This study of the religious experience of Christian students at universities in England is both surprising and most welcome. Surprising, because after almost 60 years of propaganda about the decline of聽religious faith, one does not expect to find a wide-ranging investigation as specific as this one. It is a study of the religious experience of Christian university students in what we have come to conceive of as secularised Britain. On the other hand, it is most welcome because empirical information carefully gleaned can聽only promote understanding in the ideological battleground between the die-hard secularists who seem to dominate the academy and the believers (by聽virtue of their faith deemed 颈辫蝉辞听蹿补肠迟辞 biased) who appear reactionary and overly defensive.
Mathew Guest, Kristin Aune, Sonya Sharma and Rob Warner have set themselves a modest task:聽to ascertain how Christian students view their faith within the context of their broad university experience. They present no argument about long-term change or future trends, which is a tendency that sociologists of religion have generally struggled to resist. Many of these projections have faltered on the premise that things proceed along linear lines and that, inexorably, percentages at a given time are indicative of long-term decline or聽growth. The interconnections between personal faith, participation within communities and formal membership, as scholars including Grace Davie and Robert聽Wuthnow have shown, are much more complex 鈥 illustrated also in the changing habits of declining membership within a range of other voluntary societies over the past 30 years.
The resilience of faith means that we must reconsider the scepticism about the prospects for religious belief in聽the academy
The authors seek to present a聽鈥渟napshot鈥 of Christian students studying at English universities at 鈥渁 single point in time鈥 in order to understand their distinguishing features as a sub-group. Some 4,500 students at 13聽universities were surveyed to reflect the diversity of the English university sector, including so-called traditional/elite universities, inner-city redbricks, 1960s campus universities, post-1992s and the Cathedrals Group, which are Church foundations.
探花视频
The large survey provided details about moral values, personal encounters with matters of beliefs and practice, and religion and social class. Over and聽above these survey findings, in-depth interviews with 75聽students and relevant university leaders helped the researchers in 鈥渃hallenging preconceived assumptions鈥 about the nature of Christian faith and its practice among these students.
In eight concise chapters, the聽authors explore the diverse structures, challenges and opportunities for personal and communal religious expression at the different universities. One of the chapters specifically explores whether the university is a force for secularisation; another discusses the social cleavages among Christian students, with the final chapter drawing out the implications of this study.
探花视频
The researchers have uncovered key insights, the most important being that, contrary to what I聽would have expected, 鈥淐hristian students 鈥 much like UK Christians in general 鈥 comprise a sizeable and diverse group鈥 at our universities and 鈥渁re not unified by doctrine or ethical assent鈥. The聽authors argue that 鈥渇irst and foremost鈥 it is the 鈥渟ubjective and relational experience of university that engages with their faith鈥. Some of the study鈥檚 findings are counter-intuitive: for example, that it is not predominantly the case that the university acts as a聽force for secularisation; that chaplaincies have reinvented themselves from being solely facilitators of denominational Christian interests to becoming 鈥渞esource centres for social cohesion鈥 and facilitators for interfaith understanding and cooperation; and that 鈥渟tudent Christianity is often not as sectarian in its instincts as many sceptics make out鈥.
So Christian faith and its expression among a sizeable group of university students is alive and well despite the prophecy of its demise. David Martin, one of the best sociologists of religion this country has produced, and Andrew Greeley in the US were among the only voices to challenge their peers in the 1960s and 1970s and question the doomsaying about religion. Gradually, academic opinion altered, with Peter Berger, for example, writing in the 1990s about 鈥渨hy he changed his mind鈥 about the subject.
The resilience of faith among a聽significant number of university students means that we must reconsider the scepticism about the prospects for religious belief in聽the academy. Either we make sense of its resilience and value, which is amply evident in our culture, art and literature if we take the long view, or we continue to treat it as an aberration needing something along the lines of聽Richard Dawkins鈥 wildly imaginative notion of 鈥渕emes鈥 or聽suchlike to debunk it.
While the authors seek simply to present a snapshot, they do promise to build up to a longitudinal study, which can only add value to our thinking about this important cultural issue. I look forward to the next piece in this jigsaw.
探花视频
Christianity and the University Experience: Understanding Student Faith
By Mathew Guest, Kristin Aune, Sonya Sharma and Rob Warner
Bloomsbury, 256pp, 拢65.00 and 拢21.99
ISBN 9781780936017, 37847 and 36215 (e-book)
Published 12 September 2013
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