Abstract

We draw on the organizational ecology tradition to frame the relationship between the religious environment of a community and local religious participation. Prior research linking religious environments to religious participation downplays a key organizational aspect of religion: the congregation. Following the organizational ecology usage of density, we argue that congregational density—the number of congregations per person within a community—impacts religious involvement by providing opportunities for participation and by fostering social accountability networks within congregations. Drawing on data from the 2000 Social Capital Community Benchmark Survey, we test the hypothesis that congregational density in a locality is associated with greater religious participation by residents. Our findings indicate that persons residing in congregationally dense communities are more likely to be members of churches, to attend church regularly, to participate in church-based activities, to participate in non-church religious organizations, to volunteer for religious work, and to give to religious causes. These findings hold while controlling for an array of individual and contextual-level variables. This notion of congregational density suggests that local factors transcend broader theological and/or denominational boundaries, resulting in variations in religious participation and commitment.

Highlights

  • Sociologists have a longstanding interest in identifying the determinants of American religious participation

  • This model tests the notion that congregational density is positively associated with religious participation

  • By including a time-lagged measure of religious membership, the percentage of the population belonging to a church in 1990, this model assesses the possibility that the relationship between congregational density and religious participation is due to reverse causation, such that more religiously

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Summary

Introduction

Sociologists have a longstanding interest in identifying the determinants of American religious participation. The local religious ecology is conceptualized and measured in terms of religious denominations These various approaches have proven valuable in explaining the role of the local religious ecology on community welfare. These conceptualizations of the religious ecology neglect the local congregational population that may mediate the relationship between a denomination’s theological program and the individual religious adherent. Only rarely have researchers investigated the effect of the local religious ecology’s congregational population on religious participation. Drawing on organizational ecology theory, we develop an explanation of how the local population of congregations influences participation in religious activities. We will return to a discussion of it after we develop our research hypotheses below

Rethinking the Religious Environment
Institutional Effects of Congregational Density on Religious Participation
Participatory Structures
Social Networks
Hypothesis
Data and Methodological Section
Dependent Variables
Contextual-Level Independent Variables
Individual-Level Control Variables
Analytical Strategy
Results
Conclusions
Full Text
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