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Glossary›Religious Studies

Glossary

Religious Studies

The academic, non-confessional study of religious traditions, practices, beliefs, and texts through historical, sociological, anthropological, and comparative methods.

What is Religious Studies?

Religious Studies is an academic discipline that examines religion as a human phenomenon through secular, analytical methods drawn from the humanities and social sciences. Unlike theology—which operates from within a faith tradition—Religious Studies maintains methodological agnosticism, treating all religions as equally valid subjects of inquiry. Scholars in the field investigate sacred texts, ritual practices, institutional structures, belief systems, and the social functions of religion across cultures and historical periods. The discipline encompasses comparative religion, history of religions, phenomenology of religion, anthropology of religion, sociology of religion, psychology of religion, and critical theory approaches that interrogate categories like “the sacred,” “belief,” and “religion” itself.

Origins & Lineage

Religious Studies emerged as a distinct academic field in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, though its intellectual roots extend to Enlightenment-era comparative scholarship. The discipline crystallized alongside the professionalization of university research and the rise of secular education systems in Europe and North America. Friedrich Max Müller, who held the first professorship in comparative theology at Oxford (1868), pioneered the comparative study of religions through philological analysis of sacred texts, particularly in his edited series The Sacred Books of the East (1879-1910). His contemporary, Cornelius Petrus Tiele, established the science of religion (religionswissenschaft) in the Netherlands, emphasizing phenomenological description over theological judgment.

The field’s methodological foundations were shaped by figures including William James (The Varieties of Religious Experience, 1902), who applied psychological analysis to religious experience; Émile Durkheim (The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, 1912), who examined religion’s social functions; and Mircea Eliade, who served as chair of the University of Chicago’s History of Religions department (1957-1986) and developed influential theories of sacred space, time, and myth. The establishment of departments independent from seminaries and divinity schools—beginning with the University of Chicago’s 1892 Department of Comparative Religion—marked the discipline’s institutional separation from theological training.

How It’s Practiced

Religious Studies is practiced primarily as an academic discipline in university settings. Scholars employ diverse methodologies: historians trace the development of traditions through archival research and textual analysis; anthropologists conduct ethnographic fieldwork in religious communities; sociologists use surveys and statistical methods to study religious demographics and behaviors; literary scholars apply hermeneutic and critical theory to sacred texts; and philosophers examine religious epistemology and ethics.

A typical Religious Studies program includes courses in world religions (Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, indigenous traditions), regional specializations, thematic studies (mysticism, pilgrimage, fundamentalism), and methodological theory. Graduate students gain reading proficiency in languages relevant to their research area—Sanskrit, Arabic, Hebrew, classical Chinese, or ancient Greek. Research outputs include monographs, peer-reviewed journal articles, conference presentations, and increasingly, public scholarship through podcasts, digital humanities projects, and museum exhibitions.

The discipline values empirical rigor, cultural sensitivity, and reflexive awareness of the scholar’s own positionality. Participant observation—attending rituals, conducting interviews, learning practices—is balanced with analytical distance. Scholars debate the ethics of “insider” versus “outsider” perspectives and grapple with the colonial legacies embedded in early comparative religion scholarship.

Religious Studies Today

Contemporary Religious Studies has expanded beyond traditional “world religions” paradigms to include new religious movements, secularism as a research object, lived religion, material culture, digital religion, and the intersection of religion with race, gender, sexuality, and politics. Major professional organizations include the American Academy of Religion (founded 1909), the International Association for the History of Religions, and regional societies.

Public interest in the field manifests through university extension courses, museum programs, podcast series like Religious Studies Project and New Books in Religion, and online platforms offering academic lectures. The discipline increasingly engages with questions of religious literacy in pluralistic societies, countering misinformation, and analyzing religion’s role in contemporary conflicts and social movements. Scholars contribute to public discourse through op-eds, expert testimony, and interfaith dialogue facilitation—while maintaining academic objectivity.

Tension persists between descriptive and normative approaches, with some advocating for critical religion studies that deconstructs rather than reifies “religion” as a category. Debates continue over the field’s relationship to theology, its Eurocentric biases, and whether “religion” is a universally applicable concept or a Western colonial imposition.

Common Misconceptions

Religious Studies is not seminary education or ministerial training; it does not aim to strengthen faith or produce clergy. It is not theology, which reasons from within a tradition’s truth claims; Religious Studies examines those claims as cultural phenomena without adjudicating their validity. The field does not teach “how to be spiritual” or promote syncretism, though it may increase understanding across traditions.

Studying religion academically does not require personal religiosity; many scholars are agnostic or atheist. Conversely, having faith does not disqualify one from scholarly objectivity, though it requires methodological discipline. Religious Studies is not comparative theology (which seeks common truth across traditions) nor is it advocacy for or against religion—it is analysis, description, and interpretation conducted with scholarly rigor.

How to Begin

For those interested in Religious Studies as academic inquiry, begin with foundational texts: Huston Smith’s The World’s Religions (1991) provides an empathetic survey, while Jonathan Z. Smith’s Imagining Religion (1982) offers critical theoretical grounding. University extension programs and online platforms like Coursera offer introductory courses from accredited institutions.

Attend public lectures at university religious studies departments, listen to academic podcasts, or visit exhibitions at museums with religion collections. For formal study, undergraduate programs typically require no prerequisites; graduate work demands language proficiency and theoretical sophistication. The American Academy of Religion’s website lists programs, publications, and public resources. Approach the field with intellectual curiosity, humility about cultural difference, and willingness to interrogate assumptions—including the category of “religion” itself.

Related terms

comparative religiontheologyinterfaith dialoguesacred textsmysticismphenomenology
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