{{Short description|Theological approach emphasizing reason, experience, and adaptation to modernity}} {{For|political aspects of religious freedom|Freedom of religion}} {{Redirect-distinguish|Liberal theology|Liberation theology}} {{Liberalism sidebar}} '''Religious liberalism''' (also called '''liberal theology''' or '''liberal religion''') is a broad approach to [[religion]] that emphasizes the authority of individual [[reason]] and experience over [[religious tradition|tradition]], [[dogma]], or [[religious text|scripture]] interpreted literally.<ref name="Newman144">{{harvnb|Newman|1991|p=144}}: "... when people talk about 'religious liberalism,' they are normally referring to a commitment to a certain kind of conception of what religion is and, accordingly, of how religious attitudes, institutions, and communities should be developed or reshaped so as to accommodate and promote particular forms of personal and group freedom."</ref><ref name="Newman159">{{harvnb|Newman|1991|p=159}}: "... religious liberalism came to be so concerned with respect for reason, reasonableness, and rationality ... ."</ref><ref name="Britannica">{{Cite encyclopedia |title=Theological liberalism |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/theological-liberalism}}</ref> Rather than treating inherited doctrines as fixed and binding, religious liberals seek to reinterpret their traditions in light of modern knowledge, including the findings of the natural sciences, [[historical criticism]], and moral philosophy.<ref name="deKadt">{{Cite book |last=de Kadt |first=Emanuel |title=Liberal Religion: Progressive versions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam |date=2020 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-8153-9458-7 |location=London |series=Routledge Studies in Religion}}</ref><ref name="Dorrien2001">{{Cite book |last=Dorrien |first=Gary |title=The Making of American Liberal Theology: Imagining Progressive Religion, 1805–1900 |date=2001 |publisher=Westminster John Knox Press |isbn=0-664-22354-0 |location=Louisville, KY}}</ref>
It is an attitude towards one's own religion, taken by people who remain committed to a religious tradition while seeking to reform it from within, contrasting with both a traditionalist or [[Orthodoxy|orthodox]] approach on the one hand and [[criticism of religion]] from a [[secular]] position on the other. It is directly opposed by trends of [[religious fundamentalism]].<ref name="Newman144" />
Religious liberalism is related to but distinct from [[religious liberty]], which refers to the political principle of tolerating diverse religious beliefs and practices. As the philosopher Jay Newman noted, "many people who think that religious liberty is basically a good thing that ought to be promoted do not wish to be regarded as advocates of religious liberalism; some of them even feel that many of those who call themselves 'religious liberals' are enemies of religious liberty."<ref name="Newman143">{{harvnb|Newman|1991|pp=143–144}}</ref> However, in some traditions, particularly [[Islam]], the theological and political dimensions of liberalism are closely intertwined, with reform movements simultaneously addressing questions of doctrine and of civil rights, democracy, and pluralism.<ref name="moaddel">{{cite book |first=Mansoor |last=Moaddel |title=Islamic modernism, nationalism, and fundamentalism: episode and discourse |page=2 |location=Chicago |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=9780226533339 |date=2005}}</ref>
Although the term originated in [[Protestantism|Protestant]] [[Christianity]] and the phenomenon has been most extensively studied in that context, analogous liberal movements have developed in [[Judaism]], [[Islam]], and other religious traditions, particularly in response to the challenges posed by the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] and [[modernity]].<ref name="deKadt" /><ref name="Britannica" />
== Characteristics == According to the ''Encyclopædia Britannica'', the defining feature of theological liberalism is "a will to be liberated from the coercion of external controls and a consequent concern with inner motivation."<ref name="Britannica" />
Gary Dorrien, in his three-volume history of American liberal theology, identifies several recurring characteristics: openness to [[historical criticism]] and [[evolution|evolutionary theory]], a commitment to the authority of individual reason and experience, a conception of religion as primarily an ethical way of life, and an effort to make inherited faith credible and socially relevant to contemporary people. Dorrien argues that the liberal theological tradition was "motivated by a desire to map a progressive 'third way' between authority-based orthodoxies and atheistic rationalism."<ref name="Dorrien2001" />
Emanuel de Kadt, writing comparatively across the [[Abrahamic religions]], defines liberal religion broadly as "those currents within [Judaism, Christianity, and Islam] that are more progressive, more open, more willing to challenge accepted views and structures." He argues that while the initial impetus came from the Protestant side, analogous movements within Catholicism and Judaism developed in response, "though often without acknowledging this."<ref name="deKadt" />
Usage of the term ''liberal'' in the context of religious philosophy appeared as early as the mid-19th century<ref name="Ellis" /> and became established by the first part of the 20th century. In 1936, philosophy professor and [[Disciples of Christ]] minister Edward Scribner Ames described the emerging distinction:<ref name="Ames">{{cite journal |last=Ames |first=Edward Scribner |date=July 1936 |title=Liberalism in religion |journal=[[International Journal of Ethics]] |volume=46 |issue=4 |pages=429–443 |doi=10.1086/intejethi.46.4.2989282 |jstor=2989282 |s2cid=144873810 |url=https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1165&context=crs_books|url-access=subscription }}</ref> {{Blockquote|The term "liberalism" seems to be developing a religious usage which gives it growing significance. It is more sharply contrasted with fundamentalism, and signifies a far deeper meaning than modernism. Fundamentalism describes a relatively uncritical attitude. In it custom, traditionalism, and authoritarianism are dominant. ... There is no doubt that the loss of the traditional faith has left many people confused and rudderless, and they are finding that there is no adequate satisfaction in mere excitement or in flight from their finer ideals. They crave a sense of deeper meaning and direction for their life. Religious liberalism, not as a cult but as an attitude and method, turns to the living realities in the actual tasks of building more significant individual and collective human life.}}
== In Christianity == {{Main|Liberal Christianity}} {{See also|Modernism in the Catholic Church|Progressive Christianity}} Liberal theology developed first and most extensively within [[Protestantism|Protestant Christianity]], beginning in the late eighteenth century. The ''Britannica'' identifies three broad phases: an Enlightenment phase emphasizing rational autonomy; a [[Romanticism|Romantic]] phase centered on individual experience and feeling; and a Modernist phase focused on historical consciousness and progress.<ref name="Britannica" />
The Romantic phase was shaped decisively by the German theologian [[Friedrich Schleiermacher]] (1768–1834), often called the father of modern Protestant theology. Unlike [[Immanuel Kant|Kant]], who located the core of religion in moral will, Schleiermacher grounded religion in the "feeling of absolute dependence," an immediate awareness of one's relationship to the infinite.<ref name="Britannica" /> The German [[Albrecht Ritschl]] subsequently dominated liberal Protestant theology after Schleiermacher, shifting the emphasis toward the ethical dimensions of Christianity and the [[Kingdom of God]] as a moral community to be realized in history. [[Wilhelm Herrmann]] and [[Adolf von Harnack]] were Ritschl's most prominent followers.<ref name="Britannica" />
In the United States, [[Horace Bushnell]] was the most significant liberal theologian of the nineteenth century. [[Walter Rauschenbusch]] later became the leading figure of the [[Social Gospel]] movement, which applied liberal theological principles to questions of economic justice and social reform.<ref name="Britannica" /><ref name="Dorrien2001" />
Liberal theology's influence declined significantly with the rise of [[neo-orthodoxy]] in the 1930s, particularly through [[Karl Barth]]'s critique of liberal Protestantism's accommodation to culture. Subsequent movements, including [[liberation theology]] and [[postliberal theology]], also challenged liberal assumptions from different directions.<ref name="Britannica" />
=== Catholic liberalism === {{Main|Liberal Catholicism}} The [[Catholic Church]] has had a long and contested relationship with theological liberalism. [[Catholic modernism]], associated with figures such as [[Alfred Loisy]] and [[George Tyrrell]], sought to apply historical-critical methods to Catholic theology in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, but was condemned by [[Pope Pius X]] in the 1907 encyclical ''[[Pascendi Dominici gregis]]''.
Cardinal [[John Henry Newman]] (1801–1890) was considered moderately liberal by 19th-century standards because he was critical of [[papal infallibility]], but he explicitly opposed "liberalism in religion," defining it as "the doctrine that there is no positive truth in religion, but that one creed is as good as another."<ref>J. H. Newman, 'Biglietto Speech', http://www.newmanreader.org/works/addresses/file2.html</ref>
=== Conservative critiques === The conservative [[Presbyterian]] biblical scholar [[J. Gresham Machen]] criticized what he termed "naturalistic liberalism" in his 1923 book, ''Christianity and Liberalism'', in which he intended to show that "despite the liberal use of traditional phraseology modern liberalism not only is a different religion from Christianity but belongs in a totally different class of religions."<ref name="Machen">{{cite book |last=Machen |first=J. Gresham |date=2009 |orig-year=1923 |title=Christianity and liberalism |edition=New |location=Grand Rapids, MI |publisher=[[William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company]] |isbn=9780802864994 |pages=6}}</ref>
The [[Anglican]] Christian apologist [[C. S. Lewis]] voiced a similar view in the mid-20th century, arguing that "theology of the liberal type" amounted to a complete reinvention of Christianity:<ref name="Lewis">{{cite book |last=Lewis |first=C. S. |author-link=C. S. Lewis |date=1988 |title=The essential C.S. Lewis |location=New York |publisher=[[Collier Books]] |page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=7YYhHvuNNzIC&pg=PA353 353] |isbn=0020195508 |quote=All theology of the liberal type involves at some point—and often involves throughout—the claim that the real behavior and purpose and teaching of Christ came very rapidly to be misunderstood and misrepresented by his followers, and has been recovered or exhumed only by modern scholars.}}</ref>
== In Judaism == {{Main|Reform Judaism|Conservative Judaism|Reconstructionist Judaism}}
German-Jewish intellectuals began to apply Enlightenment principles and critical scholarship to Jewish theology and practice from the early nineteenth century, a movement known as the [[Haskalah]]. This eventually gave rise to several non-Orthodox denominations, from the moderately liberal [[Conservative Judaism]] to the more thoroughgoing [[Reform Judaism]].<ref name="deKadt" /> The moderate wing of [[Modern Orthodox Judaism]], especially [[Open Orthodoxy]], has also adopted some elements of this approach.
[[Reconstructionist Judaism]], founded by [[Mordecai Kaplan]] in the twentieth century, represents one of the most radical expressions of Jewish religious liberalism. Kaplan believed that a naturalistic approach to religion and ethics was possible in a secularizing world, understanding God not as a supernatural person but as the sum of all natural processes that enable human fulfillment.<ref name="deKadt" />
== In Islam == {{Main|Liberalism and progressivism within Islam|Islamic modernism}}
Liberal and progressive currents within Islam have developed through the practice of ''[[ijtihad]]'' (independent reasoning in the interpretation of Islamic law and scripture).<ref name="ijtihad">{{cite book |last=Aslan |first=Reza |author-link=Reza Aslan |date=2011 |orig-year=2005 |title=No god but God: the origins, evolution, and future of Islam |edition=Updated |location=New York |publisher=[[Random House]] |isbn=9780812982442}}</ref> This can vary considerably in scope; at the more liberal end, only the meaning of the [[Quran]] is considered revelatory, with its specific expression in words understood as the work of [[Muhammad in Islam|Muhammad]] in his particular historical context.
[[Islamic Modernism]] has been described as "the first Muslim ideological response to the Western cultural challenge,"<ref name="moaddel" /> attempting to reconcile Islamic faith with modern values such as [[nationalism]], [[democracy]], [[civil rights]], [[rationality]], [[Egalitarianism|equality]], and [[Social progress|progress]].<ref name="EoI">{{cite book |editor-last=Martin |editor-first=Richard C. |date=2016 |orig-year=2004 |title=Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim world |edition=2nd |location=Farmington Hills, MI |publisher=Macmillan Reference |isbn=9780028662695}}</ref> It featured a "critical reexamination of the classical conceptions and methods of jurisprudence" and a new approach to Islamic theology and [[Tafsir|Quranic exegesis]].<ref name="moaddel" />
Founders of Islamic modernism include [[Muhammad Abduh]], a Sheikh of [[Al-Azhar University]], [[Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani]], and [[Muhammad Rashid Rida]] (d. 1935). It was the first of several Islamic movements, including [[secularism]], [[Islamism]], and the [[Salafi movement]], that emerged in the middle of the 19th century in reaction to the rapid changes of the time, especially the perceived impact of [[Western culture]] and [[colonialism]] on the Muslim world.<ref name="EoI" />
Liberal Muslims generally see themselves as recovering the ethical and pluralistic intent of the early Muslim community (''[[ummah]]'') and the Quran.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mcb.org.uk/media/speech_10_12_01.php |last=Sajid |first=Abdul Jalil |title='Islam against Religious Extremism and Fanaticism' |website=mcb.org.uk |publisher=Muslim Council of Britain |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080607005013/http://www.mcb.org.uk/media/speech_10_12_01.php |archive-date=June 7, 2008 |date=December 10, 2001}}</ref> They distance themselves from some traditional interpretations of Islamic law which they regard as culturally specific rather than universally binding. The reform movement uses ''[[Tawhid]]'' (monotheism) "as an organizing principle for human society and the basis of religious knowledge, history, [[metaphysics]], aesthetics, and ethics, as well as social, economic and world order".<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t125/e2356?_hi=15 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170917081036/http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t125/e2356?_hi=15 |url-status= dead |archive-date= September 17, 2017 |title= Tawhid |publisher=Oxford Islamic Studies Online |website=oxfordislamicstudies.com |access-date= 22 March 2015 }}</ref>
The early Islamic modernists used the term ''[[Islamic Modernism|salafiyya]]'' to refer to their attempt at renovation of Islamic thought, though this is distinct from the contemporary [[Salafi movement]], which generally refers to ideologies such as [[Wahhabism]].<ref name="atzori">{{cite web|last1=Atzori|first1=Daniel|author-link=Daniel Atzori|title=The rise of global Salafism|url=http://www.abo.net/oilportal/topic/view.do?contentId=2000323|website=abo.net|access-date=6 January 2015|date=August 31, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140424094728/http://www.abo.net/oilportal/topic/view.do?contentId=2000323|archive-date=April 24, 2014}}</ref> According to [[Malise Ruthven]], Islamic modernism has suffered since its inception from co-option by both secularist rulers and by "the official ''[[ulama]]''" whose "task it is to legitimise" those rulers' actions in religious terms.<ref name="Ruthven">{{cite book|last1=Ruthven|first1=Malise|author-link1=Malise Ruthven|title=Islam in the world|orig-year=1984|year=2006|edition=3rd|location=Oxford|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=318|isbn=9780195305036}}</ref>
Some scholars, such as [[Omid Safi]], distinguish between "progressive Islam" and "liberal Islam" as related but distinct orientations.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.averroes-foundation.org/articles/progressive_islam.html |last=Safi |first=Omid |title=What is Progressive Islam? |publisher=Averroes Foundation |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060709004427/http://www.averroes-foundation.org/articles/progressive_islam.html |archive-date=July 9, 2006}}</ref> Examples of liberal movements within Islam include [[Progressive British Muslims]] (formed following the [[7 July 2005 London bombings|2005 London attacks]], defunct by 2012), [[British Muslims for Secular Democracy]] (formed 2006), and [[Muslims for Progressive Values]] (formed 2007).
== In eastern religions == {{See also|Hindu reform movements|Buddhist modernism}} Eastern religious traditions were not directly shaped by the European Enlightenment but have undertaken their own reform movements, often after contact with Western thought. [[Hindu reform movements]] emerged in British India in the nineteenth century, with figures such as [[Ram Mohan Roy]] and the [[Brahmo Samaj]] seeking to reconcile Hindu traditions with rationalist and universalist principles.<ref name="deKadt" />
[[Buddhist modernism]] arose in its Japanese form as a reaction to the [[Meiji Restoration]], and was further transformed outside Japan in the twentieth century, notably giving rise to modern forms of [[Zen Buddhism]]. It is characterized by a de-emphasis on ritual and cosmology in favor of meditation, ethics, and compatibility with scientific understandings of the world.<ref name="McMahan">{{cite book |last=McMahan |first=David L. |date=2008 |title=The making of Buddhist modernism |location=Oxford |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |isbn=9780195183276}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Havnevik |editor1-first=Hanna |editor2-last=Hüsken |editor2-first=Ute |editor3-last=Teeuwen |editor3-first=Mark |editor4-last=Tikhonov |editor4-first=Vladimir |editor5-last=Wellens |editor5-first=Koen |date=2017 |title=Buddhist modernities: re-inventing tradition in the globalizing modern world |series=Routledge studies in religion |volume=54 |location=New York |publisher=[[Routledge]] |isbn=9781138687844}}</ref>
== Unitarian Universalism and "liberal religion" == {{Main|Unitarian Universalism}}
The term '''liberal religion''' has been used particularly by [[Unitarianism|Unitarian Christians]] and [[Unitarian Universalist]]s to describe their own tradition.<ref name="Ellis">{{cite journal |last=Ellis |first=George Edward |author-link=George Edward Ellis |date=November 1856 |title=Relations of reason and faith |journal=The Christian Examiner and Religious Miscellany |volume=26 |issue=3 |pages=412–456 |location=Boston |publisher=Crosby, Nichols, and Company for the [[American Unitarian Association]] |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E4g3AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA412}}</ref> In 1856, the Unitarian minister George Edward Ellis wrote: {{Blockquote|The first of all the requisites in such a religion is that it shall be Liberal. We ''mention'' this condition even before that of Truth, because a religion that is not liberal cannot be true. The devout and intelligent demand a liberal religion, a religion large, free, generous, comprehensive in its lessons, a religion expansive in its spirit, lofty in its views, and with a sweep of blessings as wide as the range of man's necessities and sins.|George Edward Ellis, "Relations of Reason and Faith" (1856)<ref name="Ellis" />}}
''The Journal of Liberal Religion'' was published by the Unitarian Ministerial Union, [[Meadville Theological School]], and the Universalist Ministerial Association from 1939 to 1949, edited by [[James Luther Adams]], an influential Unitarian theologian.<ref>[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/4714979 "The Journal of Liberal Religion"]. ''worldcat.org''. Retrieved 2017-11-20.</ref> A new version of the journal was published online from 1999 to 2009.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Journal of Liberal Religion |url=https://www.meadville.edu/library-and-archives/reference/journal-of-liberal-religion/ |website=meadville.edu |issn=1527-9324 |access-date=2020-06-19}}</ref>
The term has also been used by [[Quakers|Quakers (Religious Society of Friends)]] to describe their tradition.<ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Dandelion |editor1-first=Pink |editor2-last=Collins |editor2-first=Peter |date=2008 |title=The Quaker condition: the sociology of a liberal religion |location=Newcastle |publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing |page=18 |isbn=9781847185655}}</ref>
== See also == {{Portal|Religion}} {{div col|colwidth=22em}} * [[Christian naturalism]] * [[Demythologization]] * [[Historical criticism]] * [[Multiple religious belonging]] * [[Post-theism]] * [[Postchristianity]] * [[Postliberal theology]] * [[Red-Letter Christians]] * [[Religious naturalism]] * [[Religious pluralism]] * [[Religious Society of Friends]] * [[Sea of Faith]] * [[Secular theology]] * [[Secularism]] {{div col end}}
== Notes == {{Reflist}}
== References == * {{cite book |last=de Kadt |first=Emanuel |title=Liberal Religion: Progressive versions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam |date=2020 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-8153-9458-7 |location=London |series=Routledge Studies in Religion}} * {{cite book |last=Dorrien |first=Gary |title=The Making of American Liberal Theology: Imagining Progressive Religion, 1805–1900 |date=2001 |publisher=Westminster John Knox Press |isbn=0-664-22354-0 |location=Louisville, KY}} * {{cite book |last=Langford |first=Michael J. |title=The Tradition of Liberal Theology |date=2014 |publisher=Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. |isbn=978-0-8028-6981-4 |location=Grand Rapids, MI}} * {{cite book |last=Newman |first=Jay |author-link=Jay Newman |date=1991 |chapter=Religious liberalism |title=On religious freedom |location=Ottawa |publisher=[[University of Ottawa Press]] |pages=[https://archive.org/details/onreligiousfreed0000newm/page/143 143–180] |isbn=0776603086 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/onreligiousfreed0000newm/page/143 |chapter-url-access=registration}}
{{Unitarian, Universalist, and Unitarian Universalist topics}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Religious Liberalism}} [[Category:Religious belief and doctrine]] [[Category:Reform Judaism]]