
Contents
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1 Puritans and Revolution: Remembering the Origin; Religion and Social Critique in Early New England
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“Everything Seemed Possible” “Everything Seemed Possible”
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Harvey Cox and “Religionless Religion” Harvey Cox and “Religionless Religion”
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Peter Berger: Pluralism as Freedom, Freedom as Choice Peter Berger: Pluralism as Freedom, Freedom as Choice
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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9 The Sixties: Secularization and the Prophesies of Freedom
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Published:September 2008
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Abstract
This chapter shows that during the 1960s there was an increasing affinity between the notion that de‐institutionalized religion is something good and the intellectual and social sensibilities of the period. Two views on secularization and de‐institutionalization of religion, those of Christian theologian Harvey Cox and sociologist Peter L. Berger, mirrored the intellectual and social climate of the time and were broadly discussed and debated. In this chapter Slavica Jakelić argues that Berger and Cox's claims about the inevitable link between deinstitutionalization of religions and modernity were persuasive because they happened in a context in which “religionless religion” was increasingly becoming the ideal of religious life. Berger and Cox talked of the de‐institutionalization of religion as progress that brought about freedom for individuals to choose. Their prophecies of godlessness were the prophecies of freedom.
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