Cross-cultural perspective
A further problem about the multidisciplinary study of religion is that little has been done to explore the problem of the people to whom religions are interpreted—the clientele for the subject. Hitherto, the main assumption has been that the study is for Westerners, though a number of distinguished Asian and African scholars are working in the field. Until recently, owing to the unequal cultural and political relationship between Western and non-Western religions, however, some of the most vital contributions have been primarily attempts to articulate (for the new apologetic situation) the old traditions. This has been a main concern of scholars of Asian religions such as Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, T.R.V. Murti, and K.N. Jayatilleke. The prospect is, however, that an intellectual community will be the clientele of the subject. To this extent the study of religions will most likely involve, as it does already to some extent, a complex dialogue between religions.
Another problem is the need to elucidate the basis of a dynamic
typology of religion in which phenomenology and history are properly brought together. The tendency toward a rift between the historians and phenomenologists is unnecessary and causes harm to the pursuit of the subject.Meanwhile, some emergent tendencies within the various disciplines can be perceived. There is an increased concern in anthropological theory for the content of religious symbolism, such as in the work of the English anthropologist Mary Douglas; and the sociology of religion is, in a sense, returning to the method of Max Weber in stressing the comparison of cultures. The important development of Oriental and African studies since World War II has made this task easier—American sociologists have, for example, examined in some detail Japanese culture and religion. The interest in symbolism and mythology coincides with developments in the philosophy of religion, which, under the influence of Wittgenstein (in his later, more open phase), is concerned with explicating different functions of language. One area of the study of religion that is seriously underdeveloped at the present time—other than in respect to the psychoanalytic approaches—is the psychology of religion, although current interest in mysticism and other forms of religious experience has stimulated the collection and interpretation of data. One of the difficult problems to be solved is the extent to which cultural conditioning exerts an influence on the actual content of such experience.
In many ways the present position promises well for an expanding multidisciplinary approach to problems in the study of religion. Historians of religion are recognizing some of the contributions to be made by modern sociology, and sociologists—partly because of the development of the sociology of knowledge—have become more aware of the need for accounting for the particular systems of meaning in religion. An area that may very well exhibit the new synthesis is the study of new religious movements.
After a period of relative unconcern, Christian theology is increasingly aware of the challenge of other religious beliefs, so that there are greater impulses toward blending Christian and other studies—often kept rather artificially apart, though biblical studies, especially Old Testament studies, have usually been quite closely related to the history of the relevant religions of the ancient Middle East.
Meanwhile, in a number of Western countries (chiefly in Europe, but also to some extent in the United States), the study of religion on a pluralistic and multidisciplinary basis is being increasingly viewed as an important element in the education of secondary school students. This, together with the popularity of the subject in universities, may ensure that the study of religion will increase in significance.