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Chapter 17


  Religion
Chapter Outline

•   The Sociological Study of Religion
•   Sociological Perspectives on Religion
•   World Religions
•   Types of Religious Organization
•   Trends in Religion in the United States
•   Religion in the Future
An Overview Of Religion
• Religion is a system of beliefs and practices based on
  some sacred or supernatural realm, that guides
  human behavior, gives meaning to life, and unites
  believers into a single moral community.
• The sociology of religion focuses on religious groups
  and organizations, on the behavior of individuals
  within those groups, and on ways religion is
  intertwined with social institutions.
Religion
• Seeks to answer questions such as why we
  exist, why people suffer and die and what
  happens when we die.
• Comprised of beliefs, symbols and rituals.
• All known groups over the past 100,000 years
  have had some form of religion.
Religion
• Faith is unquestioning belief that does not
  require proof or scientific evidence.
• Sacred refers to those aspects of life that are
  extraordinary or supernatural.
Religion
• Profane refers to the everyday, secular aspects
  of life.
• Rituals are regularly repeated and carefully
  prescribed forms of behaviors that symbolize a
  cherished value or belief.
Sociological Perspectives Of
                 Religion
Functionalist    Sacred beliefs and rituals bind people
                 together and help maintain social control.


Conflict         Religion may be used to justify the status
                 quo (Marx) or to promote social change.


Symbolic         Religion may serve as a reference group for
Interactionist   many people, but because of race, class, and
                 gender people may experience it differently.
Durkheim on Religion
• According to Emile Durkheim, all religions
  share three elements:
  1. Beliefs held by adherents.
  2. Practices (rituals) engaged in collectively by
     believers.
  3. A moral community based on the group’s shared
     beliefs and practices pertaining to the sacred.
Four Categories of Religion
• Simple supernaturalism - the belief that
  supernatural forces affect people's lives
  positively or negatively.
• Animism - the belief that plants, animals, and
  elements of the natural world are endowed
  with spirits that impact events in society.
Four Categories of Religion
• Theism - belief in a God or Gods.
• Transcendent idealism - belief in sacred
  principles of thought and conduct, such as
  truth, justice, life and tolerance for others.
Secularization
• The process by which religious beliefs,
  practices, and institutions lose their
  significance in sectors of society and culture.
Civil Religion
• The set of beliefs, rituals, and symbols that
  makes sacred the values of the society and
  places the nation in the context of the
  ultimate system of meaning.
• Civil religion is not tied to any one
  denomination or religious group.
Church
   • Throughout recorded
     history, churches and
     other religious bodies
     have provided people
     with a sense of
     belonging.
   • Members of this
     congregation show
     their unity as they
     visit with one another.
Major World Religions

              Christianity       Islam
 Current
               1.7 billion      1 billion
Followers
Founder          Jesus         Muhammad


  Date      1st century C.E.   ca. 600 C.E
Major World Religions
              Hinduism       Buddhism
 Current
              719 million    309 million
Followers
             No specific     Siddhartha
Founder
              founder         Gautama

                             500 to 600
  Date      ca. 1500 B.C.E
                               B.C.E.
Major World Religions
               Judaism        Confucianism
 Current
               18 million      5.9 million
Followers
            Abraham, Isaac,
Founder                       K’ung Fu-Tzu
                Jacob

  Date      ca. 2000 B.C.E.    500 B.C.E
Separation of Church and State
               • Separation of church and
                 state is often contested by
                 people who believe religion
                 should be a part of public
                 life.
               • These workers are
                 complying with a federal
                 court order to remove a
                 monument bearing the Ten
                 Commandments from the
                 Alabama State Judicial
                 Building.
Symbolic Nature of Church and State Connection



• Currency: “In God       • Nativity Scenes and
  We Trust”;                Menorah’s erected
                            on Gov’t
• Pledge of Allegiance      Property;
                          • Gov’t Events
                            commence with
                            prayer
--Jefferson on Religion Thomas Jefferson on Politics &
Government
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/jefferson/quotations/jeff1370.htm

"The want of instruction in the various creeds of
religious faith existing among our citizens presents... a
chasm in a general institution of the useful sciences.
But it was thought that this want, and the entrustment
to each society of instruction in its own doctrine, were
evils of less danger than a permission to the public
authorities to dictate modes or principles of religious
instruction, or than opportunities furnished them by
giving countenance or ascendancy to any one sect over
another." --Thomas Jefferson: Virginia Board of Visitors
Minutes, 1822. ME 19:414
"After stating the constitutional reasons against a public
establishment of any religious instruction, we suggest
the expediency of encouraging the different religious
sects to establish, each for itself, a professorship of their
own tenets on the confines of the university, so near as
that their students may attend the lectures there and
have the free use of our library and every other
accommodation we can give them; preserving, however,
their independence of us and of each other. This fills the
chasm objected to ours, as a defect in an institution
professing to give instruction in all useful sciences... And
by bringing the sects together, and mixing them with the
mass of other students, we shall soften their asperities,
liberalize and neutralize their prejudices, and make the
general religion a religion of peace, reason, and
morality." --Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Cooper, 1822.
ME 15:405
GOD’S
IN

NAMEHTTP://WWW.NYTIMES.COM/2006/10/08/BUSINESS/08RELIGIOUS.H
TML?_R=1&PAGEWANTED=ALL
As Exemptions Grow, Religion Outweighs Regulation

                      By DIANA B. HENRIQUES
                      Published: October 8, 2006
NAMEHTTP://WWW.NYTIMES.COM/2006/10/08/
BUSINESS/08RELIGIOUS.HTML?
As Exemptions Grow, Religion Outweighs Regulation
By DIANA B. HENRIQUES
Published: October 8, 2006




EXEMPTIONS AVAILABLE Federal law gives religious
organizations unique ways to challenge government restrictions
on how they use their land or buildings. In Boulder County, Colo.,
the Rocky Mountain Christian Church is using a new federal law
to fight a county decision preventing it from expanding on land
designated for open space.
Some of the exceptions have existed for
much of the nation’s history, originally
devised for Christian churches but
expanded to other faiths as the nation
has become more religiously diverse.
But many have been granted in just the
last 15 years — sometimes added to
legislation, anonymously and with little
attention, much as are the widely
criticized “earmarks” benefiting other
special interests.
An analysis by The New York Times of laws
passed since 1989 shows that more than
200 special arrangements, protections or
exemptions for religious groups or their
adherents were tucked into Congressional
legislation, covering topics ranging from
pensions to immigration to land use.

New breaks have also been provided by a
host of pivotal court decisions at the state
and federal level, and by numerous rule
changes in almost every department and
agency of the executive branch.
The special breaks amount to “a sort of
religious affirmative action program,”
said John Witte Jr., director of the
Center for the Study of Law and
Religion at the Emory University law
school.

Professor Witte added: “Separation of
church and state was certainly part of
American law when many of today’s
public opinion makers were in school.
But separation of church and state is no
longer the law of the land.”
changes reflect, in part, the growing political
The

influence of religious groups and the growing
presence of conservatives in the courts and
regulatory agencies. But these tax and regulatory
breaks have been endorsed by politicians of both
major political parties, by judges around the
country, and at all levels of government.

“The religious community has a lot of pull, and
senators are very deferential to this kind of
legislation,” said Richard R. Hammar, the editor
of Church Law & Tax Report and an accountant
with law and divinity degrees from Harvard.
As a result of these special breaks, religious organizations of
all faiths stand in a position that American businesses — and
the thousands of nonprofit groups without that “religious”
label — can only envy.

And the new breaks come at a time when many religious
organizations are expanding into activities — from day care
centers to funeral homes, from ice cream parlors to fitness
clubs, from bookstores to broadcasters — that compete with
these same businesses and nonprofit organizations.

Religious organizations are exempt from many federal, state
and local laws and regulations covering social services,
including addiction treatment centers and child care, like
those in Alabama.
Religion and Schools
          • Shown here is Dr.
            Kenneth Miller, a
            biology professor,
            during a discussion of
            the pros and cons of
            incorporating the
            teaching of intelligent
            design into the Ohio
            state science
            curriculum.
HTTP://WWW.NYTIMES.COM/2006/10/11/BUSI
   NESS/11RELIGIOUS.HTML?EX=1318219200&E
   IN GOD’S NAME                         By DIANA B.
                                         HENRIQUES
   Religion-Based Tax Breaks: Housing to Published: October 11,
   Paychecks to Books                    2006




Monica Almeida/The New York Times
The Rev. Rick Warren, who fought for tax breaks for clergy members, conducts an
afternoon service at Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif.
For tens of millions of Americans, the Rev. Rick Warren is best
known for his blockbuster spiritual guide, “The Purpose Driven
Life,” which has sold more than 25 million copies; his success as
the founder of the 22,000-member Saddleback Church in Lake
Forest, Calif.; and his efforts on behalf of some of the world’s
neediest people.

But for tens of thousands of ministers — and their financial
advisers — Pastor Warren will also be remembered as their
champion in a fight over the most valuable tax break available to
ordained clergy members of all faiths: an exemption from federal
taxes for most of the money they spend on housing, which typically
represents roughly a third of their compensation. Pastor Warren
argued that the tax break is essential to poorly paid clergy
members who serve society.
The tax break is not available to the staff at secular nonprofit
organizations whose scale and charitable aims compare to
those of religious ministries like Pastor Warren’s church, or
to poorly paid inner-city teachers and day care workers who
also serve their communities.

The housing deduction is one of several tax breaks that leave
extra money in the pockets of clergy members and their
religious employers. Ministers of every faith are also exempt
from income tax withholding and can opt out of Social
Security. And every state but one exempts religious
employers from paying state unemployment taxes —
reducing the employers’ payroll expenses but also leaving
their workers without unemployment benefits if they are laid
off.
How Much Do You Know About the Impact
     of Religion on U.S. Education?
True or False?
• Virtually all sociologists have advocated
  the separation of moral teaching from
  academic subject matter.
False
• While contemporary sociologists hold strong
  opinions on many subjects; most do not think
  that it is their role to advocate specific stances.
• Early sociologists were less inclined to believe
  that they had to be ―value free.‖
   – Durkheim advocated that education should
     have a moral component and that schools
     had a responsibility to teach a commitment to
     the common morality.
How Much Do You Know About the Impact
     of Religion on U.S. Education?
True or False?
• The number of children from religious
  backgrounds other than Christianity and
  Judaism has grown steadily in public
  schools over the past three decades.
True
• Although about 86% of those age eighteen and
  over in the forty-eight contiguous states of the
  United States describe their religion as some
  Christian denomination, there has still been a
  significant increase in those who adhere either
  to no religion (7.5%) or who are Jewish,
  Muslim/Islamic, Unitarian–Universalist, Buddhist,
  or Hindu.
How Much Do You Know About the Impact
     of Religion on U.S. Education?
True or False?
• Debates over the content of textbooks
  focus only on elementary education
  because of the vulnerability of young
  children.
False
• Attempts to remove textbooks occur at all
  levels of schooling.
• A recent case involved the removal of
  Chaucer’s ―The Miller’s Tale‖ and
  Aristophanes’s Lysistrata from a high
  school curriculum.
Prayer in the Classroom
            • Should prayer be
              permitted in the
              classroom?
            • On the school grounds?
            • At school athletic
              events?
            • Given the diversity of
              beliefs that U.S. people
              hold, arguments and
              court cases over prayer
              and schools will continue
              in the future.
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College Students and Religion
               • College students may
                 turn to religion for
                 answers to important
                 questions for which there
                 are no easy answers.
               • Rituals help individuals
                 outwardly express their
                 beliefs and provide a
                 sense of cohesion and
                 belonging.
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Christian Coalition condemns Iowa judges
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
For other organizations with similar names, see
Christian Coalition.

The Christian Coalition of America, originally
called the Christian Coalition, Inc., is a US
Christian advocacy group, which includes
Christian fundamentalists, evangelicals, neo-
evangelicals and charismatics. It once wielded
great power within the Republican Party but
membership has declined drastically in recent
years. It claims to have 1,200,000 members.
Brief history
[edit] Beginnings with Pat Robertson and Ralph Reed
Following a well-funded but failed bid for the U.S. presidency in
1988, religious broadcaster and political commentator Pat
Robertson used the remains of his campaign machinery to jump-
start the creation of a voter mobilization effort dubbed the
Christian Coalition. Americans for Robertson accumulated a
mailing list of several million conservative Christians interested
in politics. This mailing list formed the foundation for the new
organization.

However, despite public announcements that excitement among
evangelical and Christian right voters prompted the creation of
the Christian Coalition, the incorporation records of the State of
Virginia reveal that the Christian Coalition, Inc. was actually
incorporated on April 30, 1987, with the paperwork filed earlier,
and with planning having begun before that. Thus the Christian
Coalition was actually planned long before Pat Robertson's run
for President began. Robertson's candidacy appears to have been
planned from the start for launching the Christian Coalition.
After its founding, it was granted a grace period to
operate as a 501(c)(4) tax-exempt organization
before the IRS made its final determination. Forty-
nine state chapters were also created as independent
corporations within their states, including the
Christian Coalition of Texas.

A handful, including the Christian Coalition of
Texas successfully obtained non-profit status as a
501(c)(4) tax-exempt organization, while the
national group's application remained pending and
unresolved.
In 1990, the national Christian Coalition, Inc., headquartered in
Chesapeake, Virginia, began producing "non-partisan" voter guides
which it distributed to conservative Christian churches, with 40
million being distributed in the 1992 and 1996 presidential election
years. Under the leadership of Reed and Robertson, the Coalition
quickly became the most prominent voice in the conservative
Christian movement, landing Reed on the cover of Time in May,
1994, its influence culminating with an effort to support the election
of a conservative Christian to the presidency in 1996 or 2000.

Complaints that the voter guides were actually partisan led to the
denial of the Christian Coalition, Inc.'s tax-exempt status in 1999. The
Christian Coalition, Inc. filed a lawsuit against the IRS after which
the IRS backed down for most of the years in question, holding out
only on 1992. However, instead of pursuing legal action, Pat
Robertson renamed the Christian Coalition of Texas, Inc. as the
Christian Coalition of America, Inc., since the Texas chapter already
enjoyed tax exempt status, and transferred the trademark and all
operations to the Texas-based corporation
In 1998, an advocacy group for religious freedom Americans
United urged the IRS to review the Coalition’s partisan political
activities over the decade in which its tax-exempt status was
pending. The following year, the IRS revoked the Coalition’s
provisional tax-exemption, in view of the Coalition's distribution
of "voter guides" which had a partisan bias. The revocation cost
the Coalition up to $300,000 in back taxes and penalties.

Following this, the Coalition reorganized as the Christian
Coalition of America, as an effort to regain its tax-exempt
status.[3][6] Churches that once embraced the Christian Coalition
have disassociated themselves for fear of losing their own tax-
exempt status.[6] After its tax-exempt status was denied, CCA was
able to turn all of its attention to politics. In 2000 the coalition
moved from its long-standing base of operations in the
Chesapeake Bay area to an office on Capitol Hill in Washington,
D.C.
In 2005, the Coalition concluded a settlement
agreement with the Internal Revenue Service,
ending its long-running battle with that agency
regarding its tax exempt status.[4]

As a result, the IRS has now recognized the
Coalition as a 501(c)(4) tax-exempt organization,
the first time in the Agency's history that it has
granted a letter of exemption to a group that stated
in its application that it would distribute voter
guides directly in churches. The consent decree
enforces limitations on the terminology that may be
used in the Coalition's "voter guides".[4]
Conflict Perspective
• According to Karl Marx, religion is the "opiate
  of the people."
• Max Weber argued that religion could be a
  catalyst to produce social change.
Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
• Religion serves as a reference group to help
  people define themselves.
• Women’s versions of a certain religion usually
  differ from men’s versions.
Question
•   According to the functionalist perspective, religion
    offers meaning for the human experience by:
       A. providing an explanation for events that
           create a profound sense of loss on both an
           individual and a group basis.
       B. offering people a reference group to help
           them define themselves.
       C. reinforcing existing social arrangements.
       D. encouraging secularization.
Answer: A
• According to the functionalist perspective,
  religion offers meaning for the human
  experience by providing an explanation for
  events that create a profound sense of loss
  on both an individual and a group basis.
Question
•   In regard to religion, Max Weber asserted that:
    A. church and state should be separated.
    B. religion could be a catalyst to produce social
        change.
    C. religion retards social change.
    D. the religious teachings of the Catholic Church
        were directly related to the rise of capitalism.
Answer: B
• In regard to religion, Max Weber asserted that
  religion could be a catalyst to produce social
  change.
Question
•   The Anglican Church in England and the
    Lutheran church in Sweden are examples of
    a(n):
     A.   church
     B.   sect.
     C.   denomination.
     D.   ecclesia.
Answer: D
• The Anglican Church in England and the
  Lutheran church in Sweden are examples of
  a(n) ecclesia.
Religion and Tradition
           • These Jews at the
             Western Wall in
             Jerusalem—a wall
             that holds special
             significance for all
             Jews—express their
             faith in God and in
             the traditions of their
             ancestors.
Fundamentalism
• A traditional religious doctrine that is
  conservative, is typically opposed to
  modernity, and rejects “worldly pleasures” in
  favor of otherworldly spirituality.
Hindusim
    • According to Marx and Weber,
      religion serves to reinforce
      social stratification in a
      society.
    • According to Hindu belief, a
      person’s social position in his
      or her current life is a result of
      behavior in a former life.
Buddhism
    • Worshippers at this
      Buddhist temple in
      Los Angeles
      celebrate the Thai
      New Year.
Confucianism
      • Confucianism is
        based on the ethical
        teachings formulated
        by Confucius, shown
        here in a portrait
        created by a Manchu
        prince in 1735.
Islam
   • The Muslim women
     shown here pray at a
     mosque courtyard in
     Bangladesh during the
     fasting month of
     Ramadan.
   • According to Muslim
     teaching, Ramadan
     marks God’s revelation of
     the Qur’ and to the
     Prophet Muhammad.
Christianity
      • Christians around the
        world have been
        drawn to cathedrals
        such as the Basilica
        of Sacré Coeur in
        Paris (built between
        1875 and 1914) to
        worship God and
        celebrate their
        religious beliefs.
Original Locations of the World’s
         Major Religions
Characteristics of Churches and
             Sects
            Organization            Membership
                                    Open to all;
         Large, bureaucratic
                                 members usually
Church   organization,led by
                                  from upper and
         professional clergy
                                  middle classes
          Small group,high           Guarded
 Sect      degree of lay       membership, usually
           participation        from lower classes
Characteristics of Churches and
             Sects
            Worship            Salvation

Church   Formal, orderly    Granted by God

            Informal,      Achieved by moral
 Sect
          spontaneous            purity
Characteristics of Churches and
             Sects
            Attitude Toward Other Religions

  Church               Tolerant

   Sect               Intolerant
Cult
  • This mass wedding
    ceremony brought
    widespread media
    attention to the
    Reverend Sun Myung
    Moon and the
    Unification Church,
    which many view as
    a cult.
Major U.S. Denominations That Self-
         identify As Christian
Religious Body            Members      Churches
Roman Catholic            67,260,000   19,431
Southern Baptist          16,440,000   42,972
Convention
United Methodist          8,251,000    35,102
Church of God in Christ   5,500,000    15,300
Church of Jesus Christ    5,503,000    12,112
of Latter Day Saints
Major U.S. Denominations That Self-
         identify As Christian
Religious Body          Members     Churches
Evangelical Lutheran    4,985,500   10,657
Church in America
National Baptist        5,000,000   9,000
Convention,USA
National Baptist        3,500,000   N.A.
Convention of America
Presbyterian Church     3,241,000   11,064
(U.S.A.)
Assemblies of God       2,730,000   12,222
U.S. Religious Bodies
           Membership
  Religious Body       Members
    Protestants        91,500,000
 Roman Catholics       63,683,000
     Muslims           6,000,000
       Jews            5,602,000
Orthodox Christians    5,631,000
    Buddhists          1,864,000
      Hindus            795,000
Churches in Low Income Areas
              • Churches in
                converted buildings
                such as this seek to
                win new religious
                followers and to offer
                solace and hope to
                people in low-income
                areas.
Quick Quiz
1. According to Sociologists, religion attempts
    to:
     A.   bridge the gap between the known and the
          unknown.
     B.   have a personal relationship with God.
     C.   all of the choices.
     D.   save every soul.
Answer: A
•   According to Sociologists, religion attempts
    to bridge the gap between the known and
    the unknown.
2. Who said "religion is the opiate of the
    masses?”
     A.   Emile Durkheim
     B.   Karl Marx
     C.   Max Weber
     D.   Talcott Parsons
Answer: B
• Karl Marx said "religion is the opiate of the
  masses?”
3. A relatively small religious group that has
    broken away from another religious
    organization to renew what it views as the
    original version of the faith is referred to as:
      A.   an ecclesia
      B.   Catholicism
      C.   a sect
      D.   a denomination
Answer: C
•   A relatively small religious group that has
    broken away from another religious
    organization to renew what it views as the
    original version of the faith is referred to as a
    sect.
4. Unquestioning belief that does not require
    proof or scientific evidence is:
     A.   sacred
     B.   profane
     C.   taboo
     D.   faith
Answer: D
4. Unquestioning belief that does not require
    proof or scientific evidence is faith.

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Religion, Very Final

  • 1. Chapter 17 Religion
  • 2. Chapter Outline • The Sociological Study of Religion • Sociological Perspectives on Religion • World Religions • Types of Religious Organization • Trends in Religion in the United States • Religion in the Future
  • 3. An Overview Of Religion • Religion is a system of beliefs and practices based on some sacred or supernatural realm, that guides human behavior, gives meaning to life, and unites believers into a single moral community. • The sociology of religion focuses on religious groups and organizations, on the behavior of individuals within those groups, and on ways religion is intertwined with social institutions.
  • 4. Religion • Seeks to answer questions such as why we exist, why people suffer and die and what happens when we die. • Comprised of beliefs, symbols and rituals. • All known groups over the past 100,000 years have had some form of religion.
  • 5. Religion • Faith is unquestioning belief that does not require proof or scientific evidence. • Sacred refers to those aspects of life that are extraordinary or supernatural.
  • 6. Religion • Profane refers to the everyday, secular aspects of life. • Rituals are regularly repeated and carefully prescribed forms of behaviors that symbolize a cherished value or belief.
  • 7. Sociological Perspectives Of Religion Functionalist Sacred beliefs and rituals bind people together and help maintain social control. Conflict Religion may be used to justify the status quo (Marx) or to promote social change. Symbolic Religion may serve as a reference group for Interactionist many people, but because of race, class, and gender people may experience it differently.
  • 8. Durkheim on Religion • According to Emile Durkheim, all religions share three elements: 1. Beliefs held by adherents. 2. Practices (rituals) engaged in collectively by believers. 3. A moral community based on the group’s shared beliefs and practices pertaining to the sacred.
  • 9. Four Categories of Religion • Simple supernaturalism - the belief that supernatural forces affect people's lives positively or negatively. • Animism - the belief that plants, animals, and elements of the natural world are endowed with spirits that impact events in society.
  • 10. Four Categories of Religion • Theism - belief in a God or Gods. • Transcendent idealism - belief in sacred principles of thought and conduct, such as truth, justice, life and tolerance for others.
  • 11. Secularization • The process by which religious beliefs, practices, and institutions lose their significance in sectors of society and culture.
  • 12. Civil Religion • The set of beliefs, rituals, and symbols that makes sacred the values of the society and places the nation in the context of the ultimate system of meaning. • Civil religion is not tied to any one denomination or religious group.
  • 13. Church • Throughout recorded history, churches and other religious bodies have provided people with a sense of belonging. • Members of this congregation show their unity as they visit with one another.
  • 14. Major World Religions Christianity Islam Current 1.7 billion 1 billion Followers Founder Jesus Muhammad Date 1st century C.E. ca. 600 C.E
  • 15. Major World Religions Hinduism Buddhism Current 719 million 309 million Followers No specific Siddhartha Founder founder Gautama 500 to 600 Date ca. 1500 B.C.E B.C.E.
  • 16. Major World Religions Judaism Confucianism Current 18 million 5.9 million Followers Abraham, Isaac, Founder K’ung Fu-Tzu Jacob Date ca. 2000 B.C.E. 500 B.C.E
  • 17. Separation of Church and State • Separation of church and state is often contested by people who believe religion should be a part of public life. • These workers are complying with a federal court order to remove a monument bearing the Ten Commandments from the Alabama State Judicial Building.
  • 18. Symbolic Nature of Church and State Connection • Currency: “In God • Nativity Scenes and We Trust”; Menorah’s erected on Gov’t • Pledge of Allegiance Property; • Gov’t Events commence with prayer
  • 19. --Jefferson on Religion Thomas Jefferson on Politics & Government http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/jefferson/quotations/jeff1370.htm "The want of instruction in the various creeds of religious faith existing among our citizens presents... a chasm in a general institution of the useful sciences. But it was thought that this want, and the entrustment to each society of instruction in its own doctrine, were evils of less danger than a permission to the public authorities to dictate modes or principles of religious instruction, or than opportunities furnished them by giving countenance or ascendancy to any one sect over another." --Thomas Jefferson: Virginia Board of Visitors Minutes, 1822. ME 19:414
  • 20. "After stating the constitutional reasons against a public establishment of any religious instruction, we suggest the expediency of encouraging the different religious sects to establish, each for itself, a professorship of their own tenets on the confines of the university, so near as that their students may attend the lectures there and have the free use of our library and every other accommodation we can give them; preserving, however, their independence of us and of each other. This fills the chasm objected to ours, as a defect in an institution professing to give instruction in all useful sciences... And by bringing the sects together, and mixing them with the mass of other students, we shall soften their asperities, liberalize and neutralize their prejudices, and make the general religion a religion of peace, reason, and morality." --Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Cooper, 1822. ME 15:405
  • 21.
  • 22. GOD’S IN NAMEHTTP://WWW.NYTIMES.COM/2006/10/08/BUSINESS/08RELIGIOUS.H TML?_R=1&PAGEWANTED=ALL As Exemptions Grow, Religion Outweighs Regulation By DIANA B. HENRIQUES Published: October 8, 2006
  • 23.
  • 24.
  • 25. NAMEHTTP://WWW.NYTIMES.COM/2006/10/08/ BUSINESS/08RELIGIOUS.HTML? As Exemptions Grow, Religion Outweighs Regulation By DIANA B. HENRIQUES Published: October 8, 2006 EXEMPTIONS AVAILABLE Federal law gives religious organizations unique ways to challenge government restrictions on how they use their land or buildings. In Boulder County, Colo., the Rocky Mountain Christian Church is using a new federal law to fight a county decision preventing it from expanding on land designated for open space.
  • 26. Some of the exceptions have existed for much of the nation’s history, originally devised for Christian churches but expanded to other faiths as the nation has become more religiously diverse. But many have been granted in just the last 15 years — sometimes added to legislation, anonymously and with little attention, much as are the widely criticized “earmarks” benefiting other special interests.
  • 27. An analysis by The New York Times of laws passed since 1989 shows that more than 200 special arrangements, protections or exemptions for religious groups or their adherents were tucked into Congressional legislation, covering topics ranging from pensions to immigration to land use. New breaks have also been provided by a host of pivotal court decisions at the state and federal level, and by numerous rule changes in almost every department and agency of the executive branch.
  • 28. The special breaks amount to “a sort of religious affirmative action program,” said John Witte Jr., director of the Center for the Study of Law and Religion at the Emory University law school. Professor Witte added: “Separation of church and state was certainly part of American law when many of today’s public opinion makers were in school. But separation of church and state is no longer the law of the land.”
  • 29. changes reflect, in part, the growing political The influence of religious groups and the growing presence of conservatives in the courts and regulatory agencies. But these tax and regulatory breaks have been endorsed by politicians of both major political parties, by judges around the country, and at all levels of government. “The religious community has a lot of pull, and senators are very deferential to this kind of legislation,” said Richard R. Hammar, the editor of Church Law & Tax Report and an accountant with law and divinity degrees from Harvard.
  • 30. As a result of these special breaks, religious organizations of all faiths stand in a position that American businesses — and the thousands of nonprofit groups without that “religious” label — can only envy. And the new breaks come at a time when many religious organizations are expanding into activities — from day care centers to funeral homes, from ice cream parlors to fitness clubs, from bookstores to broadcasters — that compete with these same businesses and nonprofit organizations. Religious organizations are exempt from many federal, state and local laws and regulations covering social services, including addiction treatment centers and child care, like those in Alabama.
  • 31. Religion and Schools • Shown here is Dr. Kenneth Miller, a biology professor, during a discussion of the pros and cons of incorporating the teaching of intelligent design into the Ohio state science curriculum.
  • 32. HTTP://WWW.NYTIMES.COM/2006/10/11/BUSI NESS/11RELIGIOUS.HTML?EX=1318219200&E IN GOD’S NAME By DIANA B. HENRIQUES Religion-Based Tax Breaks: Housing to Published: October 11, Paychecks to Books 2006 Monica Almeida/The New York Times The Rev. Rick Warren, who fought for tax breaks for clergy members, conducts an afternoon service at Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif.
  • 33. For tens of millions of Americans, the Rev. Rick Warren is best known for his blockbuster spiritual guide, “The Purpose Driven Life,” which has sold more than 25 million copies; his success as the founder of the 22,000-member Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, Calif.; and his efforts on behalf of some of the world’s neediest people. But for tens of thousands of ministers — and their financial advisers — Pastor Warren will also be remembered as their champion in a fight over the most valuable tax break available to ordained clergy members of all faiths: an exemption from federal taxes for most of the money they spend on housing, which typically represents roughly a third of their compensation. Pastor Warren argued that the tax break is essential to poorly paid clergy members who serve society.
  • 34. The tax break is not available to the staff at secular nonprofit organizations whose scale and charitable aims compare to those of religious ministries like Pastor Warren’s church, or to poorly paid inner-city teachers and day care workers who also serve their communities. The housing deduction is one of several tax breaks that leave extra money in the pockets of clergy members and their religious employers. Ministers of every faith are also exempt from income tax withholding and can opt out of Social Security. And every state but one exempts religious employers from paying state unemployment taxes — reducing the employers’ payroll expenses but also leaving their workers without unemployment benefits if they are laid off.
  • 35. How Much Do You Know About the Impact of Religion on U.S. Education? True or False? • Virtually all sociologists have advocated the separation of moral teaching from academic subject matter.
  • 36. False • While contemporary sociologists hold strong opinions on many subjects; most do not think that it is their role to advocate specific stances. • Early sociologists were less inclined to believe that they had to be ―value free.‖ – Durkheim advocated that education should have a moral component and that schools had a responsibility to teach a commitment to the common morality.
  • 37. How Much Do You Know About the Impact of Religion on U.S. Education? True or False? • The number of children from religious backgrounds other than Christianity and Judaism has grown steadily in public schools over the past three decades.
  • 38. True • Although about 86% of those age eighteen and over in the forty-eight contiguous states of the United States describe their religion as some Christian denomination, there has still been a significant increase in those who adhere either to no religion (7.5%) or who are Jewish, Muslim/Islamic, Unitarian–Universalist, Buddhist, or Hindu.
  • 39. How Much Do You Know About the Impact of Religion on U.S. Education? True or False? • Debates over the content of textbooks focus only on elementary education because of the vulnerability of young children.
  • 40. False • Attempts to remove textbooks occur at all levels of schooling. • A recent case involved the removal of Chaucer’s ―The Miller’s Tale‖ and Aristophanes’s Lysistrata from a high school curriculum.
  • 41. Prayer in the Classroom • Should prayer be permitted in the classroom? • On the school grounds? • At school athletic events? • Given the diversity of beliefs that U.S. people hold, arguments and court cases over prayer and schools will continue in the future.
  • 42. www.cc.org - •Barack Obama promised Planned Parenthood that he would sign the pro- abortion “Freedom of Choice Act” (FOCA) – a bill that would end virtually ALL restrictions on abortion and provide an unlimited right to tax-payer funded, abortion-on-demand. Click here and join our campaign to “Stop FOCA” by signing our petition today. The time for pro-life Americans to act is NOW! Roberta Combs, President
  • 43. College Students and Religion • College students may turn to religion for answers to important questions for which there are no easy answers. • Rituals help individuals outwardly express their beliefs and provide a sense of cohesion and belonging.
  • 44. Sidebar Navigation About Us Join Donate Commentary Newsletter Press Room News Campaigns Online Store RSS Feeds
  • 45. Obama administration to greatly damage charitable giving Top military officers say: "Keep law banning homosexuals" Black S.C. Democrat blasts his party for it's anti- choice position on education Pro-Life Senators' Open Letter to Obama Where is the fiscal restraint? He doth protest too much More
  • 46. Action Alert •Defend Conscience Protections for Healthcare Workers Support CCA $25 $50 $100 $500 Other amount
  • 47. CONNECT WITH US: twitter
  • 48. In Theatres Now - The Cross: The Arthur Blessitt Story Christian Coalition condemns Iowa judges for making law on homosexual "marriage“ Coalition Guest Commentary - Pro-Life Senators' Open Letter to Obama Coalition Guest Commentary - Where is the fiscal restraint?
  • 49. Pastor Warren Cancels ABC Interview and Will Not Talk About Prop 8
  • 50. Gingrich Says the Obama Adminstration is "Anti-Religious"
  • 51. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search For other organizations with similar names, see Christian Coalition. The Christian Coalition of America, originally called the Christian Coalition, Inc., is a US Christian advocacy group, which includes Christian fundamentalists, evangelicals, neo- evangelicals and charismatics. It once wielded great power within the Republican Party but membership has declined drastically in recent years. It claims to have 1,200,000 members.
  • 52. Brief history [edit] Beginnings with Pat Robertson and Ralph Reed Following a well-funded but failed bid for the U.S. presidency in 1988, religious broadcaster and political commentator Pat Robertson used the remains of his campaign machinery to jump- start the creation of a voter mobilization effort dubbed the Christian Coalition. Americans for Robertson accumulated a mailing list of several million conservative Christians interested in politics. This mailing list formed the foundation for the new organization. However, despite public announcements that excitement among evangelical and Christian right voters prompted the creation of the Christian Coalition, the incorporation records of the State of Virginia reveal that the Christian Coalition, Inc. was actually incorporated on April 30, 1987, with the paperwork filed earlier, and with planning having begun before that. Thus the Christian Coalition was actually planned long before Pat Robertson's run for President began. Robertson's candidacy appears to have been planned from the start for launching the Christian Coalition.
  • 53. After its founding, it was granted a grace period to operate as a 501(c)(4) tax-exempt organization before the IRS made its final determination. Forty- nine state chapters were also created as independent corporations within their states, including the Christian Coalition of Texas. A handful, including the Christian Coalition of Texas successfully obtained non-profit status as a 501(c)(4) tax-exempt organization, while the national group's application remained pending and unresolved.
  • 54. In 1990, the national Christian Coalition, Inc., headquartered in Chesapeake, Virginia, began producing "non-partisan" voter guides which it distributed to conservative Christian churches, with 40 million being distributed in the 1992 and 1996 presidential election years. Under the leadership of Reed and Robertson, the Coalition quickly became the most prominent voice in the conservative Christian movement, landing Reed on the cover of Time in May, 1994, its influence culminating with an effort to support the election of a conservative Christian to the presidency in 1996 or 2000. Complaints that the voter guides were actually partisan led to the denial of the Christian Coalition, Inc.'s tax-exempt status in 1999. The Christian Coalition, Inc. filed a lawsuit against the IRS after which the IRS backed down for most of the years in question, holding out only on 1992. However, instead of pursuing legal action, Pat Robertson renamed the Christian Coalition of Texas, Inc. as the Christian Coalition of America, Inc., since the Texas chapter already enjoyed tax exempt status, and transferred the trademark and all operations to the Texas-based corporation
  • 55. In 1998, an advocacy group for religious freedom Americans United urged the IRS to review the Coalition’s partisan political activities over the decade in which its tax-exempt status was pending. The following year, the IRS revoked the Coalition’s provisional tax-exemption, in view of the Coalition's distribution of "voter guides" which had a partisan bias. The revocation cost the Coalition up to $300,000 in back taxes and penalties. Following this, the Coalition reorganized as the Christian Coalition of America, as an effort to regain its tax-exempt status.[3][6] Churches that once embraced the Christian Coalition have disassociated themselves for fear of losing their own tax- exempt status.[6] After its tax-exempt status was denied, CCA was able to turn all of its attention to politics. In 2000 the coalition moved from its long-standing base of operations in the Chesapeake Bay area to an office on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
  • 56. In 2005, the Coalition concluded a settlement agreement with the Internal Revenue Service, ending its long-running battle with that agency regarding its tax exempt status.[4] As a result, the IRS has now recognized the Coalition as a 501(c)(4) tax-exempt organization, the first time in the Agency's history that it has granted a letter of exemption to a group that stated in its application that it would distribute voter guides directly in churches. The consent decree enforces limitations on the terminology that may be used in the Coalition's "voter guides".[4]
  • 57. Conflict Perspective • According to Karl Marx, religion is the "opiate of the people." • Max Weber argued that religion could be a catalyst to produce social change.
  • 58. Symbolic Interactionist Perspective • Religion serves as a reference group to help people define themselves. • Women’s versions of a certain religion usually differ from men’s versions.
  • 59. Question • According to the functionalist perspective, religion offers meaning for the human experience by: A. providing an explanation for events that create a profound sense of loss on both an individual and a group basis. B. offering people a reference group to help them define themselves. C. reinforcing existing social arrangements. D. encouraging secularization.
  • 60. Answer: A • According to the functionalist perspective, religion offers meaning for the human experience by providing an explanation for events that create a profound sense of loss on both an individual and a group basis.
  • 61. Question • In regard to religion, Max Weber asserted that: A. church and state should be separated. B. religion could be a catalyst to produce social change. C. religion retards social change. D. the religious teachings of the Catholic Church were directly related to the rise of capitalism.
  • 62. Answer: B • In regard to religion, Max Weber asserted that religion could be a catalyst to produce social change.
  • 63. Question • The Anglican Church in England and the Lutheran church in Sweden are examples of a(n): A. church B. sect. C. denomination. D. ecclesia.
  • 64. Answer: D • The Anglican Church in England and the Lutheran church in Sweden are examples of a(n) ecclesia.
  • 65. Religion and Tradition • These Jews at the Western Wall in Jerusalem—a wall that holds special significance for all Jews—express their faith in God and in the traditions of their ancestors.
  • 66. Fundamentalism • A traditional religious doctrine that is conservative, is typically opposed to modernity, and rejects “worldly pleasures” in favor of otherworldly spirituality.
  • 67. Hindusim • According to Marx and Weber, religion serves to reinforce social stratification in a society. • According to Hindu belief, a person’s social position in his or her current life is a result of behavior in a former life.
  • 68. Buddhism • Worshippers at this Buddhist temple in Los Angeles celebrate the Thai New Year.
  • 69. Confucianism • Confucianism is based on the ethical teachings formulated by Confucius, shown here in a portrait created by a Manchu prince in 1735.
  • 70. Islam • The Muslim women shown here pray at a mosque courtyard in Bangladesh during the fasting month of Ramadan. • According to Muslim teaching, Ramadan marks God’s revelation of the Qur’ and to the Prophet Muhammad.
  • 71. Christianity • Christians around the world have been drawn to cathedrals such as the Basilica of Sacré Coeur in Paris (built between 1875 and 1914) to worship God and celebrate their religious beliefs.
  • 72. Original Locations of the World’s Major Religions
  • 73. Characteristics of Churches and Sects Organization Membership Open to all; Large, bureaucratic members usually Church organization,led by from upper and professional clergy middle classes Small group,high Guarded Sect degree of lay membership, usually participation from lower classes
  • 74. Characteristics of Churches and Sects Worship Salvation Church Formal, orderly Granted by God Informal, Achieved by moral Sect spontaneous purity
  • 75. Characteristics of Churches and Sects Attitude Toward Other Religions Church Tolerant Sect Intolerant
  • 76. Cult • This mass wedding ceremony brought widespread media attention to the Reverend Sun Myung Moon and the Unification Church, which many view as a cult.
  • 77. Major U.S. Denominations That Self- identify As Christian Religious Body Members Churches Roman Catholic 67,260,000 19,431 Southern Baptist 16,440,000 42,972 Convention United Methodist 8,251,000 35,102 Church of God in Christ 5,500,000 15,300 Church of Jesus Christ 5,503,000 12,112 of Latter Day Saints
  • 78. Major U.S. Denominations That Self- identify As Christian Religious Body Members Churches Evangelical Lutheran 4,985,500 10,657 Church in America National Baptist 5,000,000 9,000 Convention,USA National Baptist 3,500,000 N.A. Convention of America Presbyterian Church 3,241,000 11,064 (U.S.A.) Assemblies of God 2,730,000 12,222
  • 79. U.S. Religious Bodies Membership Religious Body Members Protestants 91,500,000 Roman Catholics 63,683,000 Muslims 6,000,000 Jews 5,602,000 Orthodox Christians 5,631,000 Buddhists 1,864,000 Hindus 795,000
  • 80. Churches in Low Income Areas • Churches in converted buildings such as this seek to win new religious followers and to offer solace and hope to people in low-income areas.
  • 82. 1. According to Sociologists, religion attempts to: A. bridge the gap between the known and the unknown. B. have a personal relationship with God. C. all of the choices. D. save every soul.
  • 83. Answer: A • According to Sociologists, religion attempts to bridge the gap between the known and the unknown.
  • 84. 2. Who said "religion is the opiate of the masses?” A. Emile Durkheim B. Karl Marx C. Max Weber D. Talcott Parsons
  • 85. Answer: B • Karl Marx said "religion is the opiate of the masses?”
  • 86. 3. A relatively small religious group that has broken away from another religious organization to renew what it views as the original version of the faith is referred to as: A. an ecclesia B. Catholicism C. a sect D. a denomination
  • 87. Answer: C • A relatively small religious group that has broken away from another religious organization to renew what it views as the original version of the faith is referred to as a sect.
  • 88. 4. Unquestioning belief that does not require proof or scientific evidence is: A. sacred B. profane C. taboo D. faith
  • 89. Answer: D 4. Unquestioning belief that does not require proof or scientific evidence is faith.