STATE OF RELIGION IN A GLOBALIZED WORLD

Authors

  • Dominador Bombongan Jr De La Salle University, Manila

Keywords:

Religion, Globalization

Abstract

Our globalized world is saddled with deepening poverty, environmental destruction and social disintegration. In the face of this multifaceted global crisis, has religion anything worthwhile to offer? Put differently, what constitutes an appropriate religious response to globalization? Samuel Huntington has already pointed out that our future will be characterized by a clash of civilizations which is stamped by religions, i.e., Islamic or Confucian-Asian civilizations versus the West. We may not however, agree with such a gloomy depiction of the future. The encounter among civilizations can be an opportunity for dialogue and cooperation.1 By citing Huntington, we want to raise here the question of the perceived significance of religion for the future. Religion will play a crucial role in the future. This is contrary to the belief that religion has died out in the process of secularization. It is, in fact, a recalcitrant phenomenon which refuses to go away.2 Religion has come back, in our globalized world, although perhaps not so much in its institutionalized version. This article will further reflect on the significance of religions in our globalized world by drawing on the works of two respected sociologists of religion namely, Roland Robertson and Peter Beyer. I will commence with a brief description of the multifaceted reality of the globalization process and the challenges it poses for religions, after which I will discuss the ideas of the two above mentioned authors. 

Author Biography

Dominador Bombongan Jr, De La Salle University, Manila

Dr. Dominador Bombongan, Jr. obtained his licentiate and doctorate in theology at the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium. At present, he is an associate professor of the Theology and Religious Education and Vice-Dean of the College of Liberal Arts of De La Salle University, Manila, Philippines. His research interests include globalization, liberation theology, eco-feminism and cosmopolitanism

References

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Robertson and Chirico, Jo Ann “Humanity, Globalization Theory and Worldwide Religious Resurgence: a Theoretical Exploration,” Sociological Analysis 46 no. 3 (1985), 219-242, 241. 32Robertson and Chirico, Jo Ann “Humanity, Globalization Theory and Worldwide Religious Resurgence,” 238.

Peter Beyer, “Privatization and the Public Influence of Religion in Global Society,” Theory Culture & Society 7, no. 2-3 (June 1990), 373-395, 377.

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Published

2009-12-31

How to Cite

Bombongan Jr, D. (2009). STATE OF RELIGION IN A GLOBALIZED WORLD. Journal of Dharma, 34(4), 413–430. Retrieved from https://dvkjournals.in/index.php/jd/article/view/508