Desecularization
Desecularization denotes the resurgence of religious vitality and influence in modern societies, particularly in public spheres such as politics and culture, which contravenes the secularization thesis positing religion's inevitable decline amid modernization and rationalization.[1] This phenomenon, highlighted by sociologist Peter L. Berger in his 1999 essay collection The Desecularization of the World, manifests through the global expansion of conservative religious movements, including evangelical Protestantism in Latin America and Africa, orthodox Islam in the Middle East, and renewed traditionalism in post-communist states.[2] Berger, who earlier endorsed secularization theory, later observed that "the world today is as furiously religious as it ever was, and in some places more so," attributing this to religion's adaptive resilience rather than mere backlash against modernity.[1] Empirical indicators include rising religious identification in developing regions outpacing secular trends in the West, alongside political mobilizations like Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution and the influence of faith-based parties in democratic polities.[3] Debates persist over whether desecularization signals a paradigm reversal or coexists with ongoing privatization of faith in pluralistic settings, with critics of dominant secularization models emphasizing demographic shifts and globalization's role in amplifying religious pluralism over uniform decline.[4][5]Conceptual Foundations
Definition and Terminology
Desecularization denotes the resurgence of religious influence in societies where secularization—the process of religion diminishing in social, cultural, and political spheres—had previously advanced. The term encapsulates phenomena such as increased religious participation, the politicization of faith, and the reassertion of religious authority in public life, observed globally since the late 20th century. Peter L. Berger, a sociologist who earlier advanced secularization theory, formalized the concept in 1999, arguing that modernization does not uniformly erode religion but can foster its revival in diverse forms, including evangelical Protestantism in the United States, Pentecostalism in Latin America, and Islamist movements in the Middle East.[1][6] Central terminology includes "resurgent religion," referring to the revitalization of religious communities and beliefs amid secular pressures, and "public religion," which describes faith's expanded role beyond private spheres into governance, education, and media. Desecularization contrasts with secularization's core tenets of institutional differentiation—separating religion from state and economy—and rationalization, where religious explanations yield to scientific ones; instead, it highlights causal reversals like cultural backlash against materialism and demographic shifts favoring religious populations. Berger emphasized that desecularization manifests not as a uniform theocratic return but as pluralism where religion competes effectively with secular ideologies, evidenced by events like the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the rise of Hindu nationalism in India during the 1990s.[6][1] Related terms demand precise distinction: secularity describes a societal condition of reduced religious dominance, while secularism advocates ideologically for religion-state separation; desecularization critiques the former's inevitability without endorsing the latter's normativity. Proponents like Berger, drawing from empirical data such as Gallup polls showing stable or rising global religiosity rates into the 1990s, reject unidirectional secularization models as empirically falsified, attributing past overemphasis to Western-centric academic biases favoring Enlightenment progress narratives. This framework underscores causal realism, where religion's persistence stems from innate human needs for transcendence unmet by secular alternatives, rather than mere cultural lag.[1]Historical Context of Secularization Paradigm
The secularization paradigm originated in Enlightenment thought, which linked societal progress to the ascendancy of reason and science over religious authority, anticipating a corresponding diminution of religion's public role.[7] This perspective gained traction amid the intellectual shifts of the 18th century, where figures like Voltaire critiqued ecclesiastical power and promoted empirical inquiry as alternatives to theological explanations.[8] By the 19th century, these ideas crystallized in sociological frameworks, notably Auguste Comte's positivism, articulated in his 1830-1842 Course of Positive Philosophy, which outlined humanity's evolution through theological, metaphysical, and positive stages, with the final stage supplanting religious worldviews via scientific methods.[9] Max Weber advanced the paradigm through his analysis of rationalization and "disenchantment" (Entzauberung), concepts he elaborated in lectures such as "Science as a Vocation" delivered in 1918, positing that bureaucratic and scientific rationalization progressively eliminated magical and religious elements from everyday life.[10] In The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1905), Weber argued that Protestant asceticism inadvertently fostered capitalism, which in turn promoted an instrumental rationality eroding traditional religious orientations.[11] Émile Durkheim complemented this by viewing religion as a social construct whose functions—such as moral regulation—would be assumed by secular institutions in modern societies, as explored in The Elementary Forms of Religious Life (1912).[12] The paradigm solidified as a dominant sociological orthodoxy in the mid-20th century, particularly through Peter L. Berger's 1967 The Sacred Canopy, which theorized that modernization induced religious pluralism, fostering doubt and privatizing faith.[13] Berger and contemporaries like Bryan R. Wilson interpreted declining church attendance in Western Europe—such as the drop from 40% weekly participation in England in 1900 to under 10% by 1960—as empirical validation of inevitable religious decline amid urbanization and education.[5] This consensus, rooted in observations of European trends, extrapolated globally, assuming uniform trajectories despite variations in non-Western contexts.[14]Theoretical Frameworks
Secularization Theories
Secularization theories assert that modernization processes, including industrialization, urbanization, and scientific advancement, lead to a progressive decline in the social significance of religion. These theories, developed primarily by 19th- and 20th-century sociologists, predict that as societies rationalizes, religious institutions lose authority, practices diminish, and beliefs privatize or erode.[12] The core claim is that religion's explanatory and regulatory roles are supplanted by secular institutions like the state, science, and market economies.[15] Max Weber contributed foundational ideas through his concept of Entzauberung der Welt (disenchantment of the world), outlined in his 1917 lecture "Science as a Vocation." Weber argued that rationalization—characterized by bureaucratic efficiency, scientific method, and calculable causality—eliminates mystical elements from social life, rendering religious worldviews obsolete in favor of instrumental reason.[16] This process, Weber posited, originates partly from Protestant asceticism, which inadvertently fostered capitalism and its secular ethos, as detailed in his 1905 work The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.[17] Peter L. Berger, in his 1967 book The Sacred Canopy, framed secularization as an outcome of societal differentiation and pluralism induced by modernity. Berger contended that the fragmentation of social spheres reduces religion's plausibility structure, transforming it from a comprehensive worldview into optional, subjective belief amid competing ideologies.[5] Similarly, Bryan Wilson, in his 1966 analysis, defined secularization as the erosion of religion's social functions, with institutions like education and welfare assuming roles once monopolized by churches.[18] Other variants emphasize institutional privatization, where religion retreats from public spheres like politics and law, as articulated by José Casanova in his 1994 distinction between secularization as differentiation rather than disappearance.[19] These theories collectively link secularization to irreversible historical trends, forecasting religion's marginalization in advanced societies.[20]Desecularization Theories and Proponents
Desecularization theories challenge the secularization thesis by arguing that religion's influence persists or intensifies amid modernization, rather than diminishing uniformly. These frameworks highlight empirical counterexamples, such as religious revivals in the Global South, fundamentalist movements, and the reassertion of faith in public life, attributing vitality to factors like pluralism, market competition, and unmet human needs for meaning. Proponents emphasize that secularization, where observed, is regionally confined—primarily to Western Europe—and not a global inevitability driven by rationalization or disenchantment.[7] Peter L. Berger, a sociologist who initially endorsed secularization in works like The Sacred Canopy (1967), recanted this view by the 1990s, coining "desecularization" in his 1999 edited volume The Desecularization of the World: Resurgent Religion and World Politics. Berger argued that modernization fosters religious pluralism, which sustains faith through competition rather than eroding it, citing phenomena like the global spread of Pentecostalism (with over 500 million adherents by the late 1990s), Eastern Orthodox resurgence post-communism, and Islamist political mobilizations. He maintained that the secularization paradigm held only for Europe's mainline Protestant decline, while countertrends dominated elsewhere, falsifying the theory's universal claims.[5][7] Rodney Stark, employing rational choice theory, critiqued secularization as empirically unsupported in "Secularization, R.I.P." (1999), positing religion as a stable human constant responsive to supply-side dynamics. Stark and co-author William Sims Bainbridge, in The Future of Religion (1985), contended that religious "firms" thrive under free-market conditions, explaining vitality in deregulated contexts like the U.S. (where church membership grew from 17% in 1776 to 62% by 1980) versus state-monopolized Europe. Their model predicts periodic revivals and cult formations as alternatives to institutional decay, rebutting decline narratives with data on sustained global religiosity.[21][22] José Casanova advanced deprivatization theory in Public Religions in the Modern World (1994), decoupling secularization's differentiation aspect (religion's separation from state) from privatization (its confinement to personal spheres). He documented religions re-entering public discourse—e.g., Catholic mobilization in 1980s Poland (contributing to Solidarity's success) and U.S. evangelical political engagement—arguing this signals not decline but adaptation to modern pluralism. Casanova's case studies across Spain, Brazil, and the U.S. illustrate how faiths challenge secular assumptions by addressing collective issues like democratization.[23][24] Grace Davie introduced "believing without belonging" in the 1990s to interpret Europe's religious landscape, where institutional affiliation wanes (e.g., U.K. church attendance fell to 10% by 2000) but vicarious faith endures, with 40-50% affirming belief in God per surveys. This paradigm suggests latent religiosity persists, available for resurgence during crises, as seen in post-9/11 spiritual seeking, challenging full secularization by emphasizing cultural rather than organizational metrics.[25][26]Empirical Evidence
Global Demographic and Participation Trends
The global proportion of individuals affiliated with a religion stood at 75.8% of the world's population in 2020, down slightly from 76.7% in 2010, reflecting modest growth in the unaffiliated share amid overall population expansion.[27] Despite this, projections from 2010 to 2050 forecast a decline in the unaffiliated share from 16.4% to 12.3%, driven primarily by higher fertility rates among religious populations compared to the secular.[28] Christians are expected to remain the largest group at approximately 31% of the global population by 2050, while Muslims grow from 23% to 30%, nearing parity due to sustained higher birth rates and youthful demographics in Muslim-majority regions.[28] Fertility differentials underpin these shifts, with religious adherence correlating positively with higher total fertility rates worldwide; for instance, in the United States, highly religious women average 2.5 children versus 1.6 for the unaffiliated.[29] This pattern holds globally, as secular countries exhibit lower fertility even among religious subgroups, yet religious families consistently outpace secular ones, sustaining demographic vitality for faiths like Islam and evangelical Christianity.[30] In sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia, where religiosity remains robust, population growth amplifies religious shares, countering secularization expectations in modernizing societies.[28] Participation trends, though harder to quantify uniformly due to varying measurement, show persistent high engagement in religious rituals in the Global South; for example, over 80% of adults in many African and Latin American countries report weekly worship attendance.[27] In contrast, Western Europe and North America exhibit lower rates, around 20-30% weekly attendance, but recent U.S. data indicate stabilizing Christian identification after decades of decline, with no further net losses projected in some models.[31] Immigration from high-religiosity regions further bolsters religious demographics in secular host nations, as migrants maintain and transmit faith practices across generations.[28]| Religious Group | 2010 Share (%) | 2050 Projected Share (%) | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christians | 31.4 | 31.4 | Absolute growth via births in Africa/Asia |
| Muslims | 23.2 | 29.7 | High fertility, young population |
| Unaffiliated | 16.4 | 12.3 | Lower fertility rates |
| Hindus | 15.0 | 15.0 | Stable in India |
Regional Manifestations
Desecularization manifests variably across regions, often countering prior secularization pressures through demographic growth, political mobilization, and cultural reassertion. In post-communist Eastern Europe, Orthodox Christianity has seen revival, particularly in Russia, where the share of self-identified Orthodox believers rose from 31% in 1991 to over 70% by 2017, accompanied by increased church construction and state support under President Vladimir Putin since 2000.[32] In Poland, Catholic identification remains high at around 87% as of 2020, though practice has declined somewhat from peak post-1989 levels.[33] In Latin America, Pentecostal and evangelical Protestantism has surged, drawing converts from Catholicism; evangelicals constituted about 19% of the region's population by 2014, up from under 5% in 1970, with Brazil alone hosting over 60 million adherents by 2020.[34] This growth, fueled by grassroots evangelism and appeal to marginalized communities, has led to Protestant majorities in countries like Guatemala (over 40% by 2010).[35] The Middle East and North Africa exhibit desecularization through Islamist movements enforcing sharia-based governance; Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution established a theocratic republic, while groups like the Muslim Brotherhood gained electoral traction in Egypt (winning 47% of parliamentary seats in 2011-2012 before removal).[36] Recent surveys indicate renewed support for political Islam, with 30-40% favoring sharia as official law in several Arab states as of 2023.[37] Sub-Saharan Africa drives global Christian expansion, with the Christian population growing 31% to 697 million from 2010 to 2020, surpassing Europe's share and comprising 30.7% of worldwide Christians by 2020, propelled by fertility rates exceeding 4.5 children per woman in highly religious nations.[27] Pentecostal varieties dominate new growth, with over 50% of Christians in the region affiliated by 2010.[38] In South Asia, India's Hindu revival ties to nationalism, with temple constructions and festivals like Kumbh Mela drawing record crowds (over 50 million in 2019); under the Bharatiya Janata Party since 2014, policies like the 2019 revocation of Jammu and Kashmir's autonomy have bolstered Hindu identity, correlating with rising temple attendance and vegetarianism adherence.[39] Southeast Asia shows pockets of Christian growth, as in Indonesia's Protestant communities expanding amid majority Muslim contexts.[27] These regional patterns reflect not uniform reversal of secularization but localized resurgences amid modernization, often amplified by state alliances with religious institutions and higher religiosity in high-fertility demographics.[40]Recent Revivals Among Youth and Specific Demographics
In the United States, recent surveys indicate a resurgence in religious participation among Generation Z (born 1997–2012), with young adults now comprising the most frequent church attendees for the first time in decades. According to Barna Group data from 2025, Gen Z individuals attend church services an average of 1.9 times per month, surpassing older generations like Gen X (1.6 times) and showing a steady increase since the COVID-19 pandemic.[41] This shift is particularly pronounced among young men, who are attending weekly services at higher rates than Gen Z women, reversing prior gender gaps in religiosity.[42] [43] Additionally, over 20% of Gen Z reported increasing their Bible reading in 2024, contributing to a 12-percentage-point rise in commitment to Jesus as a divine figure since 2021, driven largely by Millennials and Gen Z.[44] [45] Similar patterns emerge in the United Kingdom, where belief in God among 18–24-year-olds surged from 16% in August 2021 to 45% by mid-2025, per YouGov polling.[46] Church attendance among this age group has also risen, aligning with broader European trends of youth seeking structured faith amid cultural uncertainties.[47] Globally, demographic analyses highlight higher religiosity among youth in Muslim-majority contexts; for instance, Ipsos' 2023 Global Religion survey across 26 countries found young adults (18–29) more likely to identify as religious and prioritize faith when raised Muslim, contrasting with declines in Christian-affiliated Western youth cohorts.[48] These revivals are not uniform, with some analyses attributing gains to slower rates of disaffiliation rather than mass conversions—Pew Research notes that while U.S. Christianity's decline has plateaued at 62% of adults in 2025, young adults remain less affiliated overall than elders, though retention from upbringing is stabilizing.[31] Among specific demographics like young men experiencing social dislocation, however, identification with Christianity has increased, often linked to perceptions of faith providing purpose against modern existential challenges.[49] Such trends challenge prior assumptions of inevitable youth secularization, though long-term sustainability depends on institutional adaptations.[50]Causal Mechanisms
Sociological and Cultural Drivers
Sociological theories highlight religious pluralism as a key driver of desecularization, where the coexistence of multiple faiths in modern societies fosters competition and innovation within religious markets, enhancing vitality rather than eroding belief. Peter L. Berger, initially a proponent of secularization, later argued that modernity produces pluralism, compelling religious institutions to adapt and appeal to voluntary adherents, thereby sustaining or reviving religiosity.[51][52] This market-like dynamic counters the privatization of faith predicted by earlier models, as evidenced by entrepreneurial religious movements in pluralistic settings like the United States.[53] Higher fertility rates among religious populations contribute to desecularization by shifting demographics toward greater religiosity over generations. Globally, actively religious individuals average more children than their secular counterparts, with weekly religious attenders in the U.S. maintaining fertility near replacement levels (around 2.0) while nonreligious rates fall below 1.5.[54][55] This differential persists even in secular contexts, where religious families prioritize larger households tied to doctrinal emphases on procreation and community.[30] Consequently, projections indicate stalling secularization in nations like the U.S. by mid-century due to this reproductive advantage.[56] Immigration from high-religiosity regions drives desecularization in historically secular areas, particularly Europe, by introducing populations with sustained religious practice and identity. Migrants, often from Muslim-majority countries, exhibit higher attendance and belief levels than natives, reviving public expressions of faith amid declining indigenous affiliation.[57] In Western Europe from 2002–2018, immigrant religiosity remained robust, offsetting native secularization trends despite some assimilation.[58] This influx challenges uniform secular norms, prompting cultural adaptations and occasional native religious re-engagement as responses to perceived identity threats.[59] Culturally, desecularization arises from secular modernity's shortcomings in providing existential meaning, moral coherence, and social bonds, leading individuals to seek fulfillment in religious frameworks. Secular individualism correlates with rising mental health issues and social isolation, contrasting with religion's role in fostering community and purpose, which appeals especially in fragmented societies.[49] Berger noted that pluralism exposes the inadequacies of secular alternatives, invigorating faith as a viable option amid cultural relativism.[60] Empirical patterns show religious resurgence in response to globalization's disruptions, where faith serves as an anchor for identity against homogenizing secular influences.[61]
Political and Institutional Factors
Political leaders in several nations have strategically allied with religious institutions to reinforce national identity, mobilize support, and counter perceived threats from liberal secularism, thereby advancing desecularization. In Russia, President Vladimir Putin has deepened ties with the Russian Orthodox Church since 2000, restoring its prominence after Soviet-era suppression and framing Orthodoxy as essential to Russian statehood.[62] This partnership includes state funding for church restoration—exceeding 3 billion rubles annually by 2010—and the 2012 introduction of religious education modules in public schools, which by 2023 reached over 90% of secondary students.[63] The Church reciprocates by endorsing Putin's geopolitical aims, such as portraying the 2022 Ukraine conflict as a defense of "Holy Rus."[64] In Poland, the Law and Justice (PiS) party, governing from 2015 to 2023, leveraged its alliance with the Catholic Church to implement policies aligning state law with doctrinal positions, including the 2020 constitutional tribunal ruling that effectively banned most abortions, advocated by church leaders.[65] This collaboration extended to media influence, with state broadcaster TVP promoting Catholic values, though it coincided with a sharp decline in church attendance from 39% weekly in 2014 to 23% by 2021 amid scandals and politicization.[66] [67] India's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), under Narendra Modi since 2014, has institutionalized Hindutva by prioritizing Hindu symbols in governance, such as the January 2024 consecration of the Ram Temple on the site of the demolished Babri Masjid and enactment of citizenship laws favoring non-Muslim immigrants from neighboring countries.[68] These actions, coupled with over 200 anti-conversion ordinances across states by 2023, have elevated Hinduism's public role, reversing aspects of post-independence secular policies.[69] Turkey under President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan exemplifies institutional Islamization, with the AKP government expanding imam-hatip religious schools from 450 in 2002 to 5,000 by 2022, enrolling 1.5 million students, and reconverting Hagia Sophia to a mosque in 2020.[70] Policies like the 2013 lifting of headscarf bans in universities and public offices have normalized Islamic practices in state spheres, eroding Atatürk's secular legacy while boosting religious observance among youth.[71] Broader institutional mechanisms include preferential legal status and funding for dominant faiths. In Central and Eastern Europe, Pew surveys indicate medians of 56% support for state funding of national churches and 42% for mandatory religious education, enabling governments to embed religion in civic life as a bulwark against globalization's secular pressures.[33] These factors demonstrate how political instrumentalization sustains religious vitality against modernization's expected erosion.Psychological and Existential Explanations
Psychological explanations for desecularization emphasize innate human cognitive and emotional mechanisms that favor religious belief as a response to limitations in secular frameworks. Evolutionary psychologists argue that religious cognition arises from adaptive traits, such as hyperactive agency detection—where humans intuitively attribute events to intentional agents rather than randomness—which persists even in educated, modern populations, fostering a predisposition to supernatural explanations amid uncertainty.[72] This cognitive bias contributes to religious resurgence, as secular rationalism often fails to fully override these evolved tendencies, particularly during periods of personal or societal instability that heighten the appeal of transcendent narratives for pattern-seeking minds.[73] Terror management theory (TMT) provides a key framework, positing that awareness of mortality induces existential terror, which individuals buffer through adherence to cultural worldviews promising symbolic or literal immortality; religion excels in this role by offering afterlife assurances and communal validation.[74] Empirical studies support that reminders of death increase religious fundamentalism and defense of faith-based beliefs, suggesting desecularization accelerates when secular buffers—like material success or therapeutic self-help—prove insufficient against death anxiety, prompting reversion to religious structures for psychological security.[75] For instance, longitudinal data indicate that intrinsic religiosity correlates with lower death anxiety compared to extrinsic or secular orientations, implying a causal pull toward faith during life transitions or crises.[76] Existential explanations highlight religion's role in addressing the "malaise of modernity," where secular individualism erodes sources of purpose, leading to widespread anomie and a quest for transcendent meaning.[49] Philosophers and psychologists, drawing from logotherapy, contend that humans possess an irreducible "will to meaning," unmet by nihilistic or hedonistic secular alternatives, which fuels conversions or revivals as individuals confront voids in identity and belonging.[77] Recent surveys among youth show elevated psychological distress in highly secular environments—marked by rising anxiety and depression rates—correlating with increased religious engagement, as faith provides resilience through reappraisal coping and communal support.[78] This pattern manifests in adversity-driven returns, where religious practices mitigate existential insecurity more effectively than secular coping, evidenced by lower symptomology in devout groups during stressors like economic downturns or health crises.[78] Cross-cultural analyses reveal that existential insecurity, amplified by rapid social change, predicts religiosity spikes, as religion restores a sense of coherence and agency lost in fragmented secular life.[79] While some scholarship attributes persistence to cultural inertia rather than inherent efficacy, causal evidence from experimental and epidemiological studies favors psychological fulfillment as a driver, with religious individuals exhibiting superior emotion regulation and purpose-derived motivation.[80] These mechanisms underscore desecularization not as irrational reversion but as a rational adaptation to unmet existential needs in materially advanced but spiritually arid contexts.[81]Methodological and Analytical Challenges
Measurement and Data Issues
Measuring religiosity poses inherent challenges due to its multifaceted nature, encompassing dimensions such as affiliation, doctrinal belief, ritual participation, and subjective salience. No universally agreed-upon metric exists, leading scholars to employ disparate indicators—ranging from self-identified religious identity to frequency of prayer or perceived importance of religion—which hinders direct comparisons across studies or time periods. For instance, affiliation-based measures may capture nominal adherence that does not reflect active practice, while behavioral metrics like attendance are prone to fluctuation based on seasonal or cultural factors.[82][83] Self-reported data, the cornerstone of most religiosity surveys, suffers from well-documented reliability issues, particularly in gauging attendance and practice. Respondents frequently overstate participation due to social desirability bias, with U.S. surveys reporting weekly church attendance at 30-40% since the 1930s, whereas church records and alternative validations indicate rates closer to 20% or lower. Recent analyses using cellphone geolocation data reveal even starker discrepancies, estimating actual weekly worship attendance at approximately 5% of the population, compared to self-reports exceeding 20%. This inflation persists across modes of survey administration, including online and telephone formats, and varies by demographics such as age and region, potentially masking true declines or understating revivals in attendance-dependent assessments of desecularization.[84][85] Cross-national comparability exacerbates these problems, as survey instruments often fail to achieve measurement invariance due to linguistic, cultural, and contextual differences in interpreting terms like "religiosity" or "importance of religion." Harmonization efforts, such as those integrating self-declared religiosity across datasets like the World Values Survey, encounter difficulties in standardizing response scales and categories, resulting in artifacts when aggregating global trends. In diverse settings, what constitutes "religious practice" may blend with cultural rituals in non-Western contexts, inflating or deflating metrics relative to secular benchmarks developed in Europe or North America. Peer-reviewed evaluations confirm that even validated scales, like the Duke University Religion Index, require extensive adaptation for cross-cultural validity, limiting the robustness of international desecularization claims.[86][82][87] Data availability further complicates analysis of desecularization, with longitudinal series often concentrated in Western nations where secularization dominates narratives, while sparser coverage in the Global South—where religious vitality is higher—relies on periodic snapshots prone to sampling biases. Institutional sources like census data may prioritize affiliation over practice, overlooking shifts in private belief or youth-driven revivals not yet captured in decennial surveys. These gaps, combined with potential underrepresentation of informal or revivalist movements in formal metrics, risk underdetecting desecularizing dynamics in regions experiencing demographic booms in religious populations.[88][27]Interpretive Debates in Scholarship
Peter L. Berger, an influential sociologist of religion, exemplifies interpretive shifts in desecularization scholarship through his reversal on secularization theory. In The Sacred Canopy (1967), Berger posited secularization as an inevitable outcome of modernization, driven by pluralism, rationalization, and the differentiation of social spheres.[5] By 1999, however, empirical evidence of global religious resurgences—such as Protestant Evangelicalism in Latin America, Pentecostalism in Africa, and Islamic revivalism—prompted him to edit The Desecularization of the World, declaring the world "as furiously religious as it ever was" and identifying Western Europe as an outlier.[5] Berger interpreted these trends as countering predictions of uniform decline, attributing persistence to modernity's unintended fostering of religious rejection and adaptation rather than erosion.[5] Debates persist over whether such resurgences constitute true desecularization or mere reconfiguration. Grace Davie counters strict decline narratives with "vicarious religion," arguing that in Europe, active minorities maintain institutions and perform rituals on behalf of a passive majority, sustaining cultural religion despite low personal affiliation.[89] This framework interprets "believing without belonging" not as secular triumph but as resilient, if privatized, faith, challenging demand-side explanations of waning religiosity.[26] Supply-side theorists Rodney Stark and Roger Finke offer an economic interpretation, viewing religious markets as thriving under deregulation and competition, which they argue explains American vitality versus European stagnation under state monopolies.[90] Stark's rational choice model posits that pluralism stimulates innovation and participation, interpreting desecularization as validation against secularization's assumed inevitability, with revivals emerging from perceived religious shortages rather than cultural backlash.[91] Critics like Steve Bruce rebut this, maintaining modernization undermines religion's existential appeal through rational doubt and welfare provision, framing resurgences as temporary reactions to rapid change rather than evidence of enduring demand.[92] Scholarly contention also centers on scope and theoretical framing, with globalists like Berger emphasizing demographic and migratory drivers of religiosity, while regionalists highlight Western exceptionalism amid broader differentiation.[92] José Casanova's deprivatization thesis interprets public religious mobilizations—such as in Poland or Iran—as religion's adaptive return to politics, not anomaly, whereas process-oriented views stress root causes like institutional supply over inherent modernity effects.[92] These interpretations underscore tensions between empirical anomalies and paradigmatic commitments, with desecularization challenging but not uniformly refuting secularization's core claim of declining social dominance in advanced contexts.[92]Critiques and Counterarguments
Defenses of Inevitable Secularization
The secularization thesis posits that modernization processes, including industrialization, urbanization, and scientific advancement, inevitably diminish the social significance and institutional power of religion.[93] Sociologist Steve Bruce defends this paradigm, arguing that structural differentiation separates religious institutions from other societal spheres like politics and economy, reducing religion's authority to private belief rather than public influence.[94] Rationalization, as articulated by Max Weber, favors empirical and bureaucratic methods over supernatural explanations, eroding faith's explanatory role in daily life.[95] Proponents contend that religious pluralism in modern societies undermines exclusive truth claims of any single faith, fostering skepticism and indifference.[96] Increasing social scale through globalization and mass communication fragments tight-knit religious communities, making collective practice harder to sustain.[97] Bruce emphasizes that these mechanisms operate independently of time, driven by specific modernizing changes rather than mere chronological progression.[93] Empirical data supports ongoing secularization in advanced economies. In Western Europe, church attendance has plummeted to under 10% weekly in countries like the UK and Sweden as of the 2010s, with no reversal despite occasional revivals.[94] Global analyses from 2025 identify a three-stage decline: first in ritual participation, then in perceived importance of religion, and finally in self-identification, correlating with higher education and income levels.[98] Quantitative research since 2000 confirms secularization in contexts of sustained modernization, where religiosity metrics decline even amid demographic shifts from immigration.[99] Defenders address apparent counterexamples, such as religious growth in the Global South or youth revivals, as transitory responses to crises or incomplete modernization, not restorations of religion's societal dominance.[100] In the United States, while religiosity remains higher than in Europe, longitudinal surveys show accelerating disaffiliation among younger cohorts, with "nones" rising from 16% in 2007 to 29% in 2021, aligning with the thesis's prediction of delayed but eventual decline.[101] Bruce argues that fundamentalist movements represent defensive reactions rather than evidence against overarching secular trends.[94]Rebuttals and Empirical Refutations of Secularization Thesis
Sociologist Peter L. Berger, an early proponent of the secularization thesis, later repudiated it, arguing in 1999 that the world remains "as furiously religious as it ever was" outside of Western Europe, with empirical evidence contradicting predictions of inevitable religious decline amid modernization. Berger attributed this to religious pluralism fostering competition and vitality rather than erosion, a view he elaborated in his 2008 essay "Secularization Falsified," where he highlighted resurgent religious movements in Latin America, Africa, and Asia as refuting the thesis's core assumption of religion's privatization and marginalization. Rodney Stark, in his 1999 article "Secularization, R.I.P.," contended that the thesis has never aligned with empirical realities, pointing to sustained or growing religious adherence in modern societies, including the United States, where church membership and attendance have historically resisted predicted drops despite industrialization and education gains.[21] Stark's supply-side model of religious economies posits that deregulation and competition among faiths, akin to market dynamics, boost participation, as seen in the rapid expansion of Protestant denominations in competitive environments, directly challenging claims of inherent religious atrophy under capitalism and science.[102] Empirical data from global demographics further undermine the thesis: between 2010 and 2020, the absolute numbers of Christians and Muslims increased despite slight proportional declines in affiliation, driven by higher fertility rates among religious groups and conversions, projecting religious populations to comprise 84% of the world by 2050 per Pew Research projections.[28] In the United States, Pew's 2023-2024 Religious Landscape Study reports Christian identification stabilizing at 62% after decades of decline, with perceptions of religion's societal influence rising, as 31% of adults in 2025 noted increasing religious impact compared to 18% in 2024.[31][103] Specific refutations include the explosive growth of Pentecostalism, reaching over 600 million adherents by the early 21st century, primarily in developing nations undergoing rapid modernization, contradicting notions of science supplanting faith; similarly, Islamic revivalism in the Middle East and beyond demonstrates religion's adaptability to political and economic upheavals rather than obsolescence.[104] These trends, coupled with religious groups' demographic advantages—such as lower secularization in high-fertility populations—suggest that secularization is neither universal nor irreversible, but regionally variable and often reversible through cultural and institutional resurgence.[105]
Implications and Future Trajectories
Societal and Policy Impacts
Desecularization influences societal structures by reinforcing traditional family norms and elevating fertility rates among religious adherents, which offsets population declines observed in more secular demographics. In the United States, women identifying as Christian demonstrate a completed fertility rate of 2.2 children per respondent, surpassing the 1.8 rate among the religiously unaffiliated, with weekly religious service attendance further correlating to rates exceeding the replacement level of 2.1.[106][54] This pattern extends globally, as religiously observant groups—such as evangelicals in Latin America and Orthodox communities in Eastern Europe—exhibit higher birth rates, contributing to intergenerational transmission of faith and altering demographic compositions in favor of religious majorities or minorities.[107] Such demographic shifts foster social cohesion within religious enclaves through shared moral frameworks, yet they can exacerbate tensions with secular subpopulations, manifesting in debates over education curricula that incorporate religious elements or public displays of faith. For example, in Israel, desecularization trends in non-religious state education have spurred activism from secular groups seeking to preserve neutral curricula against encroachments by religious authorities.[108] In consumer behavior, resurgent religiosity in regions like North Macedonia drives demand for faith-aligned products, signaling broader cultural reorientation toward religious identity.[109] On the policy front, desecularization empowers governments to enact measures aligning state functions with religious priorities, often prioritizing national identity and demographic sustainability. In Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's administration has subsidized church activities and implemented family policies—such as lifetime personal income tax exemptions for mothers of four or more children—that invoke Christian demographics to counter low birth rates and migration pressures.[33][110] Similarly, Poland's Law and Justice party has leveraged Catholic influence to restrict abortion access and promote religious education in schools, framing these as defenses of traditional values amid EU secular mandates.[111] In Russia, despite constitutional secularism, the state accords the Russian Orthodox Church preferential status through funding, media access, and advisory roles in legislation on family and morality, bolstering regime legitimacy via spiritual nationalism.[112] These policies, while enhancing religious institutional power, have drawn criticism for curtailing minority rights and secular liberties, as seen in Hungary's alignment of foreign aid with religious diplomacy to cultivate ties with faith-based partners.[113] In Muslim-majority contexts, desecularization has yielded sharia-infused legal reforms, such as Turkey's expansion of religious education under President Erdoğan since 2010, which prioritizes Islamic curricula and influences family law toward conservative interpretations. This trend underscores causal links between religious resurgence and policy resistance to liberalization, potentially stabilizing societies against existential anxieties but risking polarization where secular backlashes emerge.[114]Projections Based on Current Data
Current demographic projections indicate that the global religiously affiliated population will continue to expand through 2050, driven primarily by higher fertility rates among religious groups compared to the unaffiliated. According to Pew Research Center analysis, the share of the world population identifying as religiously unaffiliated is expected to decline from 16% in 2010 to 13% by 2050, while Christians remain stable at approximately 31% and Muslims grow from 23% to 30%.[28] This shift reflects differential fertility, with Muslims averaging 3.1 children per woman and Christians 2.7, exceeding the global replacement level of 2.1, whereas unaffiliated fertility aligns closer to or below secular trends.[28] Migration also contributes, as religious populations in high-fertility regions like sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East relocate to aging, lower-fertility societies.[115] In Western contexts, where secularization has advanced furthest, recent data suggest a potential plateau or modest reversal in religious decline, challenging long-term desecularization forecasts. U.S. surveys from 2025 show the Christian share stabilizing after decades of erosion, with the unaffiliated proportion ceasing rapid growth, possibly due to generational retention among younger cohorts and cultural pushback against perceived institutional overreach.[31] European trends indicate persistent low affiliation and practice—weekly attendance often below 20%—but stabilization in self-reported religiosity among youth, with some evidence of renewed interest in traditional faiths amid existential uncertainties like geopolitical instability.[116] Projections for Europe foresee gradual demographic infusion from higher-religiosity migrant inflows, potentially elevating Islam's share to 10-15% by mid-century, though integration dynamics could temper overt desecularization.[28] Non-Western regions amplify desecularization signals, with sub-Saharan Africa's Christian population projected to comprise 40% of global Christians by 2050, fueled by fertility rates above 4.5 in many countries and limited switching out of faith.[28] In Asia, state policies in nations like India and China may sustain or revive religious adherence, countering prior suppression, while Latin America's evangelical growth persists via conversion and family transmission.[115] Overall, these trajectories imply that desecularization, defined as religion's reassertion in public and private life, will manifest unevenly: robust globally via demographics, tentative in the secularized West, but constrained by endogenous factors like education levels that correlate with switching to non-affiliation.[117]| Religious Group | 2010 Global Share (%) | 2050 Projected Share (%) | Primary Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Christians | 31 | 31 | Fertility and youth populations in Africa/Asia |
| Muslims | 23 | 30 | Highest fertility (3.1 children/woman) |
| Unaffiliated | 16 | 13 | Lower fertility and aging demographics |
| Hindus | 15 | 15 | Stable in high-fertility India |