Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgment
- Part One Religion as a Field of Sociological Knowledge
- Part Two Religion and Social Change
- Part Three Religion and the Life Course
- Part Four Religion and Social Identity
- Part Five Religion, Political Behavior, and Public Culture
- 21 Religion and Political Behavior
- 22 Religious Social Movements in the Public Sphere
- 23 Mapping the Moral Order
- 24 Civil Society and Civil Religion as Mutually Dependent
- 25 Religion and Violence
- Part Six Religion and Socioeconomic Inequality
- References
- Index
22 - Religious Social Movements in the Public Sphere
Organization, Ideology, and Activism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgment
- Part One Religion as a Field of Sociological Knowledge
- Part Two Religion and Social Change
- Part Three Religion and the Life Course
- Part Four Religion and Social Identity
- Part Five Religion, Political Behavior, and Public Culture
- 21 Religion and Political Behavior
- 22 Religious Social Movements in the Public Sphere
- 23 Mapping the Moral Order
- 24 Civil Society and Civil Religion as Mutually Dependent
- 25 Religion and Violence
- Part Six Religion and Socioeconomic Inequality
- References
- Index
Summary
When Americans want to change something about their society, they often do so by forming, or participating in, a social movement. And when Americans commit their time, money, and energy to some organization outside their immediate families, it is highly probable that it will be to a religious organization. Thus, it is not surprising that religious organizations have been intimately involved with social movements throughout American history; nor is it surprising, given the general religiousness of the American people, that so many social movements have been grounded in religious values and ideas.
These religiously based social movements have ranged across centuries, issues, and the liberal-to-conservative spectrum. Outstanding examples from the nineteenth century include the Abolitionist Movement, the American Protective Association (an anti-immigrant organization), the Women's Christian Temperance Union, and the Anti-Saloon League (anti-alcohol). The twentieth century has witnessed such movements as the Social Gospel Movement, the Civil Rights Movement, the New Christian Right (and its constituent organizations such as the Moral Majority and the Christian Coalition), Operation Rescue (anti-abortion), and Pax Christi (antiwar and nuclear weapons). Religion has been and continues to be a source of people, organizations, and ideas for many attempts at fostering or resisting social change. It can provide the organizational bases, the rhetorical messages, and the motivated adherents that are necessary for social movements to mobilize and be effective.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Handbook of the Sociology of Religion , pp. 315 - 330Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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