This also suggests that wars have major effects on:
Acceptance or rejection of Atheism,
whether or not Atheists organize or remain "quietist," and
cultural changes that create a social environment in which Atheist  views
become increasingly well known.
 
There are differences in kinds of wars, of course. WWI generated
massive changes across the board in all Western cultures,
while limited wars (Korea, Gulf War 1) had limited effects.
 
In contemporary context, the rise of the unaffiliated (I do not use  the
term "nones" because it sounds exactly like "nuns") may be, in part,
one effect of Afghanistan and Iraq / Gulf War 2.
 
 
Some ideas worth thinking about.
 
Billy


 
=======================================
 
The Anxious Bench
 
FAITH AT WAR
November 1, 2013 
By _Philip Jenkins_ 
(http://www.patheos.com/blogs/anxiousbench/author/philipjenkins/)   
 
I have been thinking how warfare drives religious change. 
This arises partly from preparing the graduate course I am teaching at 
Baylor  University in the coming Spring semester on _Global  Christianity_ 
(http://www.personal.psu.edu/faculty/j/p/jpj1/jenkins5393.htm) , where of 
course 
I am tracing the fates of different churches  and missions over lengthy 
periods of time. Also, the new book I have coming out  next year presents the 
case for the First World War as a worldwide religious  revolution. This is The 
Great and Holy War, to be published by  HarperOne in May 2014 – more on 
that in coming posts.

 
 
Whether in teaching or writing, I frequently note the contribution of wars 
to  religious history, although I don’t think this point receives anything 
like the  attention it deserves in standard histories of Christianity, or of 
other  religions. The literature on “war and religion” is of course vast, 
but normally  it refers to the ethical and spiritual dimensions of violence – 
when for  instance can Christians support war? When is resistance 
necessary? What are the  criteria for a just war? Historically, how have 
preachers or 
theologians  justified war? 
My theme is different. Major wars, of their nature, often provoke such  
massive and far-reaching changes that they deserve to be regarded as  
revolutionary movements in their own right, equivalent to the French or Russian 
 
Revolutions. Political consequences apart, they transform society, technology,  
the economy, and culture, and their effects can reverberate for decades. It 
is  scarcely surprising then that time and again, we see wars affecting the 
shape  that particular religions or religious traditions take.
 
Wars make or break religions, to a degree that might be uncomfortable for  
thinkers in traditions nervous about seeming to praise or endorse violence. 
A  disciplinary bias might also be at work, in that historians of 
Christianity are  not necessarily too familiar with political, imperial or 
military 
history.  That’s a general observation, not a criticism. 
Without wishing to offer anything so grand as a new theory of religious  
history (!), let me offer a few themes and thoughts. 
*War has shaped the foundation of major religions 
The obvious example here is the rise of Islam, which would not have 
achieved  the worldwide impact it did without the military successes of the 
Arab 
armies.  The political consequence of that movement ultimately destroyed what 
had been  one of the world’s great world religions, namely Zoroastrianism, 
which today  survives only on a tiny scale. 
If military and imperial affairs had worked out differently – if for 
instance  the Roman and Persian empires had not weakened each other so 
appallingly 
in  their long wars between 530 and 630 or so – then conceivably the 
Islamic  movement would have been strangled at birth.
 
 
Another example would be the great Jewish revolutionary war against Rome  
between 66 and 73 AD, which led to the sack of Jerusalem and the Fall of the  
Temple. Among many other consequences, that catastrophe led to the complete 
 restructuring of Judaism, essentially to the creation of what became 
medieval  and modern Judaism; and also to the decisive split between Judaism 
and 
emerging  Christianity. 
Different outcome, different religious histories.
 
*The outcome of war decides which competing religions will grow and  spread 
their influence 
Wars determine the success or failure of states, and with them the 
religious  traditions that they support. In some cases, failure in war can 
result in 
a  religious current being utterly wiped out. (If you don’t believe that, 
just ask  an Albigensian). 
Suppose for instance we are tracing the early history of Protestantism. We  
might tell that story through a sequence of reformers and theologians, 
thinkers  and preachers. Arguably, though, the most important event that 
happened in  seventeenth century Protestantism was the outcome of the Thirty 
Years 
War, and  specifically around the year 1630. If matters had worked out a 
little  differently, the whole Protestant state order could easily have been 
smashed in  Germany and Northern Europe, leaving only disfranchised 
minorities. Presumably,  these would have been the targets of a lengthy 
Catholic 
reconversion campaign,  on the lines of what actually happened in Bohemia and 
Austria in the later  seventeenth century.
 
Although major Protestant powers were not directly involved in the war –  
notably England – their regimes would have faced enormous political and 
cultural  pressures to conform to the new continental religious order. 
Protestantism did not survive the seventeenth century because of the piety 
of  individual believers, its theological sophistication, or its attitude to 
Bible  translation. It survived because Protestant states somehow defeated 
their  Catholic rivals on successive battlefields. Without Swedish and Dutch 
military  successes in the 1630s, Protestantism would have been a footnote 
in Christian  history.
 
Good old-fashioned power politics also proved decisive. Catholic France was 
 “the eldest daughter of the church,” but had no wish to live in a Europe  
dominated by Catholic Habsburgs. France thus swung its military might 
against  Catholic Spain and the Empire, in effect saving the Protestants.
 
 
*Imperial wars shape the success or failure of overseas  missions 
Less apocalyptically, we see how almost casual were the transitions of rule 
 in particular European colonies overseas. In India, for instance, the wars 
of  the 1750s could easily have created a French hegemony, driving out the 
English.  In a hypothetical French Raj, Catholic missions would presumably 
have occupied  the role that English Protestants actually played in “real” 
history. 
In Africa likewise, the success or failure of imperial armies decided which 
 particular states and their churches won the right to convert particular  
territories. Those missions might not have been enormously influential in 
their  early years, but their efforts mattered enormously as Christianity 
boomed across  the continent. Anglicans and Catholics won huge successes. If 
colonial wars had  worked out differently, perhaps German Lutherans would have 
won those rich  spoils. (Yes, I know Africa has its Lutherans, but their 
numbers could have been  far larger). 
Wars also disrupt the communication networks on which missions depend. The  
triumph of Christianity in modern black Africa owes much to the First World 
War  years and the severing of traditional ties with mission agencies in 
metropolitan  nations. This forced native African churches to develop their 
own leaders, and  the following years witnessed a widespread upsurge of 
prophets and charismatic  leaders. Many modern independent churches date from 
these years. 
*The horrors of war stir mystical and even apocalyptic expectations,  
driving revivals and new religious movements. 
I will discuss this in my next post. 
Hmm, this material is starting to look like the sketch for a course, isn’t  
it? Or even a book?

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