Publication type
Journal Article
Authors
Publication date
June 1, 2010
Summary:
The Christian churches have considerably declined in popularity, power, and prestige over the twentieth century in Britain and Europe. This decline has stimulated many attempts to characterise the attitudes towards religion of people who are neither involved with organised religion nor consciously opposed to it. Grace Davie has founded one such effort on the concept of ‘vicarious religion’. The idea of vicarious religion rests on two principles: that a minority of people are religious on behalf of a silent majority and that those in the majority appreciate their efforts. We agree that examples of the phenomenon can be found, but we question whether popular sympathy for religion provides evidence for this conjecture. We review the various illustrations provided by Davie and offer alternative readings that seem more plausible. We also argue that the trajectory of change in marginal religious involvement seriously weakens its ability to diminish the evidence of secularisation.
Published in
Journal of Contemporary Religion
Volume and page numbers
Volume: 25 , p.243 -259
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13537901003750936
ISSN
13537903
Subjects
Notes
Not held in Res Lib - bibliographic reference only
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