A Level Sociology: Religion and Social Change — Why Understanding History Matters
Can religion really change society?
When students begin studying religion in A Level Sociology, they often expect to discuss beliefs, worship, churches and perhaps the apparent decline of religion in modern Britain.
They may be less prepared for a much bigger sociological question:
Can religion become a force capable of changing an entire society?
To answer that properly, students need more than a list of sociological theories. They need some understanding of history.
I am often amazed by how fragmented that historical understanding can be. Many students know selected facts about the Second World War. They may know about Hitler, the Holocaust, Dunkirk and D-Day, but know very little about the experiences of Black American soldiers serving in the United States military.
Most students have heard of the transatlantic slave trade, but their understanding may end when the ships reached America. They may know little about slavery within the United States, the period of segregation that followed emancipation, the Jim Crow laws or the long struggle for civil rights.
They have usually heard the name Dr Martin Luther King Jr., but they may know little about the movement around him — or why churches, ministers, religious language and Christian organisations were so important to that movement.
This matters because sociology is not floating theory. Sociology is the study of real societies, real institutions and real struggles. To understand social change, students must first understand what needed to change, who resisted that change and how individuals and organisations managed to challenge established power.
SOCIOLOGY NEEDS HISTORY
A student can memorise that Karl Marx regarded religion as a conservative force or that Max Weber believed religious ideas could contribute to social change.
However, unless that student can apply these arguments to historical examples, the theories remain little more than isolated quotations.
History gives sociology its evidence.
It helps students examine:
• how societies were organised;
• which groups held economic, political and cultural power;
• how inequality became normalised;
• how religious teachings were interpreted;
• why some religious organisations supported authority;
• and why others challenged it.
The relationship between religion and society is rarely simple. Religion has sometimes helped to maintain inequality, but it has also provided people with the language, organisation and courage needed to resist it.
The American Civil Rights Movement is one of the clearest examples of this contradiction.
FIGHTING FASCISM ABROAD WHILE FACING SEGREGATION AT HOME
During the Second World War, more than one million African Americans served in the United States armed forces. Yet the military remained segregated, and many Black servicemen and women were placed in separate units, accommodation and facilities.
They were defending democracy overseas while being denied equal treatment within their own country.
This contradiction produced the powerful idea of the Double V Campaign:
Victory against fascism abroad and victory against racism at home.
The campaign encouraged Black Americans to support the war effort while also demanding full citizenship, equal opportunities and an end to racial discrimination in the United States.
This makes an excellent starting point for a sociology lesson.
I might ask students:
How could a country claim to be fighting for freedom and democracy while maintaining racial segregation within its own military and society?
That question moves the discussion beyond remembering wartime events. It introduces ideas about ideology, power, institutional racism, contradiction and social change.
It also shows that the Civil Rights Movement did not suddenly appear in the 1950s. Wartime experiences, returning veterans, Black newspapers, civil rights organisations and changing expectations all contributed to growing demands for equality.
Social change usually has a history.
FROM SLAVERY TO SEGREGATION
Students often know that slavery existed but may not appreciate how its consequences continued after its formal abolition.
The end of slavery did not immediately create racial equality. Across much of the American South, segregation became embedded in education, transport, housing, employment, public facilities and voting arrangements.
Racial inequality was not simply a collection of individual prejudices. It was supported by institutions, laws, customs and sometimes violence.
This distinction is sociologically important.
If inequality is institutional, changing individual attitudes is not enough. Laws, political systems, schools, workplaces and cultural expectations also have to change.
Religion was woven into this struggle in contradictory ways.
Some Christians used selective interpretations of the Bible to defend slavery and segregation. Some white churches avoided the subject, treating racial injustice as a political issue rather than a moral one. Others actively resisted change.
At the same time, Black churches became some of the strongest institutions available to African American communities.
This creates an important sociological lesson:
The same religion can be interpreted in ways that justify inequality or in ways that challenge it.
WHY THE BLACK CHURCH MATTERED
The importance of the Black church cannot be explained simply by saying that campaigners happened to be religious.
Churches provided practical resources that social movements need.
They offered buildings in which people could meet. They had established congregations, respected local leaders, communication networks, choirs, fundraising systems and connections between different towns and communities.
In a society where many other institutions were controlled by white political and economic interests, Black churches possessed a degree of independence.
The Southern Christian Leadership Conference drew upon that independence and the organisational strength of churches to coordinate non-violent protest across the American South.
Churches could therefore provide:
• leadership, particularly through ministers who were experienced public speakers;
• meeting places where campaigns could be planned;
• communication networks for sharing information;
• financial support for transport, publicity and legal assistance;
• emotional support when campaigners faced intimidation;
• and moral legitimacy, presenting racial equality as a matter of justice rather than merely political preference.
Religion was not operating outside society. It was supplying the social organisation through which change could happen.
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.: MINISTER AND MOVEMENT LEADER
Dr Martin Luther King Jr. was not simply a political speaker who occasionally mentioned religion. He was a Baptist minister whose approach to civil rights was deeply connected to Christian ideas about justice, love, human dignity and non-violence.
His religious position gave him access to church networks and a language that could connect personal faith with public action.
The Southern Christian Leadership Conference was established in 1957 to coordinate civil rights campaigns throughout the South. Its methods included boycotts, marches and other forms of non-violent direct action against segregation.
This was not passive religion.
It was religion being used to organise protest, challenge laws and confront powerful institutions.
The Montgomery Bus Boycott offers a particularly useful example. Following Rosa Parks’s arrest, churches provided places for mass meetings, ministers helped organise the campaign, and Christian teachings were used to justify disciplined non-violent resistance.
At Holt Street Baptist Church, King connected the injustices experienced by Black passengers with a Christian duty to protest without violence.
This allows students to see how religious beliefs may be translated into social action.
A belief such as “all people are equal before God” can remain a private conviction. However, when it is connected to organisations, leaders, resources and political opportunities, it can become a challenge to an unequal social structure.
RELIGION SUPPLIED MORE THAN BUILDINGS
The Black church also helped create a shared identity.
Sermons, prayers and biblical stories placed the struggle within a much larger moral narrative. The story of Moses leading an oppressed people out of slavery, for example, carried enormous symbolic power.
Campaigners were not simply being told that a particular law was unfair. They were being told that their struggle had moral meaning.
Music played a similar role. Spirituals, hymns and freedom songs helped create solidarity, courage and a sense of collective purpose.
King described freedom songs as giving people courage, unity and hope during extremely difficult moments.
This is important because social movements require more than organisation. People must be prepared to take risks.
Those joining protests could face arrest, dismissal from employment, threats and physical violence. Religious belief did not remove those dangers, but it could help participants understand sacrifice as meaningful and collective action as a moral responsibility.
Religion therefore contributed:
Belief + identity + organisation + leadership + emotional energy
Together, these could become a powerful force for change.
THE MOVEMENT WAS LARGER THAN ONE MAN
Teaching the Civil Rights Movement solely through Martin Luther King can create another historical weakness.
King was enormously important, but social change was not achieved by one charismatic leader acting alone.
Local campaigners, women’s organisations, students, lawyers, trade unionists, journalists, veterans and countless church members sustained the movement.
Women frequently provided the link between national organisations and local communities, even though male ministers have often received more public recognition.
This offers another valuable sociological question:
Why do historical accounts often concentrate on a small number of famous leaders while overlooking the networks and ordinary participants who made collective action possible?
A movement needs people to arrange transport, distribute information, raise money, provide food, teach children, offer accommodation and keep communities involved.
The sociology of social change should therefore examine both leadership and social networks.
RELIGION AS A FORCE FOR CHANGE
Several sociological perspectives can be applied to the Civil Rights Movement.
WEBER: RELIGIOUS IDEAS CAN INFLUENCE SOCIETY
Max Weber rejected the assumption that religion always prevents change.
He argued that religious ideas can shape human behaviour and contribute to major social transformations.
In the Civil Rights Movement, Christian ideas about justice and equality helped motivate action against segregation.
Religion did not simply reflect economic or political conditions. Religious beliefs influenced how people interpreted those conditions and what they believed they should do about them.
ERNST BLOCH: RELIGION CONTAINS A PRINCIPLE OF HOPE
The neo-Marxist thinker Ernst Bloch recognised that religion could encourage people to imagine a better society.
Religion may contain dreams of justice that have not yet been achieved. These beliefs can expose the gap between society as it is and society as it ought to be.
For Black Christians living under segregation, the teaching that every person possessed equal worth could make racial inequality appear not natural but intolerable.
RELATIVE DEPRIVATION
People may experience relative deprivation when they compare their lives with those of another group or with the conditions they believe they should enjoy.
Black Americans were told that the United States represented freedom and democracy while experiencing discrimination within its institutions.
Black soldiers who had fought for freedom overseas returned to a society that still denied them equality.
That contradiction could intensify awareness of injustice and strengthen demands for change.
CULTURAL DEFENCE
Religion may help communities protect their identity when facing oppression or hostility.
Black churches preserved community life, leadership, music, identity and solidarity in a society structured by racial inequality.
That cultural strength could then support organised resistance.
RELIGION AS A CONSERVATIVE FORCE
The Civil Rights Movement does not prove that religion always produces progressive change.
Marxists may argue that religion frequently supports existing power structures. Religious teachings may encourage acceptance, obedience or the belief that suffering will be rewarded in another life.
Religion may also legitimise inequality when powerful groups present their position as divinely approved.
King himself criticised churches that remained silent or preferred social order to justice.
His arguments demonstrate that religious institutions can become too closely connected to comfort, respectability and established authority.
This is why the best sociological conclusion is not:
Religion causes social change.
Nor is it:
Religion prevents social change.
A stronger conclusion is:
Religion can become either a conservative or transformative force, depending on how beliefs are interpreted, how religious institutions are organised, whose interests they support and the historical circumstances in which they operate.
That is a much more useful evaluative argument for an A Level essay.
THE CONTINUING STRUGGLE BETWEEN CHURCH AND STATE
The relationship between religion and government has been contested in many societies.
States may attempt to control religious organisations because they possess influence, property, education systems, communication networks and the loyalty of large populations.
Religious organisations may support the state, negotiate with it or openly challenge it.
Conflict can emerge over:
• education;
• marriage and family law;
• reproductive rights;
• freedom of expression;
• racial equality;
• national identity;
• political authority;
• and the limits of religious freedom.
From a functionalist perspective, shared religion may help create social solidarity and reinforce common values.
From a Marxist perspective, a close relationship between church and state may help legitimise the interests of powerful groups.
From a Weberian or neo-Marxist perspective, independent religious organisations may also provide the ideas and structures needed to oppose government policy.
Church and state are therefore not permanent allies or permanent enemies. Their relationship changes according to the issue, the society and the historical period.
A PRACTICAL WAY OF TEACHING THE TOPIC
One of the most effective ways to teach religion and social change is to begin with historical evidence rather than immediately presenting the theories.
I would start with three contrasting sources:
- A photograph of segregated Black American soldiers during the Second World War.
- A photograph of a civil rights meeting inside a church.
- A photograph of a march or non-violent protest.
Students could then consider:
• What inequality can be seen or inferred?
• What resources would a successful protest movement require?
• Why might a church be safer or more useful than another meeting place?
• How could religious language strengthen a political campaign?
• Would Marx, Weber and Bloch interpret the evidence differently?
Another useful activity is to ask students to construct a chain of explanation:
Racial inequality
↓
Shared grievance
↓
Religious interpretation
↓
Church organisation
↓
Collective action
↓
Political pressure
↓
Legal and social change
Students can then challenge the chain.
Did every church support the movement?
Was religion the cause of change or simply a useful resource?
How important were television, federal government action, economic pressure and international opinion?
Could the movement have succeeded without religious leadership?
This moves students from description into analysis and evaluation.
TURNING HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE INTO AN EXAMINATION ANSWER
An effective response to the question “Assess the view that religion is a force for social change” could use the Civil Rights Movement in the following way:
The American Civil Rights Movement supports the view that religion can promote social change. Black churches provided meeting places, leadership, communication networks, funding and a shared moral framework. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference connected Christian beliefs about justice and human equality with organised non-violent action. This supports Weber’s argument that religious ideas can influence social action and Bloch’s view that religion contains a principle of hope. However, not all Christian churches supported racial equality, and some remained silent or defended segregation. Religion should therefore be understood as a potential resource for change rather than an automatically progressive force.
That paragraph works because it combines:
• accurate historical evidence;
• sociological theory;
• explanation;
• application;
• and evaluation.
The history makes the sociology stronger.
WHY THIS TOPIC MATTERS BEYOND THE EXAMINATION
Students sometimes ask why they need to learn events that happened in another country many decades ago.
The answer is that social institutions cannot be understood without examining how they behaved when societies faced injustice.
Religion and social change raises questions that remain important:
Who has the authority to define what is morally right?
When should religious organisations challenge the law?
Why do some institutions defend established power while others resist it?
How do ordinary people create a movement capable of changing society?
These are not merely questions about the past. They are questions about power, responsibility and the possibility of change.
CONCLUSION: SOCIOLOGY IS THE STUDY OF HOW CHANGE BECOMES POSSIBLE
A Level Sociology is much more than learning the names of theorists.
It is an opportunity to understand how societies were created, how inequalities became established and how people challenged systems that once appeared permanent.
The American Civil Rights Movement demonstrates that religion can do more than comfort individuals or maintain tradition.
Religious belief can provide a language of justice. Churches can provide organisation, leadership and solidarity. Faith can help people imagine that society could be different and give them the courage to act upon that belief.
However, the example also teaches caution.
Religion has been used both to defend inequality and to resist it. Churches have sometimes supported authority, sometimes remained silent and sometimes stood at the centre of movements for change.
That tension is exactly what makes the topic sociologically valuable.
Students need history because social change does not begin with a textbook theory. It begins when real people recognise injustice, organise themselves, challenge authority and refuse to accept that the way society is organised is the way it must always remain.
SUGGESTED SOURCES FOR FURTHER READING
National Museum of African American History and Culture — The experiences of Black soldiers and the Double V Campaign
United States National Park Service — The Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the Civil Rights Movement
The Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Institute, Stanford University — Speeches, sermons and documents from the Civil Rights Movement
United States National Park Service — Women in the African American Civil Rights Movement



