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Religion
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To cite this article: Michael P. Carroll (2012) Rodney Stark's One True Vision: retrograde
historiography and the academic study of religion, Religion, 42:1, 105-125, DOI:
10.1080/0048721X.2011.640358
To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0048721X.2011.640358
Religion
Vol. 42, No. 1, January 2012, 105125
Michael P. Carroll*
For nearly half a century, Rodney Stark has been well known to anyone involved
with the academic study of religion in the English-speaking world. Partly this is
because his work with Charles Glock in the 1960s, which called attention to important differences between denominations that were usually lumped together in a
single Protestant category in social-science surveys, is still regarded as foundational (Moberg 2008). Partly as well, Stark is known for his work with John
Loand (Loand and Stark 1965) on the rise of new religious movements, which
argued among other things that having affective ties with existing members
(i.e., ties based on family relationship or friendship) was typically more important
than belief in determining who joined these movements. Stark has also won
praise, mainly from people trained in schools of theology (see for example Bell
[2005]) for calling attention to the emphasis on undermining and discrediting religious belief that seems latent in much existing scholarship on religion.
But for the most part, Starks prominence results from the fact that during the
1980s and 1990s he and a variety of associates used rational-choice theory to
develop the theory of religious economies that will be familiar to the readers of
this journal. Although that theory, and in particular that theorys claim that
*Email: mcarroll@wlu.ca
ISSN 0048-721X print/ISSN 1096-1151 online/12/01010521 2012 Taylor & Francis
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0048721X.2011.640358
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M.P. Carroll
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True God (2001b) Stark looked at the historical consequences of monotheism (the
subtitle to the book). His core claim was that the exclusive nature of the relationship
that exists between God and believers in a monotheistic tradition lays the foundation for mass mobilization around a variety of issues (like missionization) in a
way that is far less likely in non-monotheistic religions. Since, he argues (pp. 20
22), people prefer a god who is rational, responsive and dependable like, well,
the God who appears in the Jewish, Christian and Islamic traditions, most of his
discussion of mass mobilization in this book involves examples from these
traditions.
Stark is clear in noting that the emphasis on exclusivity in the monotheistic traditions can lead to violence, and spends a signicant section of the book discussing
outbursts of collective violence against Jews in both Christian and Moslem
societies. In his nal chapter, however, in what is clearly a nod to the theory of religious economies, he goes on to argue that under culturally sanctioned conditions of
religious pluralism, the violence that might otherwise ow from the logic of monotheism can be moderated or even eliminated. And the evidence for this? The experience in the United States.
Previous commentators (Alles 2009; Carroll 1996; Simpson 1990) have already
noted that Starks general theorizing about religion, especially in regard to the
theory of religious economies, has been pervaded and shaped by a distinctively
American cultural ethos. That trend continues in this more recent work. For
example, American historians (and Americans generally) have always argued
that one of the greatest strengths of the federalist form of government developed
and instituted by the Founding Fathers was a system of checks and balances
that divided power among different branches of government, with the result that
no one branch could dominate the other (see for example Henretta, David and
Dumenil [2006]; Hofstadter, Miller and Aaron [1967]) In the last chapter of One
True God, Stark in effect borrows this checks and balances model from the political
realm and makes it one of the great strengths of the American religious system. Thus
he argues that civility, that is, a tolerance for other faiths (even for other monotheistic faiths), will develop when power is sufciently diffused among a set of competitors that conict is not in anyones interest (p. 222). The fact that this structural
condition prevails among religions in the United States but rarely elsewhere is
for Stark why the US has not experienced the sort of religious-violence experiences in the Sudan, the Balkans, Mexico (where we are told without citation
that Protestant converts still risk being murdered in the more remote villages
[p. 257]), etc.
Given Starks scholarly credentials in sociology, it is hardly surprising that One
True God was well reviewed in sociological journals, and hardly surprising as well
that most of these reviewers stressed the theoretical continuities with Starks
earlier (and highly visible) work in sociology. Mirola (2002) and Johnson (2003),
for example, saw many of the arguments in One True God as deriving from
rational choice theory; Ammerman (2002) saw Stark as emphasizing the importance of social networks in promoting religious growth, an argument that he
had made forcefully in his earlier work on the rise of Christianity (Stark 1996).
On the other hand, it should be noted that outside of Sociology (and so in areas
where the cumulative weight of Starks sociological works likely mattered less)
Stark tended to be ignored. The American Historical Review, for example, which
had reviewed Starks work on religion in the early American republic (Finke
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M.P. Carroll
and Stark 1992) and his work on the rise of Christianity (Stark 1996), ignored One
True God.
What I want to call attention to here, however, mainly because it is so strongly
related to themes that would appear in subsequent books, is a section of Starks
last chapter (pp. 251256) in which he rails against the libels that liberal clergy,
liberal theologians, and writers in the secular press have directed against evangelical and fundamentalist Protestants. In particular, Stark takes issue with claims
implying that that evangelical and fundamentalism Protestants are stupid, crazy,
ignorant and dangerous and argues that competent social scientists know that
these [claims] are lies, entirely equivalent to fantasies concerning Jewish conspiracies or orgies in Catholic convents (p. 254). Although Stark himself mainly cites his
own work in support of this last claim, it is certainly true that since the publication
of One True God, much evidence has been brought forward that does undermine
common stereotypes of evangelical and fundamentalism Protestant (see in particular Gallagher [2003]; Greeley and Hout [2006]). What needs to be emphasized,
however, is that in this section Stark over and over again labels the stereotypical
statements made about fundamentalists and evangelicals to be instances of incivility. In the end, in other words, the logic of his overall argument is suggesting that
non-believers and liberal Protestants and Catholics (who, remember, are the groups
whom Stark sees as promoting these stereotypes about evangelicals and fundamentalists) are the real threat to the system of pluralistic tolerance that makes
the US religious system so wonderful. As we shall see, this devaluation of religious
liberals, and implicit privileging of fundamentalist and evangelical Protestantism,
is an important part of a message that has become increasingly central to Starks
work.
Starks next book, For the Glory of God (2003), purports to demonstrate how Christian monotheism was instrumental in giving rise to four historical processes in the
West: (1) the reforming impulse that culminated in the Reformation; (2) the rise of
modern science; (3) witch hunts; and (4) the eventual abolition of slavery. Generally,
this book too was relatively well received, mainly because Stark was seen as once
again bringing a new perspective on old issues. One reviewer (Petersen 2005), for
example suggested:
What is most thought provoking about the book is his reversal of Durkheims perspective on religion For the Glory of God challenges numerous assumptions
about how religion interacts with society. The book, and its argument, will be
subject to much discussion. (p. 410)
Even an historian like Dana Robert (2004), who found Starks argument to be simplistic, could compliment Stark for his creativity and could recommend For The
Glory of God because it injects new energy and evidence into old but signicant discussion about the historical importance of religious belief.
And yet, careful attention to the logic of Starks argument reveals that far from
being innovative and creative, his argument is really quite old and stale.
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Thus, very early in the book (p. 40), Stark makes a distinction that is central to the
argument he builds throughout the book. This is the distinction between the
Church of Power (more or less, the institutionalized hierarchy of the Church)
and the Church of Piety, by which Stark means those who were still committed
to the moral vision of early Christianity. He then goes on to argue that over the
centuries the Church of Power became increasingly corrupt. His evidence for this
corruption consists almost entirely in a litany of anecdotes detailing the sexual misadventures of succession of popes (see pp. 4146). If all this seems familiar, it
should.
Although Stark routinely emphasizes that he is a social scientist, not an apologist
for any particular religious viewpoint, his account of Christian reform is a fairly
straightforward version of what Carroll (2007: 9395) has called the Degradation
Narrative that was for centuries the hallmark of Protestant historiography. Thus,
in the Protestant worldview, Christianity was originally a pristine religion, very
much centered on an interiorized religiosity and concerned with otherworldly salvation, but over time became encrusted with a number of magical and sacramental
processes under the inuence of a corrupt clergy. The great achievement of the
Reformation (in this narrative) is that it restored Christianity to its initial pristine
condition.
Although the Degradation Narrative was initially only a Protestant view of
Christian history, it has been projected by proxy onto other traditions. Norman
Girardot (2002: 8689, 318319, 590591), for example, demonstrates how this narrative was projected onto the study of Chinese religion in the 19th century; Philip
Almond (1988) has shown how this same narrative shaped the academic perception of Buddhism in Victorian England; and Jonathan Smith (1990) has argued
that the impulse to construct early Christianity as a pristine, interiorized religion
had long warped and continues to warp the study of the Roman mystery
cults with which early Christianity was often contrasted. What Stark has done is
to resuscitate the Degradation Narrative by once again making it central to the
study of Christianity (or at least, to his study of Christianity).
At least up until the 1960s, the Degradation Narrative was typically paired, at
least in accounts of Christian reform written by historians, with an emphasis on
Protestant triumphalism. Central to this view was the belief that the Reformation
was the culmination of reformist movements that had built up slowly but cumulatively over the centuries in reaction to clerical corruption and to those encrustations
(the worship of Mary and the Saints, pilgrimages, etc.) that had distorted the
message of early Christianity. In this view of things, the fact that this reformist
emphasis gained more and more popular support with each passing century
made the Reformation itself inevitable. One consequence of this old historiographical emphasis on a slow but cumulative building up of reformist impulse in European societies was a historiographical predisposition to focus on individuals and
movements who could be viewed a precursors to the Reformation. John Foxes
massive, and inuential, Acts and Monuments (1965), originally published in
1563, is likely the most well known English language example of this type of Protestant literature. In any event, Stark (pp. 5368) mimics Foxe (and other Protestant
historians) by running through a list of reformers and reform movements (including the Cathars, the Waldensians, the Beghards and Beguines, Wyclif and the
Lollards, John Hus, etc.) in order to establish that indeed the Church of Piety
had been trying to achieve a reformation for many centuries (p. 117). By
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M.P. Carroll
Grand ethnography
Starks recent work also very much resembles the sort of grand ethnography (the
term is from Connell [1997]) that was typical of 19th-century social-evolutionary
theorizing. Thus, although different 19th-century theorists posited different
evolutionary sequences, what all theorists in the grand ethnography tradition
had in common was: (1) a tendency to ransack the historical record for bits and
pieces of information that could be used to describe each of the stages posited in
the particular social evolutionary sequence they favored; and (2) an equally
strong tendency to explain away, or simply ignore material, that didnt quite
t the sequence they were promoting. I am by no means the rst person to
suggest the latter. In his review of For the Glory of God, for instance, Robbins
(2005) noted that Starks explicit decision to exclude the Peasants Revolt or the Anabaptist movement from consideration in his discussion of Protestant success
makes for a clean and coherent sociological theory, perhaps, but renders suspect
his triumphalist tone (p. 143). But there are other instances in which Stark explains
away evidence that does not t his version of grand ethnography, and I want to
discuss two of them briey. The rst concerns what might be called the Erasmus
problem for Stark.
In any number of works, but in particular in Praise of Folly (1971 [1511]) and in
Pilgrimage for Religions Sake (1997 [1526]), Erasmus was quick to condemn clerical
corruption, popular credulity and a range of practices and beliefs having to do with
relics, pilgrimages, the cult of the saints, etc. and in his discussion of Erasmus (and
humanist reformers generally) Stark (pp. 7579) concedes all this. The problem for
Stark, given his historiographical emphasis on Protestant triumphalism, is that
Erasmus did not break with the Church. How then to deal with Erasmus and
his fellow humanists? Answer: make Erasmus a religious reformer not really
concerned with religion. In Starks own words (p. 76):
However, some, perhaps most of the leading Biblical Humanists of the late
fteenth and early sixteenth centuries were probably less than sincere. Their
personal faith often seems hollow, their criticisms of the Church and of religion
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often seem too viciously gleeful, and many of them greatly valued form over
content These aspects of Humanism snobbery and skepticism were
exemplied by the most famous Humanist of them all, Desiderius Erasmus
(14691536).
Not content to simply label Erasmus as insincere in his religiosity, Stark goes on
(pp. 7678) to further denigrate Erasmus by calling attention to the fact that
although Erasmus had entered the Augustinian order, he requested a dispensation to live in the world and to wear lay clothing; that he earned large royalties
from his writings; and that he was always careful to stay on the good side
of Rome.
At one level, the suggestion that Erasmus was skeptical and not really religious is
not new; as Cameron (1996) points out (p. 128), it was a charge that Erasmuss
critics both Catholic and Lutheran leveled at him in his own time. Still,
careful analysis of Erasmuss life and work by modern scholars (see for example
Halkin [1987]) suggests that while he did seek to avoid institutional entanglements
and was ruthless in satirizing what he considered superstitions, he was nevertheless committed to a very individualized type of piety centered on the gure of
Christ and emphasizing interiorized prayer aimed directly to God. Indeed, Manselds (2010) overview of Erasmian scholarship over the course of the 20th century
suggests that one of the hallmarks of this body of work is an increasing appreciation of Erasmuss individualized piety and of the t between such piety and Erasmuss dedication to reason, education and pacism.
Nevertheless, whats most important here is not so much that Stark (once again)
shows no awareness of modern scholarship on the subject hes discussing, but
rather the sort of religion which Starks critique of Erasmus implicitly privileges.
After all, Erasmuss own critiques t well with the Degradation Narrative. So:
why then is it so important to Stark to dissociate Erasmus (the individual) from
the building process of reform that Stark is describing? The answer, I suggest, is
that Erasmus never embraced the sort of high-tension, in-your-face, religion that
in his earlier writing Stark has consistently argued is the sort of faith associated
with the highest levels of religious commitment in an unregulated religious
economy (see especially Finke and Stark [1992]). Erasmuss misfortune, in other
words, is that although he clearly embraced a deeply interiorized religiosity, he
was clearly not the sort of proto-Methodist or proto-Baptist that he needed to
be in order to t with the specic notion of reform that underlies the social evolutionary sequence that Stark is describing. So: Erasmus has to be explained away,
and he is.
My second example involves Starks discussion of the Reformation in England
(pp. 8792). This discussion proceeds by rst mentioning that the Lollards prepared
the way for Lutheranism; then by discussing how Protestantism entered England
through mercantile links with the Continent; and then by describing the ways in
which Crown and Parliament combined to initiate the English Reformation
(p. 89). Still, when all is said and done, what does Stark see as the major cause of
the Reformation in England? Simply: it was the great popular appeal of Protestant
Reforms (p. 91) in the context of a conict between the Church and the English
Crown that had been intensifying for many years (p. 91). To anyone familiar
with the historiography of the English Reformation, statements like these must
inevitably raise red ags.
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M.P. Carroll
Up until the 1980s, the prevailing view of the Reformation in England was
indeed a Protestant triumphalist view that stressed as does Stark the great
popular appeal of Protestantism and widespread anti-clericalism. Starting in
the 1970s, and continuing into the 1980s and early 1990s, however, this view
came increasingly to be discredited. A number of writers but notably J.J. Scarisbrick (1984), Christopher Haigh (1987, 1993) and Eamon Duffy (1992)
brought forward an immense amount of evidence which established fairly
conclusively that popular Catholicism in England was thriving on the eve of
the Reformation and that earlier accounts had grossly exaggerated anti-clerical
sentiment. Very quickly, this revisionist position became the dominant position
among English historians, with the result that in the same year that Stark
published For the Glory of God, Peter Marshall (2003) could begin his text on
Reformation England with:
Since at least the mid-1970s, historians have regularly observed that the Tudor
monarchs were on notably good terms with the papacy; that the English
Church was almost uniquely fortunate in western Europe with the quality and
commitment of its bishops and clergy; and that English lay (non-clerical)
people participated with enthusiasm and sacraments, and poured considerable
resources into their parish churches. (p. 1)
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who is seen to have created the universe according to immutable principles that can
be discovered); witchcraft persecutions (conict between competing versions of
monotheism reduces tolerance of non-conforming belief); and the abolition of
slavery (only the logic of Christian monotheism creates the moral predisposition
to abolish slavery).
In these rst two books, then, Stark is advancing nothing less than the claim that
Christian monotheism is responsible for the advance of Western civilization and the
superiority of Western society over non-Western societies.
Progress resumed
For the next book in this series Stark chose a title that makes the social-evolutionary
avor of his argument especially blatant: The Victory of Reason (2005). Basically,
Stark devotes the bulk of this book to expanding the list of Western accomplishments that he sees as deriving from the logic of Christian monotheism. His subtitle
is a good summary of what he intends to show: How Christianity led to freedom,
capitalism and Western success. And what is it about Christian monotheism that
sets it apart from other monotheisms, like Islam and Judaism? Stark repeats here
much the same argument he made in connection with the rise of modern science.
Basically, according to Stark, the Christian conception of God promotes the view
that there is always more and more to be discovered about the universe created
by God, and over time (sometimes a long time!) this impels Christian societies
toward all the things that Stark discusses in this book (technological innovation,
progress in high art, capitalism, etc.).
Here again though, as in his previous books, although Stark has positive things
to say about Christianity (in general) and Catholicism, the logic of his argument
privileges Protestantism. This is easiest seen in his discussion of capitalism, a
subject that takes up almost half of his text. Stark is at pains to say that unlike
Weber, he does not see Protestantism per se as having given rise to capitalism.
On the contrary, he devotes an entire chapter (pp. 103127) to showing that
capitalism arose in Catholic societies long before the Reformation. Still, in his
Introduction, he summarizes his explanation of why capitalism emerged only in
Europe this way:
Why did things turn out differently in Europe? Because of the Christian commitment to rational theology something that may have played a major role in
causing the Reformation but that surely predated Protestantism by far more
than a millennium. (p. xiii)
In other words, and consistent with the argument made in One True God, the
impulse toward progress that is latent in the logic of Christian monotheism led
rst to the emergence of European capitalism and then (centuries later) to Protestantism. Phrased differently still, Starks argument privileges Protestantism
because that argument sees Protestantism as one of the many progressive advances
(like Western success; the rise of modern science, the abolition of slavery, freedom,
etc.) that have emerged out of the logic of Christian monotheism. Catholicism, in
this schema, is once again just a social evolutionary way station on the road to
Protestantism.
Nor does Stark see the process of religious evolution he is describing to be at an
end. In the nal two pages (pp. 234235) of The Victory of Reason, he rst wonders
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aloud if modernization is still linked to Christianity and then gives the answer: yes,
it is. The evidence? Simply: Christianity is spreading rapidly in non-Western
societies. While acknowledging that Christianity might be appealing for a variety
of reasons, one of them, he argues, is certainly that it is a ticket to Western
success. In his own words,
another signicant factor is its appeal to reason and the fact that it is so inseparably linked to the rise of Western Civilization. For many non-Europeans, becoming a Christian is intrinsic to becoming modern. (p. 235)
Readers can decide for themselves if the principle that Stark is enunciating is truly
as fundamental a Judeo-Christian premise as he claims. The only point I want to
make is that this principle, though rst introduced simply as a Judeo-Christian
belief, very quickly becomes (for Stark) nothing less than an explanatory tool for
understanding the evolution of all religions across time and space. In his own
words: The principle of divine accommodation provides a truly remarkable key
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for completely reappraising the origins and history of religions (p. 7) and using
this key to do just that is what Discovering God is all about.
Unlike the other books in this series, which are mostly about the things brought
into existence by the unique logic of Christianity, Discovering God is almost entirely
about religion itself. Thus, after the now-familiar discussion designed to establish
that Durkheim and a host of other earlier theorists had it wrong and that gods
are central to what religion is all about, Stark considers a dizzying array of case
studies, including: the religions of ancient Mesopotamia; Mayan and Aztec religion; Roman religion; Hinduism; Buddhism; Taoism, Confucianism and other
Chinese religions. In each case, he argues that the historical record is best understood using the theory of religious economies. In other words, in Starks reconstruction of the historical record, these case studies establish that: (1) religious
monopolies promote clerical laxity and low levels of popular participation; (2) religious plurality leads to competition; and (3) high-tension religion sells best.
Although I suspect that there is much in Starks discussion of non-Christian religions that would be challenged by specialists, there is nothing inherently problematic in trying to show the universal applicability of what is supposedly a
general theory. Where Starks argument does become problematic, however, is in
the last quarter of the book (p. 282 ff).
One of the rst signs that Stark will be developing an argument that is just a bit
unusual, at least in social-scientic circles, appears in the discussion of miracles
(pp. 284285) that forms part of his chapter on the rise of Christianity. He starts
by noting that some scholars have used the mention of miracles in the Gospel narratives as the basis for discrediting those narratives. For Stark, this is simple ignorance (his term) and he goes on to identify two groups here. The rst are those
militant atheists (Stark seems never to have met an atheist who wasnt militant)
who ridicule miracles on the grounds they are violations of natural law and so
impossible. The second group are those people who see miracles as the misperception of entirely natural events. He holds little regard for either view. In his own
words:
Both approaches to miracles are equally absurd. To make miracles plausible, all
that is needed is to postulate the existence of a God who created the universe,
nothing more. Surely a God who created the natural laws could suspend them
at will So, was Lazarus raised from the dead? Perhaps, and perhaps not. But
if God exists, he could have been. Was Mary a virgin? She could have been. Did
the resurrection occur? It could have. (p. 285, emphases in original)
This is a truly remarkable passage. Remember that Stark is not talking here about
what ordinary Christians might believe to make miracles plausible. He is talking
about the plausibility of miracles, and for Stark what makes them plausible is
the existence of God.
Much of what remains in this particular chapter reprises and then builds upon
arguments that Stark has made in earlier publications (such as Stark [1996])
about Roman religion and the rise of Christianity. Basically: Christianity ourished
because it was a high-tension sect that did well in the relatively open religious
economy of the Roman Empire. Naturally, for Stark, Christianity changed when
it became the ofcial religion of the Empire and entered into a monopoly situation.
The fact that he uses the heading Monopoly and Decline (rather than, say, the
more neutral Monopoly and Change) at the beginning of his discussion of the
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M.P. Carroll
post-Constantine Church (p. 327) signals to the reader that his account is once more
being shaped by the Degradation Narrative.
In Starks account, once Christianity became the ofcial state religion, sons of the
aristocracy ooded into the priesthood in order to pursue luxury and ease (p. 329)
rather than to promote piety. As a result, Christian fervor was allowed to wither
(p. 329) and a substantial proportion of medieval society failed to attend church at
all unless ordered to do so by their lord (p. 329). We also know that when the
common people did show up in church they often misbehaved (p. 329). As has
been noted before (Carroll [1996]; see also Sommerville [2002]), the measures
that Stark has used to measure religiosity (and uses again here), namely, interiorized fervor and regular attendance at formal church services, rests upon an
implicitly Protestant notion of piety that misses much about the lived experience
of Catholicism during the medieval and modern periods.
In the end, though, Stark like past scholars caught in the rigid grip of an oldfashioned Protestant historiography is concerned with progression toward
truth and so it is to the matter of religious truth, in the good old-fashioned
sense of that word, to which he turns in his Conclusion. In a section headed Criteria of Divine inspiration he rst rejects the idea that all religions are somewhat
true (p. 390). He then poses the question have all religions contributed to the discovery of God? (p. 390) and in the next sentence gives his answer: Assuming for
the moment that God exists, the answer must be no (p. 390). Stark then tells us:
I suggest three criteria by which it is possible to separate faiths into those that could
reect actual divine inspiration in that they increased our understanding of God, and
those that seem not to have been inspired. (p. 390, emphasis added)
And what are the three criteria that we can all use to separate the religions of the
world into those that tell us something about God and those that do not? The rst
criterion, were told, assumes that God reveals himself (p. 390). This means, for
Stark, that religions whose founders did not claim divine revelation lacked the
means to contribute to the discovery of God (p. 391). The second criterion is consistency. Here again, Stark has to be quoted to appreciate the sheer enormity of
what he is saying:
It is all well and good to suppose that God limits his revelations to the prevailing
level of human understanding, but it is not plausible to suppose that his revelations are utterly contradictory. Granted that variations can arise but there
should still be substantial compatibility among any religions that are based on
divine inspirations. (p. 391)
In other words, starting from the premise that there really is only one God out there
(up there?), then he (and this one God is always he in Starks discussion) would of
course be consistent in revealing his message to people in different cultures and
different times. And the third criterion?
The third criterion is progressive complexity. Ordered as to when they appeared,
authentic religions [emphasis added] should reveal an increasingly sophisticated
and complex understanding of God they should form a developmental or evolutionary sequence. (p. 391)
Of course the use of a descriptor like authentic in this context only reinforces what
should now be clear: Starks analysis suggests that the God he is describing does
exist and religions which have a direct connection with this particular God are
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privileged. In any event, Stark expands on this third criterion by linking it to the
principle of divine accommodation mentioned in the Introduction. Since God
reveals himself within the current limits of the human capacity to understand it
follows that over the course of history, Gods revelations should progress from
the simple to the more complex (p. 393).
Having introduced these three criteria, Stark goes on to quickly order all the
world religions discussed in earlier chapters. The temple religions of Sumer,
Egypt, Greece, early Rome and Mesoamerica are quickly set aside, since they
have no place within the progressive core of inspired faiths (p. 393). Judaism, Zoroastrianism and Christianity do make the cut, though of course Christianity epitomizes revealed religion and offers a substantially more complex and nuanced
vision of God as is appropriate for a faith that fullls the Old Testament and presents a more comprehensive doctrine of salvation (p. 394). And Islam? Sorry.
Allah is too unpredictable and unknowable within the Islamic tradition. For
Stark this is regressive, and why would God have sent a regressive message to
Arab tribes that were in the process of converting to Judaism and Christianity
(p. 395)? Presuming progressive complexity, then, Stark concludes that it would
be inappropriate to include Islam in the inspired core of faiths (p. 395).
In the end, then, what we have in this concluding chapter is an especially clear
statement of the social-evolutionary schema that underlies all of the books in this
series. Basically: God exists and he reveals himself to humans throughout the
world according to what they can understand. Religions can therefore be
ordered on an evolutionary scale depending up how truly inspired they are,
with again Protestant Christianity at the apex. In the end, though, what is
most signicant about this iteration of his argument is that it allows us to see
even more clearly the nature of the Protestant historiographical bias that has
shaped Starks work.
Thus, for some time now both David Tracy (1981) and Andrew Greeley (2000)
have argued that there is a fundamental difference between the Protestant Imagination and the Catholic Imagination. In the Protestant Imagination, the emphasis is
on Gods transcendence and so on: the great distance between God and humanity.
Within the logic of this worldview, what becomes important is the message that
God sends to humanity and the ways in which human beings respond to that
message. In the Catholic Imagination, by contrast, the emphasis is on Gods immanence, that is, on his presence in the world. This in turn gives rise to a predisposition to think about God using metaphors drawn from daily experience as well as a
predisposition to draw closer to God (or, more generally, to the sacred) by involvement in human society (since society is pervaded by the sacred). Starks emphasis
on a transcendent God who sends messages that progressively reveal more and
more about his intent and nature to human beings would seem to be a textbook
example of what both Tracy and Greeley take to be the worldview that proceeds
from the Protestant Imagination.
But theres more: Starks particular take on progressive revelation seems borrowed, not just from the Protestant tradition generally, but more specically
from the evangelical Protestant tradition. True, given that most Christians tend
to see the New Testament as a divinely inspired advance over the Old Testament,
the notion of progressive revelation is to some extent shared by all Christians. The
evangelical tradition, however, takes this a step further. Thus central to the evangelical narrative that developed in the 18th century was the view that God
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periodically intervened to bring Christians closer to him. These periodic interventions, evangelical groups believed, had occurred at Pentecost and during the Reformation, and were occurring in their time (Lambert 1999: 2325). Obviously, the
content of what God reveals at discrete point in human history is different for
Stark as compared to 18th-century evangelical groups. Thus, Stark sees God as
revealing more and more about the logic of Christianity; evangelicals were more
apt to stress spiritual awakening and the new birth made possible by an outpouring
of Gods grace. My point is only that there is a common emphasis on direct intervention from God at well-dened points in history as the force that drives
people toward a better version of Christianity.
What Stark is clearly saying here, it seems to me, is that science has led him to the
discovery of Gods nature. The implication is that evidence has led Stark to the
conclusions he has reached but that is precisely what has not happened. On
the contrary, Starks recent work has been shaped by a number of historiographical
biases that proceed ultimately from a distinctively evangelical Protestant worldview, and these historiographical biases have produced an account of religious
evolution that is more reasonably seen as having been imposed on the evidence
than derived from it.
The New Triumphalism
For the most part, Starks most recent book, The Triumph of Christianity (2011),
recycles arguments presented in earlier books. Thus, the rst third of this latest
book draws heavily on the arguments relating to the growth of Christianity in
Stark (1996). One interesting difference is that this newer book has more material
(pp. 4954) on the person of Jesus Christ himself. Since most of this material is
derived from the Gospel accounts, Stark has added a section (pp. 5456) asking
But can the Gospels be trusted, and answering, as you might expect at this
point, in the afrmative. In later chapters, Stark repeats his arguments linking
monotheism to the rise of capitalism; the elimination of slavery; the rise of
modern science, etc.
Stark also repeats and updates his version of the Degradation Narrative. Thus,
for example, in a section on Defective Clergy he again excoriates the medieval
clergy for their corruption, although this time around he at least moves beyond
the popes by citing Ludwig Pastor (18541928) as saying it is a mistake to
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suppose that the corruption of the clergy was worse in Rome than elsewhere
there is documentary evidence of the immorality of the priests in every town in
the Italian peninsula (Stark 2011: 261). Later, in discussing the forces that led to
the Reformation, he continues to see the widespread immorality and indolence
among the clergy at all levels (Stark 2011: 322) as central to this process. Indeed,
so committed is Stark to the Degradation Narratives emphasis on clerical corruption that he seems unaware of inconsistencies in his argument. Thus, at one point
(p. 261), for example, he cites the fact that a priest in Southern Italy kept a concubine, and would not end the relationship because he was fond of his children, as an
example of clerical corruption in the Middle Ages. A bit later, however, Stark
(p. 319) lists Luthers call for a married clergy as one of the many organizational
reforms that Luther championed. Allegations of clerical corruption aside, Stark
also repeats the encrustation argument that is similarly central to the Degradation
Narrative. Thus, after a discussion of medieval magic, Stark (2011: 272) concludes
with: For the vast majority of medieval Europeans, their religious beliefs were a
hodge-podge of pagan, Christian, and superstitious fragments; they seldom went
to church, and they placed greater faith in the magic of the Wise Ones than in
the service of the clergy. And Stark once again, in several sections, contrasts the
Church of Power with the Church of Piety and once again describes the
Church of Pietys attempts to reform the organizational Church an effort which
culminated in the Reformation.
Towards the end of this book Stark (pp. 353367) also repeats the argument,
developed most of all in Finke and Stark (1992), that religious pluralism (of the
sort that emerged in the United States) promotes increased religious participation
and that under conditions of such religious pluralism high-tension religion sells
best. Finally, he presents statistics attesting to the rapid growth of Christianity
throughout the world (pp. 389412).
So is there anything new in this latest book? Not really. And the underlying
reason for this, I suggest, is that within the logic of Starks cumulative argument
religious evolution has reached its endpoint in Christianity, and in particular, in
the evangelical Christianity that his analysis privileges. Given this, the only thing
left to do is to repeat his theoretical arguments (over and over again) and to document the inevitable growth of Christianity which is exactly what this last book
does. And again, although Stark does provide data relating to the growth of
both Protestantism and Catholicism, evangelical Protestantism remains the telos
of the process he is describing. Consider, for example, how he explains the
growth of Christianity. Partly, he argues (Stark 2011: 412), as he did in The Victory
of Reason, that Christianity is embraced because of its link with Western modernity.
But Christianity is also embraced because of its fundamental message. And what,
for Stark, is that message? In his words:
Like Judaism and Islam, Christianity conceives of God as a transcendent, omnipotent, merciful being, who is somewhat mysterious, remote and awesome. But
unlike Judaism and Islam, Christianity also embraces the Son, a very human
and approachable gure adults speak of Jesus having come into their lives,
children sing Jesus loves me When Christians seek to convert others, their
emphasis usually is on Jesus, which is facilitated by the fact that the Gospels
are the story of Jesus.
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M.P. Carroll
And the fundamental message of the Gospels is that Christ died for our Sins,
and hence all who accept Jesus as their Savior will enjoy everlasting life after
death. This is the doctrine that forms the core of the Christian appeal and gives
meaning, purpose, and duration to human life. (Stark 2011: 408)
The emphasis here on having Jesus come into your life; on accepting Jesus as
your personal Savior; on the Gospels all these emphases link what Stark sees
as the essential appeal of Christianity, and central to its triumph, not simply to Protestantism but more specically to evangelical Protestantism. The casual reference
to the hymn Jesus loves me, this I know, which has always been especially popular
in the Baptist tradition, only reinforces this evangelical emphasis. Basically,
whereas Protestant triumphalism used to mean a historiographical tendency to
see the Reformation as inevitable, what is inevitable within the logic of Starks theorizing is the triumph of evangelical Protestantism.
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M.P. Carroll
the Glory of God, were published by Princeton University Press. While Princeton
does not share exact sales gures, a representative did say (private communication,
2011) that each book sold thousands of copies, with For the Glory of God selling over
10,000 copies not at all bad for books published by a university press. The next
three books considered here, however, were published as trade books by
well-known publishers (Random House in the case of The Victory of Reason and
Harper Collins in the case of Discovering God and The Triumph of Christianity).
I have not been able to obtain sales records for these books, but it seems plausible
to suggest that with the distribution networks available to these publishers, sales
might well have been good. Furthermore, sales numbers aside, positive reviews
of his work have appeared in non-academic publications. Writing in the National
Catholic Reporter, for instance, Turner (2008) tells us:
Discovering God is breathtaking in its scope. It illustrates not only the amazing
varieties of religious belief that have marked the journey of humankind but also
the often contradictory variety of sociological explorations of those beliefs. (p. 18)
Starks work, in other words, has likely reached a large audience and has been relatively well received in some circles. The net effect, I suggest, is that Discovering God,
and Starks monotheism series generally, has functioned to legitimize in the minds
of many people a retrograde approach to religion that undermines that separation
between religion and the study of religion and that for many scholars is a necessary precondition for insight into religious phenomena.
Third, although Starks privileging of a distinctively evangelical vision of God in
his monotheism books does not necessarily invalidate his work on religious economies, it does lend support to earlier critiques (Carroll 2004) which suggested both:
(1) that the theory of religious economies rested upon a distinctively evangelical
Protestant vision of what it means to be religious; and (2) that much of the evidence supportive of the theory of religious economies dissipates if we conceptualize religiosity in non-evangelical terms. In other words, although Starks
evangelical vision may only have become especially explicit in his monotheism
series, it seems likely that that vision has been shaping his work for quite some
time, and so should be taken into account when assessing his earlier and more
well-known analyses.
Finally, there is one more reason for paying careful attention to Starks recent work
and it has to do with Islam. In a book we have so far not considered, Gods Battalions:
The Case for the Crusades (2009), Stark takes aim at claims that European Crusaders
were ruthless barbarians who attacked a relatively tolerant Islamic society for
plunder and land, and that the Crusader kingdoms were part of a European colonialist impulse. On the contrary, Stark argues, the pope (Urban II) who preached the
First Crusade was part of the Church of Piety; the Crusaders were driven by true
piety; Saladin was not the good guy he is often made out to be in romanticized
Western accounts; the Crusader kingdoms were relatively tolerant societies compared to their neighbors; etc. These same arguments are repeated, in shortened
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form, in The Triumph of Christianity (Stark 2011: 199234). There seems very little sociology or theoretical argument in Starks discussion of Islam, and Renick (2010: 40), in
commenting on Gods Battalions, has already made the point that much of the
research he [Stark] uses to refute the historical accounts of the past generation [of historians] is itself over 30 years old. Here again, in other words, just as he did in discussing the Reformation in England, Stark reaches into the past for his scholarly
materials and promotes a vision of history (and historical development) that has
long been discarded by most modern scholars.
But once more: so what? Actually, Renick (2010) also provides the answer here,
noting rst that news sources in the United States today are tailored to appeal to
particular audiences, so that conservative viewers tune in to Fox News for a conrmation of their judgments and perceptions (p. 38), and then, when discussing
Gods Battalions, noting that Starks argument provides an account of the Crusades
perfectly tted for the Fox News audience (p. 39). Starks analysis of course deals
with the Crusades, not Muslims and Islam in the modern world. Renicks point is
only that Gods Battalions creates an account of the Islamic past that reinforces many
of the views and perceptions about Islam and Islamic societies in the present that
are held and promoted by contemporary conservatives in the United States who
see Islam as intolerant, as a source of violence, and as opposed to Western culture.
Here again, of course, there is nothing inherently inappropriate about developing a
view of history at odds with most contemporary scholarship. Still, given the
rampant Islamophobia that pervades our society, can we really turn a blind eye
when a former President of the Scientic Study of Religion, who for more than
40 years has been a leading practitioner in the Sociology of Religion, implies that
reason and science has led him to statements of the I think it inappropriate to
include Islam in the inspired core of faiths (Stark 2007) variety and who then
goes on to write an account of the Crusades of the sort that appears in Gods Battalions? I think not.
Quite the contrary, in todays climate, I believe that academics who study religion
have an obligation to look carefully at any scholarly work that devalues Islam
(whether in the past or the present) in order to see if something other than evidence
is driving the argument and to lay bare what that something might be. And in
Starks case, the analysis here does indeed suggest that underlying his conclusions
about Islam is long-standing and distinctively evangelical approach to what religion is all about. Generally, while the corpus of Starks work on religion including
his work on Islam can and should be taken as an object of study for anyone interested in the political and historiographical corollaries of an evangelical worldview
in modern America we must recognize that it is nothing more and nothing less.
Acknowledgements
I want to thank the three anonymous reviewers and the editor for their very constructive comments on the original version of this article; taking their comments
into account resulted in a better argument and a more clearly written text.
Michael P. Carroll is Professor of Sociology and Dean of Arts at Wilfrid Laurier
University in Waterloo, Ontario (Canada). Apart from his early work on myth
and folklore, he has published seven books on popular Catholicism in different historical periods and cultural contexts. His most recent books include Veiled Threats:
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M.P. Carroll
The Logic of Popular Catholicism in Italy (Johns Hopkins, 1996); Irish Pilgrimage: Holy
Wells and Popular Catholic Devotion (John Hopkins, 1999); The Penitente Brotherhood:
Patriarchy and Hispano Catholicism in New Mexico (Johns Hopkins, 2002); and American Catholics in the Protestant Imagination (Johns Hopkins, 2007).
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