Religion and Different Social Groups
Religion and Different Social Groups
Religion and Different Social Groups
Religious organisations and movements tend to attract more members or believers from some groups than
others. The main social divisions linked to religious belief and participation are social class, gender,
ethnicity and age. The relationship between social groups and religiosity shall be examined, asking questions
such as how does social class influence religious belief? Why do women appear to participate more than
men in most religions and spiritual groups? How closely is ethnicity associated with differences in religious
affiliation? And do people get more religious as they age?
Denominations tend to be slightly anti-establishment, as they have broken away from the religious
mainstream. However, Wallis (1984) noted that they are respectable organisations and therefore
appeal most to the upper working class and the lower middle class. They are not usually closely
identified with the upper classes.
Sects have traditionally recruited the most disadvantaged people in society. They require members to
give up their previous life, so those with much to lose are unlikely to join. They tend to appeal to the
deprived because membership offers a way of coping with disadvantage by finding meaning and a
sense of self-worth within the sect. Wallis (1984) argued that in the 1960s and 1970s, sects also
began to appeal to the 'relatively deprived' middle class of affluent students who were seeking
compensation for their lack of a spiritual life.
World-affirming new religious movements (Wallis, 1984) such as TM are positive about mainstream
society. Their religious practices tend to facilitate social and economic success. Cults such as
Scientology offer services to their followers but require little commitment. Both world-affirming
new religious movements and cults appeal to the successful and affluent who want to become even
more successful.
Cult movements such as the Unification Church involve their followers or believers fully and are
similar to sects in opposing mainstream society. Consequently, they tend to attract the disadvantaged
or relatively deprived.
According to Heelas (1996), New Age movements tend to appeal to the middle class (particularly
women). Hunt (2004) and Bruce (2002) believe that they attract those in expressive professions
such as the media, teaching and counselling who believe in self-improvement.
Evaluation
In the USA, detailed data are available on social class, religious belief and participation. However, there is a
shortage of such data in many other countries. It is therefore difficult to assess the accuracy of claims about
class and different religious organisations. Consequently, most of the claims discussed here should be
treated as hypotheses rather than as well-supported theories. Furthermore, class intersects with other social
divisions, particularly gender, ethnicity and age, in shaping religious belief and participation.
Gender and religiosity
Statistical evidence suggests that women tend to be slightly more religious than men on a global scale. The
Pew Research Center (2016) estimated that globally, 83.4% of women identified with a faith group
compared with 79.9% of men. In 61 of 192 countries, women were at least two percentage points more
likely than men to express a religious affiliation, but there were none in which the reverse was true.
Evidence
Voas and Crockett examined data from the British Social Attitudes survey to consider which of these
theories was most plausible. The data allowed them to see whether a cohort was more or less than other
cohorts and whether their attitude to religion changed as they aged.
Voas and Crockett found little evidence that people became markedly more religious with age, or that
specific cohorts were becoming less religious. Instead, they concluded that in Britain 'change has occurred
because each generation has entered adulthood less religious than its predecessors'. This was partly because
each generation was less likely to socialise their children into religious beliefs than the previous generation.
Voas and Crockett's conclusions on the theory of secularisation may not apply to all types of religious and
spiritual beliefs. For example, Heelas et al. (2005) claim that New Age spiritual beliefs are growing rapidly
despite few young people being involved, because people do not usually start to engage with such
spiritualities until middle age.
Marion Burkimsher (2008) identified similar patterns across many, but not all, countries. She examined
statistical evidence from the European Values Surveys of 2002, 2004 and 2006 and the World Values
Surveys of 1995 and 2004. She found that evidence from 'stable developed countries' (including Western
Europe) suggested that recent generations were less religious than earlier generations. Although there was
generally a decline in religiosity among people in their early 20s, and a slight increase in their late 20s,
attendance did not generally increase after the age of 30. There was, therefore, little evidence of increased
religiosity as people aged.
However, in some ex-communist countries in Eastern Europe and in much of Africa, there is evidence of
increased religiosity among the young. In the USA, youth attendance fell between 1980 and 1995 but rose
again between 1995 and 2000. Furthermore, Puerto Rico, Mexico and Brazil have all had rising rates of
attendance among the young.
Key terms
Differential socialisation The contrasting ways in which females and males are brought up within and outside the family.
Structural location The position of different social groups within the social structure - for example, the greater involvement of
men in full-time paid employment than women.
Attitude to risk The extent to which individuals are willing to expose themselves to social practices, beliefs and situations that
carry a possibility of danger.
Public sphere The social world outside the family and personal life.
Private sphere The social world inside families involving personal relationships.
Modernisation The process of moving from traditional society to a modern developed society.
Rationalisation A process in which people calculate the most efficient means to achieve given objectives rather than relying on
faith or tradition to guide their actions.
Secondary institutions Institutions associated with caring for others, such as the family and religion.
Individual sphere The sphere of social life concerned with individual identity.
Cultural defence An ethnic group using religion to reinforce and maintain ethnic identity and pride.
Cultural transition An ethnic group using religion to cope with social change and migration.
Renewed vigour An increase in the intensity of religious feelings in response to perceived hostility.
Period effect The effects of being born in a particular era on social beliefs and practices.
Cohort A group of people born in a particular time period.
Summary
1. Marxists believes that religion originates among subject classes to help them cope with oppression, but it
is also adopted by the ruling classes to justify their position.
2. Weber argued that different theodicies appealed to different social groups. A theodicy of misfortune
attracts lower classes and a theodicy of good fortune attracts higher classes.
5. Hunt argues that socially mobile groups tend to join liberal religious organisations and social groups who
feel under threat tend to join more conservative organisations.
4. Churches aspire to attract members from all classes but tend to be predominantly middle-and higher-class
institutions because they generally support the establishment.
5. Denominations tend to appeal to the upper working class and lower middle class, while sects generally
attract the disadvantaged or the relatively deprived.
6. World-affirming new religious movements appeal to the all affluent. The New Age mainly attracts
middleclass professionals, particularly women in expressive professions.
7. Statistical evidence suggests that women tend to be more religious than men in all types of religious
organisation in most countries.
8. Miller and Hoffman explain gender differences in terms of gender socialisation, the structural locations of
men and women, and men's greater willingness to take risks.
9. Bruce argues that secularisation has led to religion being largely confined to the private sphere, in which
women are more involved than men.
10. Woodhead believes that secularisation has impacted on men more than women, which has resulted in
churches becoming feminised and appealing to women more than men. New Age beliefs appeal to women
because they help women to develop a new sense of selfhood which bypasses the contradiction between
their family and work roles.
11. The religion of minority ethnic groups in countries such as Britain is closely connected with the ethnicity
and countries of origin of first-generation immigrants. Most minority ethnic groups in Britain tend to be
more religious than their White counterparts.
12. Bird explains higher levels of religiosity among minority ethnic groups in terms of ethnic origins,
community solidarity, cultural identity, socialisation and oppression.
13. Bruce argues that religion acts as a form of cultural defence or a way of coping with transition to a new
society. In his view, minority ethnic religions in the UK will decline over time. However, Chryssides
suggests that they can develop in three ways: apostasy, renewed vigour or accommodation.
14. Statistical evidence suggests that, in most countries, young people are less religious than older people.
Voas and Crockett suggested that the statistical patterns could be due to people getting more religious as
they age, a period (or cohort) effect or secularisation.
15. Data from the British Social Attitudes survey suggest that, in Britain, secularisation is the main cause of
age differences in religiosity, However, Heelas claims that New Age beliefs are growing rapidly, despite
relatively few young people being involved.
16. Burkimsher found that secularisation is affecting most industrialised countries, but in Eastern Europe
and Africa there is evidence of young people becoming more religious.