations, for example, in the
American religious field has changed, such that many survey denomination
questions have little analytical usefulness. Many standard theological indicators (for example, ``literal Bible'') yield invalid estimates of what researchers want to study. Improved measures of religious self-identity, practices, beliefs, and organizational location need to be developed and refined and used on surveys. Most
surveys ± especially longitudinal surveys ± have no questions on religion or only a few poorly constructed ones. Fortunately, this is beginning to change. High
quality data are becoming increasingly available and are starting to transform
scholars' perceptions of religion.
In North America, surveys typically have asked if respondents are Catholic,
Protestant, or Jewish. However, this distinction increasingly has little predictive power and researchers have developed more nuanced religion measures. The
greatest progress has been in developing better ways to differentiate groups of
Protestants. Little work focuses on differentiating types of Catholics ± although David Leege and Michael Welch (1988, 1991) of Notre Dame have made
progress in that direction. We still know almost nothing about how to identify
different types of Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, and other minority religious
groups on surveys (see Leege and Kellstedt, 1993; Green et al., 1996; Woodberry
and Smith, 1998).
In North America, religious denomination is probably the most common way
scholars identify religious groups. With good denominational lists and categor-
ization schemes, scholars can effectively differentiate mainline-liberal and conservative Protestant denominations, as well as pentecostals and black
Protestants. Unfortunately, most denomination questions on surveys lack suffi-
cient detail. Protestant denominations, especially small ones, can be tricky to
code correctly. And many surveys do not distinguish subgroups within larger
religious families. For example, Lutherans are very heterogeneous ± the Evange-
lical Lutheran Church of America tends to be liberal, while Missouri Synod
Lutherans are quite conservative. Good religion analysis requires getting these
kinds of groups coded correctly. Fortunately, scholars (Green et al., 1996;
Steensland et al., 2000) are developing useful schemes for recoding detailed
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denomination lists, which are being adapted by a number of major surveys,
including the American National Election Survey, the Southern Focus Poll, and
the Adolescent Health Survey.
Another way to identify different religious groups is with religious belief
measures. In North America, ``biblical literalism'' or ``biblical inerrancy'' are the most common belief measures scholars use ± in this case, to identify conservative Protestants. However, these Bible measures are crude. People vary
widely in what they mean by ``literal'' and ``without error.'' And since this
measure excludes many better educated evangelicals who are not literalists or
inerrantists, it makes ``conservative Protestants'' appear less educated and from a lower class than they actually are. Another problem is that scholars generally
only use a single belief measure to categorize religious respondents, which can
cause significant measurement error and biased coefficients. Or they use belief
measures additively, such as identifying conservative Protestants as people who
are biblical literalists, and `born again,'' and have shared their faith with others.
But this stringent procedure can confound the problem, excluding respondents
who actually belong. Ideally, researchers should use multiple beliefs as indicators of a latent belief system (Woodberry and Smith, 1998).
Even so, denominational measures and most belief measures do not distin-
guish different subtypes of conservative Protestants or Catholics, between which there are actually striking differences. Recently scholars have begun asking
respondents which religious tradition or movement they identify with ± funda-
mentalist, evangelical, pentecostal, charismatic, traditionalist Catholic, liberal Catholic, etc. These generally predict attitudes and behaviors better than
denomination or the religious belief measures. As to American religiosity, scho-
lars typically use measures of church attendance, prayer, or subjective import-
ance of religion. These religious measures work equally well for different groups of American Catholics and Protestants (Woodberry, 1998), though attendance
typically has the strongest impact on people's beliefs and behavior. But it is not clear how well these measures work for non-Christian groups. As new surveys
increasingly contact non-Christian respondents, scholars need to develop new
measures that address other forms of religiosity.
Finally, several new methodological techniques promise to enhance our study
of religion. For example, past research has tended to look at differences between religious traditions, but neglected the diversity within traditions. However, some scholars have developed ways to test whether the internal diversity is greater in some religious groups than others (DiMaggio et al., 1996; Gay et al., 1996).
Scholars have also begun to mix qualitative and quantitative research more
effectively. Past qualitative research on religion has suffered because it was
hard to determine whether case studies, `ìnsider documents,'' or interviews
were representative or not. On the other hand, survey research often did not
capture the important nuances, contradictions, and ambivalence in religious
language and culture, and religion researchers often projected alien meanings
onto their research subjects. Fortunately, several groups of scholars are begin-
ning to bridge the gap between qualitative and quantitative research. For ex-
ample, Christian Smith and colleagues (1998) conducted two-hour face-to-face
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interviews in 23 states with a random sample of churchgoing Protestants whom
they had contacted in a national telephone survey of the United States. This
directly linked national survey data with detailed information about how
respondents understand concepts and the reasons they give for what they believe
and do. Bradford Wilcox (1998) has combined broad reviews of religious family-
advice books with careful quantitative analysis. These kinds of mixed-method
strategies hold much promise for advances in religion research. Finally, religion research is just beginning to explore multilevel designs. For his National Congregations Study, for example, Mark Chaves and colleagues (1999) asked 1998
General Social Survey respondents where they attend church, then used this
information to identify and investigate a representative sample of all US
churches. This procedure could also be used to contact representative samples
of religious-based schools, voluntary organizations, or political groups. Religion research will only improve by moving beyond simply cross-sectional surveys to
creative mixed-method, longitudinal, and multilevel designs.
Globalizing Religion
Religion
Religious transformation is taking place at a global scale. In the past two
centuries, and especially since the Second World War, Christianity has spread
rapidly in Asia, Islam and Christianity in Africa, Protestantism in Latin America, and Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam have spread to North America, Europe,
and former British colonies. Many new religious movements (NRMs) have also
sprung up by combining elements of different traditions. Population migrations
with religious implications are under way, and old religious cleavages are
reasserting themselves anew in places like Serbia, Palestine, India, and Indonesia.
Meanwhile, Pentecostalism ± a native of the early-twentieth century US West
coast ± is spreading rapidly in many parts of the world. Large segments of many
societies have changed their religions, and members of thesèìmported'' reli-
gions have been disproportionately influential in their home societies, in both the West and the non-West.