The City Worships
The Role of Religion in Cities
Cities have long exerted an important influence over the development of American religion; in turn, religion has shaped the life of America’s cities. As the city shaped religion, religion shaped the city and the nation.
Historians continue to uncover ways in which urban religion enabled individuals to understand, navigate, and contribute to the city around them.
Across the urban landscape, there are an array of cathedrals, churches, and synagogues that serve as visible reminders of diversified urban congregations.
Urbanists should take religion much more seriously than they often do. That’s because it plays a much bigger role in the city and civic health; providing opportunities for emotional support, moral discipline, social networking, economic assistance, and political participation.
Religions of the World (Pew Research Center)
There are 5.8 billion religiously affiliated adults and children around the globe, representing 84% of the 2010 world population of 6.9 billion.
Nearly three-quarters (73%) of the world’s people live in countries in which their religious group makes up a majority of the population.
Religions of the World (2010)
2.2 billion Christians (31% of the world’s population),
1.6 billion Muslims (23%),
1.1 billion have no religious affiliation (16%)
1 billion Hindus (15%),
500 million Buddhists (7%)
400 million people (6%) practice various folk or traditional religions,
14 million Jews (0.2%)
Christianity is prevalent in the Americas, South Africa, Europe, Russia, Indonesia, and Australia.
Islam is prevalent in the Middle East, western Asia, and Indonesia.
Buddhism is prevalent in southern Asia.
Hinduism is prevalent in India.
China is largely unaffiliated.
The Five Major World Religions
The Future of World Religions
The religious profile of the world is rapidly changing, driven primarily by differences in fertility rates and the size of youth populations among the world’s major religions, as well as by people switching faiths. Over the next four decades, Christians will remain the largest religious group, but Islam will grow faster than any other major religion.
Top findings predicting religious affiliation in the U.S. (to 2050).
Atheists, agnostics and religiously unaffiliated people will increase in the United States (from 16% to 26%) but decline as a share of the total worldwide population.
Also in the United States, Christians will drop from 78% to 66% of population. Muslims will surpass Jews as the largest non-Christian religion in the U.S.
Faith and Government
Most of the world’s countries (85%) allow citizens of any religious affiliation to be head of state.
30 of the world’s countries (15%) belong to a unique group of nations that call for their heads of state to have a particular religious affiliation.
More than half of the countries with religion-related restrictions on their heads of state (17) maintain that the office must be ...
The City WorshipsThe Role of Religion in CitiesCitie.docx
1. The City Worships
The Role of Religion in Cities
Cities have long exerted an important influence over the
development of American religion; in turn, religion has shaped
the life of America’s cities. As the city shaped religion, religion
shaped the city and the nation.
Historians continue to uncover ways in which urban religion
enabled individuals to understand, navigate, and contribute to
the city around them.
Across the urban landscape, there are an array of cathedrals,
churches, and synagogues that serve as visible reminders of
diversified urban congregations.
Urbanists should take religion much more seriously than they
often do. That’s because it plays a much bigger role in the city
and civic health; providing opportunities for emotional support,
moral discipline, social networking, economic assistance, and
political participation.
Religions of the World (Pew Research Center)
There are 5.8 billion religiously affiliated adults and children
around the globe, representing 84% of the 2010 world
population of 6.9 billion.
Nearly three-quarters (73%) of the world’s people live in
countries in which their religious group makes up a majority of
the population.
2. Religions of the World (2010)
2.2 billion Christians (31% of the world’s population),
1.6 billion Muslims (23%),
1.1 billion have no religious affiliation (16%)
1 billion Hindus (15%),
500 million Buddhists (7%)
400 million people (6%) practice various folk or traditional
religions,
14 million Jews (0.2%)
Christianity is prevalent in the Americas, South Africa, Europe,
Russia, Indonesia, and Australia.
Islam is prevalent in the Middle East, western Asia, and
Indonesia.
Buddhism is prevalent in southern Asia.
Hinduism is prevalent in India.
China is largely unaffiliated.
The Five Major World Religions
The Future of World Religions
The religious profile of the world is rapidly changing, driven
3. primarily by differences in fertility rates and the size of youth
populations among the world’s major religions, as well as by
people switching faiths. Over the next four decades, Christians
will remain the largest religious group, but Islam will grow
faster than any other major religion.
Top findings predicting religious affiliation in the U.S. (to
2050).
Atheists, agnostics and religiously unaffiliated people will
increase in the United States (from 16% to 26%) but decline as
a share of the total worldwide population.
Also in the United States, Christians will drop from 78% to 66%
of population. Muslims will surpass Jews as the largest non-
Christian religion in the U.S.
Faith and Government
Most of the world’s countries (85%) allow citizens of any
religious affiliation to be head of state.
30 of the world’s countries (15%) belong to a unique group of
nations that call for their heads of state to have a particular
religious affiliation.
More than half of the countries with religion-related restrictions
on their heads of state (17) maintain that the office must be held
by a Muslim.
19 nations have religious requirements for ceremonial monarchs
who serve as their heads of state. Sixteen of these are members
of the Commonwealth of Nations with Queen Elizabeth II as
their head of state.
The U.S. and Religious Freedom
The U.S. was founded as a result of religious dissent.
The puritans settled New England (1630) to achieve for
4. themselves a freedom from the church and civil officials in
England who had prevented them from pursuing their faith as
they believed God wanted them to.
Civil religion is term used to describe the relationship between
religion and national identity in the United States. The basic
theory maintains that an informal civil religion binds the
American people to God. (Bellah, 1967).
According to the tenets of civil religion, God will ensure the
spread of American values throughout the world.
The U.S. and Separation of Church and State
The concept of “separation of church and state” has been part of
the nation’s cornerstone of American democracy.
The Supreme Court first employed the term “separation of
church and state” in 1879 as shorthand for the meaning of the
First Amendment’s religion clauses.
Although the phrase is not found in the Constitution, no
organizing theory has had a greater impact on the way
Americans conceptualize the intersection of religion, culture,
and politics than the principle of church-state separation.
Religion and Politics
Religion can strongly influence which party a person supports.
People will change their political affiliation to fit their religious
beliefs.
Political views can play a major role in religious conversion.
People change religions or denominations in order to find a fit
for their political beliefs.
As much as secular governments strive for a clean break
between religion and politics, the two do in reality mix, and
they mix in complex ways.
5. While support for churches’ involvement in politics has
fluctuated, there has been consistent agreement that houses of
worship should not directly endorse political candidates.
Assignment for Friday, March 10
Complete Chapter Summary Question 13-2: Map the places of
worship in your neighborhood and discuss their role in your
community.
This submission should be two pages:
One page includes a map (Google, Bing, Yahoo maps or other
source) of the places of worship in your community. This can
also be hand drawn (I am not grading you on artistic abilities).
One page is a written response to the question. Please state your
community, describe the activities of the places of worship, and
the role faith plays in your neighborhood (400-500 words, about
one page).