From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Secularity (adjective form
secular) is the state of being separate from religion.[1]
For instance, eating and bathing may be regarded as examples of
secular activities, because there may not be anything inherently
religious about them. Nevertheless, both eating and bathing are
regarded as sacraments in some religious traditions,
and therefore would be religious activities in those worldviews. Saying a prayer derived from religious text or doctrine,
worshipping through the
context of a religion, and attending a religious school
are examples of religious (non-secular) activities. Prayer and
meditation are not necessarily non-secular, since the
concept of spirituality and higher consciousness are
not married solely to any religion but are practiced and arose
independently across a continuum of cultures. However, it can
be argued that these practices have arisen as a result of religious
(non-secular) influence.
Most businesses and corporations, and some governments, are secular organizations. All
of the state universities in the United States are
secular organizations (especially because of the First Amendment of the United States
Constitution) while some prominent private universities are
connected with the Christian or Jewish religions. Among many
of these, seven examples of them are Baylor University, Brigham Young University, Boston College,
Emory
University, the University of Notre Dame, Southern Methodist
University, and Yeshiva College
(listed in alphabetical order).
The public university systems of the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan are also secular, although some
government-funded primary and secondary schools may be religiously
aligned in some countries.
Origin of
term
Secularity derives from a Latin word meaning "of the age".
The Christian
doctrine that God exists outside time led medieval Western culture to use secular
to indicate separation from specifically religious affairs and
involvement in temporal ones. This meaning has been extended to
mean separation from any religion, regardless of whether it has a
similar doctrine.
This does not necessarily imply hostility to God or religion,
such as Atheism, though some
use the term this way (see "secularism", below); Martin Luther used
to speak of secular work as a vocation from God for most
Christians.
Modern
usage
Examples of secular used in this way include:
- Secular
authority, which involves legal, police,
and military authority as
opposed to clerical authority, or matters under church
control.
- Secular
clergy in the Roman Catholic
Church, who, traditionally, do not live the monastic lives of the regular clergy
and are therefore, in a sense, more engaged with the temporal
world. For a related Roman Catholic reference, see Secular
institute.
- Secular education, schools that
are not run by churches, synagogues, or other religious organizations.
- Secular
states with secular governments]] that follow civil
laws—as opposed to religious authorities like the Islamic Shariah—Catholic Canon law, or Jewish Halakha, and that specifically do not favor any
particular religion.
- Secular Jewish culture,
cultural manifestations of Jewishness that are not specifically
religious.
- Secular
music, composed for general use, as opposed to sacred music which is composed for church
use. Secular sonatas, in the 17th century, were those not
composed for church services.
- Secular Organizations
for Sobriety, a secular alternative to the Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)
organization which is a loosely religious one although nondenominational.
- Secular
society refers to aspects of society that are not (mosque, church, synagogue, temple)-affiliated.
- Secular spirituality, the
pursuit of spirituality without a formal affiliation with a church,
or other religious organization, or the pursuit of
spirituality specifically in the context of temporal affairs.
Related
concepts
- Laïcité is a French concept related to
the separation of state and religion, sometimes rendered by the
English cognate neologism laicity and also translated by
the words secularity and secularization. The word
laïcité is sometimes characterized as having no exact
English equivalent; it is similar to the more moderate definition
of secularism, but is
not as ambiguous as that word.
- Secularism is an assertion or
belief that religious issues should not be the basis of politics, and it is a
movement that promotes those ideas (or an ideology) which hold that religion has no
place in public life. Secularist organizations are
distinguished from merely secular ones by their political
advocacy of such positions.
- Laïcisme is the French word that most
resembles secularism,
especially in the latter's extreme definition, as it is understood
by the Catholic Church, which sets laïcisme in opposition
to the allegedly far milder concept of laïcité. The correspondent word
laicism (also spelled laïcism) is sometimes used
in English as a synonym for secularism.
See also
External
links
Notes
- ^
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language,
Fourth Edition. "Secularity". ("1. The condition or quality of
being secular. 2. Something secular.")