THEM AND US?
FREDERICK W. BOAL
MARGARET C. KEANE
DAVID N. LIVINGSTONE
WITH
REBECCA J. DANIEL
JAHNET GARDINER
FINAL REPORT TO
THE CENTRAL COMMUNITY RELATIONS UNIT
1996
Them and Us?
A Survey of Catholic and Protestant Churchgoers in Belfast
Funded by
European Regional Development Fund
and
The Central Community Relations Unit of the Northern Ireland Office
Executive Summary
Aim of the Project
Northern Ireland society is typically portrayed as comprising
two monolithic blocs, Catholic and Protestant. This project aimed
to query this depiction through an in-depth investigation of attitudinal
variation among both Catholic and Protestant churchgoers in Belfast.
Methodology
The main methodological instrument was a questionnaire distributed
to a wide range of Catholic and Protestant churchgoers in Belfast.
Completed returns were received from 5,255 respondents. The findings
from this source were supplemented by information gleaned from
a series of 81 in-depth interviews carried out with clergy / church
leaders. Operationalizing this method involved a number of
discrete stages. Initially seven different social areas within
Belfast were identified to ensure a range of socio-spatial contexts
within which a variety of individual churches could be surveyed.
As a result 81 individual churches, across a wide denominational
range, were selected. Questionnaires were subsequently distributed
to church attenders at each of these locations during October/November
1993. Completed returns were collected, coded, and analysed on
the Queen's University Vax 9000 using the SPSS statistical
package.
Major Findings
Catholic churchgoers
Catholic churchgoers appear to follow late twentieth century
trends in that they are more likely to be women, to be middle
aged or elderly and to have among them few who are under 25.
The whole educational spectrum is represented and, although
there are as many from manual as from non-manual backgrounds,
there are few who are 1 An active church-going population gives
the impression of solidarity. However, it is far from uniform
not only in religious convictions but also in attitudes to morality,
social concerns and community tensions. Age and education are
particularly significant in accounting for this diversity; individualistic,
younger, well educated, high status Catholics contrast in a range
of religious, social and political attitudes with ageing, less
well educated churchgoers from manual occupational backgrounds.
These demographic characteristics, however, do not penetrate identity
and political outlook; on these there is little disagreement.
Religious Practice and Beliefs
The levels of religious practice recorded by Catholic
churchgoers suggest a very active churchgoing population, loyal
to the sacraments, prayer and other devotional practices. Nonetheless,
there is a decided absence of the under 25s in the pews while
the under 45s and the better educated are less diligent and less
conformist to Church rules than their older co-religionists. Of
considerable behavioural and attitudinal significance is individual
placing in theological space and an orthodoxy scale from high
to low in respect of attitudes to Catholic Church doctrinal teachings
was used as an identifier. At the high end of the spectrum are
the religious conservatives who follow Church regulations closely
and who are most likely to be less well educated, over 55, and
in manual employment. In contrast, at the other end of the scale
are the young, many educated to third level and in professional/managerial
occupations, who show a strong tendency to take an individualistic
stance on doctrinal and moral matters in spite of Church guidance.
Such distinctive religious views permeate attitudes to moral and
social questions and to cross-community mixing but when it comes
to the question of identity and the constitutional future of Northern
Ireland, the effect of religious mindset is far less obvious;
right across the theological spectrum Catholic churchgoers are
strongly in agreement.
Moral and Social Concerns
One post-Vatican 2 trend, the inclusion of the laity in
the ministry of the Church, has been generally well accepted by
churchgoers. The applause, however, is decidedly stronger among
the younger members and from those of professional/managerial
backgrounds. This is particularly so with regard to the involvement
of women in non-traditional roles in the Church and in society
in general. As for personal morality in general and sexual morality
in particular, Catholic churchgoers generally conform to Church
teaching on premarital sex and co-habitation and there is a strong
pro-life ethic. However, for some the influence of Church teaching
has declined and the growing trend of individualism as regards
what is morally acceptable follows the age, education and theological
profile already observed. These same characteristics contribute
distinctive outlooks in the public arena on such matters as Sunday
observance, discipline and punishment; the older, theologically
conservative, less educated core are more rigid in their adherence
to traditional values and behaviours. Whether this reflects spiritual
commitment or social conformism is not clear.
Social and Religious Mixing
These divergent outlooks are mirrored in difference in
attitude to the mixing of Catholics and Protestants. To begin
with, Catholic churchgoers give almost universal support to ecumenism,
the most orthodox members religiously being more likely to approve
full church unity as an alternative to religious and social co-operation.
Moreover, attendance at a joint church service of worship presents
little problem especially for those of higher status living in
mixed neighbourhoods. Attitudes to mixing on a more social basis
can vary depending on the level of intimacy involved and Belfast
Catholics are no exception to this general rule. Nonetheless,
profound differences between differing religious mindsets, and
different ages, education and occupational backgrounds emerge
in situations ranging from the closeness of marriage to more distant
residential or employment links. The young, well-educated, higher
status members of society are notably less exclusionist in any
context, whether a mixed marriage, a mixed neighbourhood or a
mixed workplace. However, a very wide range of churchgoing Catholics,
among whom only a slight tendency towards older and less educated
members is observable, opt for schools for their children with
a Catholic ethos. The almost universal encouragement shown for
Catholic and Protestant children working together in school projects,
however, suggests an openness to mixing but not at the expense
of Catholic values and identity.
Identity and Political Outlook
The language which people use to describe themselves and
the place in which they live is instructive. Whether expressed
in terms of place or national feelings or reflected in political
affiliation, Catholic churchgoers are united in being non-Ulster
and non-British in identity and non-unionist in politics. For
the overwhelming majority of Catholic churchgoers their identity
lies in some form of Irishness, the great majority feeling unequivocally
'Irish' and a smaller group as 'Northern Irish.' Nonetheless,
age, education and class differences emerge, however weakly, as
does position on the theological spectrum, to distinguish the
'Irish' identity of some from the 'Northern Irish' identity of
others. The younger churchgoers, it should be noted, fall into
the former group and the better educated into the latter. Whatever,
churchgoers of both identities feel strongly, and in equal proportions,
that the S.D.L.P. most closely represents their views. They also
strongly favour a political future where Northern Ireland is united
with the rest of Ireland and where the massive perception of the
centrality of religion in employment decisions is dealt with.
These fundamental issues of identity and political outlook unify
Catholic churchgoers even though in other respects there is little
to indicate consensus.
Protestant churchgoers
Protestant churchgoers, taken overall, tend to be predominantly
female, over the age of 45, and to come from middle class backgrounds.
These characteristics are indicative of an important trend in
religious life over the past decade. Comparison with our 1983
survey indicates that churchgoing is increasingly an activity
practised by the elderly and by women. Nevertheless a very wide
range of attitudinal variation on moral, social and political
issues is evident among Protestant churchgoers in Belfast. Age
is of greater significance than gender in conditioning response
patterns. The younger age cohort is conservative than those in
older age brackets. On constitutional questions, however, there
is little disagreement.
We have explored this attitudinal variation through four perspectives.
The Denominational landscape
Employing a seven-fold denominational taxonomy, we found
that denominational affiliation matters a good deal in accounting
for attitudinal variation. Ecumenical and cross-community ventures
more generally are viewed more favourably by members of the three
larger denominations than by their smaller counterparts. In religious
observance (for example, personal piety and women's ordination)
dramatic differences between denominations were registered. At
the same time considerable differences of opinion on many matters
are expressed within each of the denominational groups suggesting
that other factors were significant in conditioning outlooks.
Again, however, denominational affiliation makes little difference
to matters of national identity and constitutional preference.
Theological Spectrum
As well as occupying denominational space, respondents
were located at points on a theological spectrum from conservative
to liberal. Positioning on this spectrum turned out to be of very
considerable significance in interpreting diverse ecclesiastical,
moral, and community stances. One particularly noteworthy finding
is that the younger age cohorts (though these are a disproportionately
small segment of churchgoers) are overwhelmingly conservative
in their religious convictions. On such issues as religious observance,
abortion, divorce, mixed Protestant-Catholic schooling, cross
community interaction, mixed marriage, and sexual mores, there
is clear evidence that conservatives adopt an outlook markedly
different from their liberal counterparts. These diversities,
however, do not seem to penetrate the political sphere at least
on the major constitutional issue, though this should not be taken
to mean that favouring one set of constitutional arrangements
is indicative of either a monochrome Protestant culture or an
entirely uniform suite of ideological motivations.
Social Class Arena
The influence of social class on churchgoers' attitudes
is controverted. On the one hand, at least on the surface, class
affiliation does not seem to make much difference to positions
taken up on large scale political questions. On the other hand,
social class does connect with religious identity, party political
preference, and feelings about cross-community initiatives. Once
again it is evident that a monolithic constitutional aspiration
does not denote a cultural singularity. What is here expressed
is a range of Ulster unionisms, stretching from a more exclusivist
stance, which retains aspirations towards politico-religious 'purity',
to a more inclusivist outlook hoping to incorporate a stronger
cross-communitarianism within a broader unionist méntalité.
Political Affinity
While, as has been noted, on the question of the constitutional
future of Northern Ireland Protestant churchgoers speak with one
voice, this preference expresses itself through a variety of different
party political channels. In turn, party political orientation
is of considerable significance in accounting for attitudinal
variety. Not only do the churchgoing constituencies of the various
parties reveal distinctive religious topographies in terms
of denominational and theological profile, but also-in attitudinal
terms-they diverge in their responses to women's issues, the regulation
of the public sphere, private morality, and cross community interaction.
Them and Us?
Having explored the Catholic and Protestant churchgoing
populations separately we turned to an examination of continuities
and discontinuities between them. From the wide range of possible
topics for analysis we chose to focus our investigation largely
on demographic structure, religious values, gender concerns, moral
stance, neighbourhood space, cross-community relations, national
identity and the constitutional question.
People Profile
Demographically the two churchgoing populations are remarkably
similar, that is, they tend to be female and in the higher age
cohorts, though there is a tendency for Protestant churchgoers
to be somewhat older. In terms of class, there is again a broad
similarity, with a noticeable bias towards the middle class and
a relative absence of the unemployed.
Faith and Practice
Remarkably high levels of commitment to standard doctrines
and to religious practice are typical of both populations. Divergences,
of course, emerge over the specifics of theology and personal
piety. Different senses of the meaning of parish and community
also seem to surface.
Women 's Issues
The question of women's ordination produces a marked divergence
between Catholic and Protestant churchgoers taken overall, though
this does not mean that opposition or support follows the contours
of this divide. There are both opponents and advocates of women's
ordination within each group, though in general there is greater
support amongst Protestants. Of crucial importance here is age
of respondent while, perhaps remarkably, gender seems to make
little difference. So far attitudes to women and work are concerned,
there is a remarkable similarity between the populations.
The Moral Sphere
While both Catholic and Protestant churchgoers inhabit
a similar moral universe - on issues of sexual mores, for example,
there is substantial agreement-there is a predictable shift of
attitude on the abortion question. It is notably, however, that
conservative Protestants and high orthodox Catholics adopt a very
similar stance on this issue. On other matters of public morality
- to do with Sunday observance, discipline in schools, the court
system, and capital punishment-Protestants turn out to be rather
more disciplinarian than their Catholic counterparts.
Neighbourhood Space
Given the patterns of residential segregation in Belfast.
it is only to be expected that the majority of Protestant and
Catholic churchgoers come from neighbourhoods composed of members
of their own ethnic group. Accordingly when asked about the kind
of area they would prefer to live in, a majority of both
groups would opt to live alongside neighbours sharing their own
religious background. A concern to occupy neighbourhoods exclusively
composed of one's own religious tradition is particularly characteristic
of Catholic respondents. Differential personal experience of 'the
troubles', together with a strong sense of parish community, may
well be significant factors in accounting for this attitudinal
pattern.
Them and Us?
Ecumenical ventures and cross-community interaction elicit
greater support from Catholic than from Protestant churchgoers.
This finding reflects the much greater support for church unity
among the former. Nevertheless, when it comes to actual participation
in such endeavours, there is little difference between the two
groups with around half of each having taken part in joint services
of worship. In addition there is a widespread feeling among both
groups of churchgoers that the churches should be much more active
in trying to improve community relations. And again there is little
variation in attitudes to social exclusivity as revealed in a
range of situations where Catholic-Protestant mixing may occur-marriage,
education, neighbourhood and employment.
Identity
Compared with the high levels of agreement reported above,
on issues of national identity there is overwhelming disagreement.
Not surprisingly these differences manifest themselves in a
highly polarised pattern of party political support. Closely related
is the shared sense that 'the other group' is fairly treated these
days, though Catholics are much more likely to see themselves
as disadvantaged.
The Future of Northern Ireland
More than anywhere else, the issue of the constitutional
future of Northern Ireland crystallises profoundly different aspirations
between Catholic and Protestant churchgoers. What this manifest
bifurcation conceals, however, are differing motivations that
may be subsumed under this bi-polarity of constitutional antithesis.
Future Work
This research project has highlighted the profound differences
and similarities that exist within and between the Catholic and
Protestant churchgoing populations in Belfast. Two things are
evidently missing from this analysis. First, our research needs
to be supplemented by a rural and country town dimension. Research
on attitudes among churchgoers beyond the city would bring to
light urban-rural contrasts and continuities that could be highly
significant in coming to terms with cultural diversity within
Northern Ireland's religious communities as a whole. Second, our
findings also need to be set in the context of attitudinal variety
amongst non-churchgoers, both urban and rural. Only then can we
begin to ascertain what difference churchgoing makes to the reproduction
of social attitudes, and to determining the overall complexity
of cultural life within Northern Ireland.
Professor Frederick W. Boal
Department of Geography
The Queen's University of Belfast
Dr. Margaret C. Keane
Department of Geography
St. Mary's College, Belfast
Professor David N. Livingstone
Department of Geography
The Queen's University of Belfast
© CCRU 1998-1999
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