ABSTRACT

Is religion dying out in Western societies? Is personal spirituality taking its place? Both stories are inadequate. Institutional religion is not simply coming to an end in Western societies. Rather, its assets and properties are redistributed: large parts of the church have gone into liquidation. Religion is crossing the boundaries of the parish and appears in other social contexts. In the fields of leisure, health care and contemporary culture, religion has an unexpected currency.

The metaphor of liquidation provides an alternative to approaches that merely perceive the decline of religion or a spiritual revolution. Religion is becoming liquid. By examining a number of case studies in the Netherlands and beyond, including World Youth Day, television, spiritual centers, chaplaincy, mental healthcare, museums and theatre, this book develops a fresh way to look at religion in late modernity and produces new questions for theological and sociological debate. It is both an exercise in sociology and an exercise in practical theology conceived as the engaged study of religious praxis. As such, the aim is not only to get a better understanding of what is going on, but also to critique one-sided views and to provide alternative perspectives for those who are active in the religious field or its surroundings.

part 1|25 pages

Religion in liquid modernity

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

What’s going on?

chapter 1|11 pages

An organizational perspective

part 2|50 pages

Parish and beyond

chapter 2|18 pages

A solid church enters liquid modernity

chapter 3|18 pages

The modern parish dealing with choice

chapter 4|12 pages

Movements and events

Ambivalence towards liquid modernity

part 3|52 pages

Losing control

chapter 5|15 pages

God in the living

Celebrating Mass through the television screen

chapter 7|14 pages

Spiritual care

The devastating success of chaplaincy

part 4|49 pages

The world takes over

chapter 9|14 pages

Private matters

The presentation of religion in a museum

part 5|8 pages

Conclusion

chapter 11|6 pages

The liquidation of the church