Religious studies, also known as the study of religion or religiology, is an academic field devoted to research into religious beliefs, behaviors,
and institutions. It describes, compares, interprets, and explains
religion, emphasizing systematic, historically based, and cross-cultural
perspectives.
While theology attempts to understand the nature of transcendent or supernatural forces (such as deities),
religious studies tries to study religious behavior and belief from
outside any particular religious viewpoint. Religious studies draws upon
multiple disciplines and their methodologies including anthropology, sociology, psychology, philosophy, and history of religion.
Religious studies originated in the 19th century, when scholarly and historical analysis of the Bible had flourished, and Hindu and Buddhist texts were first being translated into European languages. Early influential scholars included Friedrich Max Müller, in England, and Cornelius P. Tiele, in the Netherlands. Today religious studies is practiced by scholars worldwide. In its early years, it was known as "comparative religion" or the science of religion
and, in the USA, there are those who today also know the field as the
History of religion (associated with methodological traditions traced to
the University of Chicago in general, and in particular Mircea Eliade, from the late 1950s through to the late 1980s).
The religious studies scholar Walter Capps
described the purpose of the discipline as to provide "training and
practice... in directing and conducting inquiry regarding the subject of
religion".
At the same time, Capps stated that its other purpose was to use
"prescribed modes and techniques of inquiry to make the subject of
religion intelligible."
Religious studies scholar Robert A. Segal characterised the discipline
as "a subject matter" that is "open to many approaches", and thus it
"does not require either a distinctive method or a distinctive
explanation to be worthy of disciplinary status."
Different scholars operating in the field have different
interests and intentions; some for instance seek to defend religion,
while others seek to explain it away, and others wish to use religion as
an example with which to prove a theory of their own. Some scholars of religious studies are interested in primarily studying the religion to which they belong.
Scholars of religion have argued that a study of the subject is
useful for individuals because it will provide them with knowledge that
is pertinent in inter-personal and professional contexts within an
increasingly globalised world.
It has also been argued that studying religion is useful in
appreciating and understanding sectarian tensions and religious
violence.
Etymology
The term "religion" originated from the Latin noun religio, that was nominalized from one of three verbs: relegere (to turn to constantly/observe conscientiously); religare (to bind oneself [back]); and reeligere (to choose again). Because of these three different potential meanings, an etymological
analysis alone does not resolve the ambiguity of defining religion,
since each verb points to a different understanding of what religion is.
During the Medieval Period, the term "religious" was used as a noun to
describe someone who had joined a monastic order (a "religious").
Defining "religion"
Throughout the history of religious studies, there have been many attempts to define the term "religion". Many of these have been monothetic,
seeking to determine a key, essential element which all religions
share, which can be used to define "religion" as a category, and which
must be necessary in order for something to be classified as a
"religion". There are two forms of monothetic definition; the first are substantive,
seeking to identify a specific core as being at the heart of religion,
such as a belief in a God or gods, or an emphasis on power. The second are functional,
seeking to define "religion" in terms of what it does for humans, for
instance defining it by the argument that it exists to assuage fear of
death, unite a community, or reinforce the control of one group over
another. Other forms of definition are polythetic,
producing a list of characteristics that are common to religion. In
this definition there is no one characteristic that need be common to
every form of religion.
Causing further complications is the fact that there are various secular world views, such as nationalism and Marxism,
which bear many of the same characteristics that are commonly
associated with religion, but which rarely consider themselves to be
religious.
Conversely, other scholars of religious studies have argued that
the discipline should reject the term "religion" altogether and cease
trying to define it.
In this perspective, "religion" is argued to be a Western concept that
has been forced upon other cultures in an act of intellectual
imperialism. According to scholar of religion Russell T. McCutcheon, "many of the peoples that we study by means of this category have no equivalent term or concept whatsoever". There is, for instance, no word for "religion" in languages like Sanskrit.
Intellectual foundation and background
Before
religious studies became a field in its own right, flourishing in the
United States in the late 1960s, several key intellectual figures
explored religion from a variety of perspectives. One of these figures
was the famous pragmatist William James. His 1902 Gifford lectures and book The Varieties of Religious Experience examined religion from a psychological-philosophical perspective and is still influential today. His essay The Will to Believe defends the rationality of faith.
Max Weber studied religion from an economic perspective in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1904-1905), his most famous work. As a major figure in sociology, he has no doubt influenced later sociologists of religion.
Émile Durkheim also holds continuing influence as one of the fathers of sociology. He explored Protestant and Catholic attitudes and doctrines regarding suicide in his work Suicide. In 1912, he published his most memorable work on religion, The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life.
History
Interest in the general study of religion dates back to at least Hecataeus of Miletus (ca. 550 BCE – ca. 476 BCE) and Herodotus (ca. 484 BCE – 425 BCE). Later, during the Middle Ages, Islamic scholars such as Ibn Hazm (d. 1064 CE) studied Persian, Jewish, Christian, and Indian religions, among others. The first history of religion was the Treatise on the Religious and Philosophical Sects (1127 CE), written by the Muslim scholar Muhammad al-Shahrastani. Peter the Venerable, also working in the twelfth century, studied Islam and made possible a Latin translation of the Qur'an.
Notwithstanding the long interest in the study of religion, the
academic discipline Religious Studies is relatively new. Dr. Chris
Partridge notes that the "first professorships were established as
recently as the final quarter of the nineteenth century."
In the nineteenth century, the study of religion was done through the eyes of science. Max Müller was the first Professor of Comparative Philology at Oxford University, a chair created especially for him. In his Introduction to the Science of Religion
(1873) he wrote that it is "the duty of those who have devoted their
life to the study of the principal religions of the world in their
original documents, and who value and reverence it in whatever form it
may present itself, to take possession of this new territory in the name
of true science."
Many of the key scholars who helped to establish the study of
religion did not regard themselves as scholars of religious studies, but
rather as theologians, philosophers, anthropologists, sociologists,
psychologists, and historians.
Partridge writes that "by the second half of the twentieth
century the study of religion had emerged as a prominent and important
field of academic enquiry." He cites the growing distrust of the
empiricism of the nineteenth century and the growing interest in
non-Christian religions and spirituality coupled with convergence of the
work of social scientists and that of scholars of religion as factors
involved in the rise of Religious Studies.
One of the earliest academic institutions where Religious Studies
was presented as a distinct subject was University College Ibadan, now
the University of Ibadan, where Geoffrey Parrinder was appointed as lecturer in Religious Studies in 1949.
In the 1960s and 1970s, the term "religious studies" became
common and interest in the field increased. New departments were founded
and influential journals of religious studies were initiated (for
example, Religious Studies and Religion). In the forward to Approaches to the Study of Religion, Ninian Smart
wrote that "in the English-speaking world [religious studies] basically
dates from the 1960s, although before then there were such fields as
'the comparative study of religion', the 'history of religion', the
'sociology of religion' and so on..."
In the 1980s, in both Britain and America,
"the decrease in student applications and diminishing resources in the
1980s led to cut backs affecting religious studies departments."
(Partridge) Later in the decade, religious studies began to pick up as a
result of integrating religious studies with other disciplines and
forming programs of study that mixed the discipline with more
utilitarian study.
Philosophy of religion uses philosophical tools to evaluate
religious claims and doctrines. Western philosophy has traditionally
been employed by English speaking scholars. (Some other cultures have
their own philosophical traditions including Indian, Muslim, and Jewish.) Common issues considered by the (Western) philosophy of religion are the existence of God, belief and rationality, cosmology, and logical inferences of logical consistency from sacred texts.
Although philosophy has long been used in evaluation of religious claims (e.g. Augustine and Pelagius's debate concerning original sin), the rise of scholasticism
in the 11th century, which represented "the search for order in
intellectual life" (Russell, 170), more fully integrated the Western
philosophical tradition (with the introduction of translations of Aristotle) in religious study.
There is some amount of overlap between subcategories of
religious studies and the discipline itself. Religious studies seeks to
study religious phenomena as a whole, rather than be limited to the
approaches of its subcategories.
Anthropology of religion
The anthropology of religion is principally concerned with the common basic human needs that religion fulfills.
Cultural anthropology of religion
The cultural anthropology
of religion is principally concerned with the cultural aspects of
religion. Of primary concern to the cultural anthropologist of religions
are rituals, beliefs, religious art, and practices of piety.
Economics of religion
Gallup
surveys have found that the world's poorest countries may be the most
religious. Of those countries with average per-capita incomes under
$2000, 95% reported that religion played an important role in their
daily lives. This is contrasted by the average of 47% from the richest
countries, with incomes over $25000 (with the United States breaking the
trend by reporting at 65%).
Social scientists have suggested that religion plays a functional role (helping people cope) in poorer nations.
The New York Times offers a graphic illustrating the correlation (not necessarily causation) between religion and poverty.
Geography of religion
The
geography of religion is principally concerned with the spatial
elements of religious practice and embodiment. In the 1960s and 1970s,
geographers of religion such as Wilbur Zelinsky and David Sopher were
mostly associated with the "Berkeley school" of cultural geography and
focused mostly on the cultural imprints of religion on the landscape.
Since the turn in the new cultural geography of religion through the
work of James Duncan on the City as Text, geographers of religion have
focused on what Lily Kong has called the "politics and poetics" of
religion, especially in relation to the political geographies of secular
nation-states. Recent interest
in the geography of religion has focused on how religious practitioners
enact sacred space through their embodied sacred practices as well as
the relationship between religion and geopolitics.
History of religion
The history of religions is not concerned with theological claims
apart from their historical significance. Some topics of this
discipline are the historicity of religious figures, events, and the evolution of doctrinal matters.
Literary approaches
There
are many approaches to the study of sacred texts. One of these
approaches is to interpret the text as a literary object. Metaphor,
thematic elements, and the nature and motivations of the characters are
of interest in this approach. An example of this approach is God: A Biography, by Jack Miles.
Neurological approaches
The temporal lobe has been of interest which has been termed the "God center" of the brain. (Ramachandran, ch. 9) Neurological
findings in regard to religious experience is not a widely accepted
discipline within religious studies. Scientific investigators have used a
SPECTscanner to analyze the brain activity of both Christian contemplatives and Buddhist meditators, finding them to be quite similar.
Origin of religion
The "origin of religion" refers to the emergence of religious behavior in prehistory, before written records.
Psychology of religion
The psychology of religion is concerned with the psychological principles operative in religious communities and practitioners. William James's The Varieties of Religious Experience
analyzed personal experience as contrasted with the social phenomenon
of religion. Some issues of concern to the psychologist of religions are
the psychological nature of religious conversion, the making of religious decisions, religion and happiness, and the psychological factors in evaluating religious claims.
Sigmund Freud
was another figure in the field of psychology and religion. He used
his psychoanalytic theory to explain religious beliefs, practices, and
rituals, in order to justify the role of religion in the development of
human culture.
Sociology of religion
The sociology of religion concerns the dialectical relationship between religion and society; the practices, historical backgrounds, developments, universal themes and roles of religion in society.
There is particular emphasis on the recurring role of religion in all
societies and throughout recorded history. The sociology of religion is
distinguished from the philosophy of religion in that it does not set
out to assess the validity of religious beliefs, though the process of
comparing multiple conflicting dogmas may require what Peter L. Berger has described as inherent "methodological atheism".
Whereas the sociology of religion broadly differs from theology in
assuming the invalidity of the supernatural, theorists tend to
acknowledge socio-cultural reification of religious practise.
It may be said that the modern formal discipline of sociology began with the analysis of religion in Durkheim's 1897 study of suicide rates amongst Catholic and Protestant populations. The works of Max Weber emphasised the relationship between religious belief and the economic foundations of society. Contemporary debates have centred on issues such as secularization, civil religion, and the cohesiveness of religion in the context of globalization and multiculturalism.
The sociology of religion also deals with how religion impacts
society regarding the positive and negatives of what happens when
religion is mixed with society. Theorist such as Marx states that
“religion is the opium of the people” - the idea that religion has
become a way for people to deal with their problems. At least one
comprehensive study refutes this idea. Research has found that secular
democracies like France or Scandinavia
outperform more theistic democracies on various measures of societal
health. The authors explains, "Pressing questions include the reasons,
whether theistic or non-theistic, that the exceptionally wealthy U.S. is
so inefficient that it is experiencing a much higher degree of societal
distress than are less religious, less wealthy prosperous democracies.
Conversely, how do the latter achieve superior societal health while
having little in the way of the religious values or institutions?"
Law and religion
Vogel reports that in the 1970s a new "law and religion" approach has
progressively built its own contribution to religious studies. Over a
dozen scholarly organizations and committees were formed by 1983, and a
scholarly quarterly, the Journal of Law and Religion first published that year and the Ecclesiastical Law Journal opened in 1999.
Many departments and centers have been created around the world during
the last decades. As of 2012, major Law and Religion organizations in
the U.S. included 500 law professors, 450 political scientists, and
specialists in numerous other fields such as history and religious
studies. Between 1985 and 2010, the field saw the publication of some
750 books and 5000 scholarly articles.
Scholars are not only focused on strictly legal issues about religious
freedom or non establishment but also on the study of religions as they
are qualified through judicial discourses or legal understanding on
religious phenomena. Exponents look at canon law, natural law, and state
law, often in comparative perspective.
Specialists have explored themes in western history regarding
Christianity and justice and mercy, rule and equity, discipline and
love. Common topics on interest include marriage and the family, and human rights.
Moving beyond Christianity, scholars have looked at law and religion
interrelations in law and religion in the Muslim Middle East, and pagan Rome.
Religion and film
The earliest serious writing on the interface between religion and film appeared in the work of film critics like Jean Epstein in the 1920s.
The subject has grown in popularity with students and is cited as having
particular relevance given the pervasiveness of film in modern culture.
Approaches to the study of religion and film differ among scholars;
functionalist approaches for instance view film as a site in which
religion is manifested, while theological approaches examine film as a
reflection of God's presence in all things.
Methodologies
A number of methodologies are used in Religious Studies. Methodologies are hermeneutics, or interpretive models, that provide a structure for the analysis of religious phenomena.
Phenomenology
Phenomenology
is "arguably the most influential approach to the study of religion in
the twentieth century." (Partridge) The term is first found in the
title of the work of the influential philosopher of German Idealism, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, entitled The Phenomenology of Spirit. Phenomenology had been practiced long before its being made explicit as a philosophical method by Edmund Husserl, who is considered to be its founder. In the context of Phenomenology of religion however, the term was first used by Pierre Daniel Chantepie de la Saussaye
in his work "Lehrbuch der Religiongeschichte" (1887). Chantepie's
phenomenology catalogued observable characteristics of religion much
like a zoologist would categorize animals or an entomologist would
categorize insects.
In part due to Husserl's
influence, "phenomenology" came to "refer to a method which is more
complex and claims rather more for itself than did Chantepie’s mere
cataloguing of facts." (Partridge) Husserl argued that the foundation
of knowledge is consciousness.
He recognized "how easy it is for prior beliefs and interpretations to
unconsciously influence one’s thinking, Husserl’s phenomenological
method sought to shelve all these presuppositions and interpretations."
(Partridge) Husserl introduced the term "eidetic vision" to describe
the ability to observe without "prior beliefs and interpretations"
influencing understanding and perception.
His other main conceptual contribution is the idea of the epoche:
setting aside metaphysical questions and observing phenomena in and of
themselves, without any bias or commitments on the part of the
investigator. The epoche, also known as phenomenological reduction or
bracketing, involves approaching a phenomenon or phenomena from a
neutral standpoint, instead of with our own particular attitudes. In
performing this reduction, whatever phenomenon or phenomena we approach
are understood in themselves, rather than from our own perspectives. In
the field of religious studies, a contemporary advocate of the
phenomenological method is Ninian Smart. He suggests that we should
perform the epoche as a means to engage in cross-cultural studies. In
doing so, we can take the beliefs, symbols, rituals etc. of the other
from within their own perspective, rather than imposing ours on them.
Another earlier scholar who employs the phenomenological method for
studying religion is Gerardus van der Leeuw. In his Religion in Essence and Manifestation (1933), he outlines what a phenomenology of religion should look like:
- Firstly, argues van der Leeuw, the student of religion needs to classify the religious phenomena into distinct categories: e.g. sacrifice, sacrament, sacred space, sacred time, sacred word, festivals, and myth.
- Secondly, scholars then need to interpolate the phenomena into their own lives. That is to say, they need to empathetically (Einfühlung) try and understand the religion from within....The life examined by the religious studies scholar, insists van der Leeuw, needs to "acquire its place in the life of the student himself who should understand it out of his inner self."
- Thirdly, van der Leeuw stresses perhaps the fundamental phenomenological principle, namely epoch, the suspension of value-judgements and the adoption of a neutral stance.
- Fourthly, scholars needs to clarify any apparent structural relationships and make sense of the information. In so doing, they move towards a holistic understanding of how the various aspects of a religion relate and function together.
- Fifthly, this leads naturally to a stage at which "all these activities, undertaken together and simultaneously, constitute genuine understanding [Verstehen]: the chaotic and obstinate 'reality' thus becomes a manifestation, a revelation" (eidetic vision).
- Sixthly, having thus attained this general grasp, there is a continual need to make sure that it tallies with the up-to-date research of other disciplines, such as archaeology, history, philology etc. For van der Leeuw, as for other phenomenologists, the continual checking of one’s results is crucial to the maintenance of scholarly objectivity. In order to avoid degeneration into fantasy, phenomenology must always feed on facts.
- Finally, having gone through the above six stages, the phenomenologist should be as close as anyone can be to an understanding of the 'meaning' of the religious phenomena studied and be in a position to relate his understanding to others.
The subjectivity inherent to the phenomenological study of religion
makes complete and comprehensive understanding highly difficult.
However, phenomenologists aim to separate their formal study of religion
from their own theological worldview and to eliminate, as far as
possible, any personal biases (e.g., a Christian phenomenologist would
avoid studying Hinduism through the lens of Christianity).
There are a number of both theoretical and methodological attitudes common among phenomenologists:source
- Phenomenologists tend to oppose the acceptance of unobservable matters and grand systems erected in speculative thinking;
- Phenomenologists tend to oppose naturalism (also called objectivism and positivism), which is the worldview growing from modern natural science and technology that has been spreading from Northern Europe since the Renaissance;
- Positively speaking, phenomenologists tend to justify cognition (and some also evaluation and action) with reference to what Edmund Husserl called Evidenz, which is awareness of a matter itself as disclosed in the most clear, distinct, and adequate way for something of its kind;
- Phenomenologists tend to believe that not only objects in the natural and cultural worlds, but also ideal objects, such as numbers, and even conscious life itself can be made evident and thus known;
- Phenomenologists tend to hold that inquiry ought to focus upon what might be called "encountering" as it is directed at objects and, correlatively, upon "objects as they are encountered" (this terminology is not widely shared, but the emphasis on a dual problematics and the reflective approach it requires is);
- Phenomenologists tend to recognize the role of description in universal, a priori, or "eidetic" terms as prior to explanation by means of causes, purposes, or grounds; and
- Phenomenologists tend to debate whether or not what Husserl calls the transcendental phenomenological epochê and reduction is useful or even possible.
Many scholars of religious studies argued that phenomenology was "the distinctive method of the discipline".
In 2006, the phenomenologist of religion Thomas Ryba noted that this approach to the study of religion had "entered a period of dormancy".
Phenomenological approaches were largely taxonomical, with Robert A. Segal stating that it amounted to "no more than data gathering" alongside "the classification of the data gathered".
Functionalism
Functionalism,
in regard to religious studies, is the analysis of religions and their
various communities of adherents using the functions of particular
religious phenomena to interpret the structure of religious communities
and their beliefs. The approach was introduced by British anthropologist
Alfred Radcliffe-Brown. A major criticism of functionalism is that it lends itself to teleological explanations. An example of a functionalist approach is understanding the dietary restrictions contained in the Pentateuch as having the function of promoting health or providing social identity (i.e. a sense of belonging though common practice).
Lived religion
Lived religion
is the ethnographic and holistic framework for understanding the
beliefs, practices, and everyday experiences of religious and spiritual
persons in religious studies. The name lived religion comes from the
French tradition of sociology of religion "la religion vécue".
The concept of lived religion was popularized in the late 20th century by religious study scholars like Robert A. Orsi and David Hall.
The study of lived religion has come to include a wide range of subject
areas as a means of exploring and emphasizing what a religious person
does and what they believe. Today, the field of lived religion is
expanding to include many topics and scholars.
Religious studies and theology
Western
philosophy of religion, as the basic ancestor of modern religious
studies, is differentiated from theology and the many Eastern
philosophical traditions by generally being written from a third party
perspective. The scholar need not be a believer. Theology stands in
contrast to the philosophy of religion and religious studies in that,
generally, the scholar is first and foremost a believer employing both
logic and scripture as evidence. Theology according to this understanding fits with the definition which Anselm of Canterbury gave to it in the 11th century, credo ut intelligam,
or faith seeking understanding (literally, "I believe so that I may
understand"). The theologian then has the task of making intelligible,
or clarifying, the religious commitments to which he or she subscribes.
The scholar of religious studies has no such allegiances.
Criticism
A
group of scholars have criticized religious studies beginning in the
1990s as a theological project which actually imposes views onto the
people it aims to survey. Prominent voices in this critical view include
Jonathan Z. Smith, Timothy Fitzgerald, Talal Asad, Tomoko Masuzawa, Geoffrey A. Oddie, Richard E. King, Russell T. McCutcheon, and Daniel Dubuisson. Their areas of research overlap heavily with postcolonial studies.