The Meaning of Sunday

The Practice of Belief in a Secular Age

By Joel Thiessen
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773546264, 240 pages, October 2015
Paperback : 9780773546271, 240 pages, October 2015
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773598027, November 2015
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773598034, November 2015

Description

Fewer Canadians identify with a religion, believe in a god, or attend weekly religious services than in past decades. What explains higher and lower levels of religiosity? Is secularization a myth or reality? What impact does religiosity or secularity have on a society’s social and civil fabric? In The Meaning of Sunday, Joel Thiessen addresses these questions by weaving together narratives from interviews with members of both religious and secular communities. Exploring the meanings and motivations behind people’s religious beliefs and behaviours, the book features discussions with three groups of people: those who attend religious services weekly, those who attend services mainly for religious holidays and rites of passage, and those who do not identify with any religious group and never attend religious services. Interview responses show that religiosity levels correlate to one’s personal experiences with the supernatural, religious organizations, and social ties with those who either encourage or discourage religious identification, belief, or practice. Concluding that the demand for religion is waning regardless of what religious groups include in their programs, Thiessen suggests that, apart from some initial social and civic concern, Canadian society may be just fine without it. Testing two dominant theories in the sociology of religion - secularization and rational choice theory - The Meaning of Sunday provides in-depth qualitative research on people's "lived religion" and contributes to a major ongoing debate concerning the nature and importance of religion in contemporary society.

Reviews

“An engaging book, The Meaning of Sunday pulls together evidence from significant literature on secularization and rational choice theory. Thiessen’s arguments are persuasive and on point.” Paul Bowlby, Saint Mary’s University

“A needed and important contribution to our understanding of Christian religiosity in Canada. The book draws from a broad knowledge of sociological theory and research on Canadian religion. The responses of active and marginal affiliates and religious non

"This study offers rich qualitative data, especially on the growing phenomenon of "religious nones." A quarter of Canadians now identify as religious nones, including one third of teens, and this book offers some fresh insights into their views. The study

“There is a striking theoretical thread running through these accounts: religious commitments are created and sustained by strong communal ties and lost in their absence. Life transitions break ties and habits, for instance, accounting for a primary point