1 / 15

Religion: Chapter 14 page 464

Religion: Chapter 14 page 464. Sociology Mrs. M c Vey. Religion: The Definition. A unified system of beliefs & practices concerned with sacred things Sacred Holy; set apart & given a special meaning that goes beyond, or transcends, immediate existence Profane Nonsacred.

cairbre
Télécharger la présentation

Religion: Chapter 14 page 464

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Religion: Chapter 14page 464 Sociology Mrs. McVey

  2. Religion: The Definition • A unified system of beliefs & practices concerned with sacred things • Sacred • Holy; set apart & given a special meaning that goes beyond, or transcends, immediate existence • Profane • Nonsacred

  3. Religion in Society • All societies have spirituality • Religion provides a sense of belonging, part of a group • Code of conduct • Boundary questions: Why are we here? Where did we come from? What happens when we die? How are we to live our lives?

  4. Religion Basics • Monotheistic v. Polytheistic • Western Religions (traditionally, clear focus on God) • Christianity • Islam • Judaism • Eastern Religions (traditionally, ethical codes) • Buddhism • Hinduism • Confucianism

  5. Theoretical Perspective • Functionalism p. 468-469 contributions • Three functions of religion in society: • Social cohesion—unites people • Social control—conformity/rules to live by • Meaning & purpose—social clock • P. 470 Major World Religions Chart

  6. Theoretical Perspectives • Conflict Theory • Inhibit (marx) or encourage (weber) social change • Beyond control of people? • Marx said religion suits those in power and they use religion to exploit the less fortunate • Which would make sense why the Soviet Union’s official policy was atheism

  7. Theoretical Perspective • Conflict Theory Continued • Calvin • Protestant ethic: set of values, norms, beliefs, and attitudes stressing hard work, thrift, and self-discipline • Weber • Spirit of capitalism: the obligation to reinvest money in business rather than spend it

  8. Theoretical Perspectives • Symbolic Interactionism • People create symbolic meanings from their religious beliefs, rituals, and ideas

  9. Separation of church & State • Which of the following statements best describes why the framers of the U.S. Constitution supported the separation of church and state? • Maintain religious freedoms!!

  10. Religious Organization • Church: life-encompassing religious organization to which all members of a society belong • Denomination: one of several organizations that most members of society accept as legitimate • Sect: religious organization that arises out of a desire to reform an existing religious organization • Cult: religious organization whose characteristics are not drawn from existing religious traditions within a society

  11. Religiosity • Importance of religion in a person’s life • Ways in which people express their religious interests and convictions

  12. Religiousity • Belief • What one thinks is true • Ritual • Expected practice • Intellectual Dimension • Knowledge of religion • Experience • Feelings attached to religious expression • Consequences • Decisions made based on religion (ex; pro-life, capital punishment)

  13. Religion in the United States • Secularization: Sacred loses influence over society • Religious Preferences: 58% Protestant • Fundamentalism: resistance of secularization and the rigid adherence to traditional religious beliefs, rituals, and doctrines

  14. The End

  15. Turn in … • Your perspective chart (if you’ve turned it in already, you should have gotten it back to study) • Your religiosity graphic organizers

More Related