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<Source 9 : IDPÈ£ÁÖ´ëÇп¬ÇÕ>
(3-2) History of Religion in Australia
During the Roman Catholic Counter-Reformation
of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the
Habsburgs were the leading political representatives
of Roman Catholicism in its conflict with the Protestantism
of the Protestant Reformation in Central Europe,
and ever since then, Austria has been a predominantly
Roman Catholic country. Because of its multinational
heritage, however, the Habsburg Empire was religiously
heterodox and included the ancestors of many of
Austria's contemporary smaller denominational groups.
The empire's tradition of religious tolerance derived
from the enlightened absolutism of the late eighteenth
century. Religious freedom was later anchored in
Austria-Hungary's constitution of 1867. After the
eighteenth century, twelve religious communities
came to be officially recognized by the state in
Austria: Roman Catholic; Protestant (Lutheran and
Calvin); Greek, Serbian, Romanian, Russian, and
Bulgarian Orthodox; Jewish; Muslim; Old Catholic;
and, more recently, Methodist and Mormon.
The presence of other communities within the empire
did not prevent the relationship between the Austrian
imperial state and the Roman Catholic Church--or
the "throne and the altar"--from being
particularly close before 1918. Because of this
closeness, the representatives of secular ideologies--liberals
and socialists--sought to reduce the influence of
the Roman Catholic Church in such public areas as
education.
A relatively complicated series of treaties (or
concordats) between the Republic of Austria and
the Vatican defined the role and status of the Roman
Catholic Church. After 1918 the Roman Catholic Church
maintained considerable influence in public life.
For example, many members of the church hierarchy
explicitly supported the Christian Social Party
(Christlichsoziale Partei-- CSP). Members of the
Social Democratic Workers' Party (Sozialdemokratische
Arbeiterpartei--SDAP) responded to this partisanship
in the interwar period by being explicitly anticlerical.
Some Roman Catholics were committed to a form of
"political Catholicism," which was anti-Liberal
and anti-SDAP. Because of these sympathies, they
supported the authoritarian regime that erected
a one-party "Christian Corporate State"
in 1934.
After the Anschluss in 1938, the Roman Catholic
Church initially pursued a policy of accommodation
with the National Socialist German Workers' Party
(National-Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei--NSDAP,
or Nazi Party), but by 1939 it began to assume an
oppositional stance. In the decades after World
War II, the Roman Catholic Church abstained from
publicly and actively supporting any one political
party. An exception to this restraint was the church's
involvement in the controversy surrounding the legalization
of abortion in Austria in the early 1970s. For its
part, the Socialist Party of Austria (Sozialistische
Partei ?terreichs--SP? developed more accommodating
attitudes toward the Roman Catholic Church than
were common before World War II.
According to the 1991 census, a majority of Austrians
(77.9 percent) belonged to the Roman Catholic Church.
This is a decline from the 1971 figure of 87.2 percent.
The number of Protestants also declined in the same
period. The number of Lutherans, or members of the
Augsburg Confession, declined from 5.7 percent in
1971 to 4.8 percent in 1991 according to the census,
and Calvinists, or members of the Helvetic Confession,
declined from 0.3 percent to 0.2 percent in the
same years.
In 1938 the Jewish population of Austria numbered
more than 200,000, most of whom lived in Vienna.
After the Anschluss, the community was almost wiped
out by emigration and the Holocaust. By 1990 the
community amounted to about 7,000 and consisted
largely of postwar immigrants instead of Austrian-born
Jews.
Owing to the influx of foreign workers from Turkey
and the former Yugoslavia, the Islamic and Serbian
Orthodox communities experienced considerable growth
in Austria in the 1970s and the 1980s. However,
many of these foreign workers do not officially
register with their respective religious organizations,
and accurate information about the size of these
communities is not available.
The influence of the Roman Catholic Church, although
still formidable because of its historical position
in Austrian society and network of lay organizations,
receded in the postwar period. The form of nominal
Roman Catholicism many Austrians practice is called
"baptismal certificate Catholicism." In
other words, most Roman Catholics observe traditional
religious holidays, such as Christmas and Easter,
and rely on the church to celebrate rites of passage,
such as baptisms, confirmations, weddings, and funerals,
but do not participate actively in parish life or
follow the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church
on central issues. This trend can be seen in the
low rate of regular church attendance (less than
one-third of Catholics) and the high rates of divorce
and abortion in the 1980s and early 1990s.
Within Austria there are regional patterns of religious
conviction. Generally, provinces with strong conservative
and agricultural traditions, such as Tirol and Vorarlberg,
followed by Lower Austria and Burgenland, have higher
percentages of Roman Catholics than the national
average, and parish churches still fulfill a social
function in many smaller communities. Religious
affiliation is lower in urban centers, however,
and Vienna has the lowest percentage of any Austrian
province.
The decline in the number of Austrians professing
religious affiliation and the increase in the number
who have no religious affiliation--4.3 percent in
1971 and 8.6 percent in 1991--may be interpreted
as an increase in the secularization of Austrian
society. Renouncing church membership and being
without religious affiliation was one of the anticlerical,
historical traditions of the SP? In general, Austrians
without religious affiliation tend to be associated
with the SP? whereas "active" Catholics
tend to be connected to conservative parties and
hold conservative political views.
The increase in the number of Austrians without
religious affiliation should not be interpreted
as an exclusively political gesture, however. Recognized
religious organizations in Austria finance themselves
by "taxing" their members directly with
a socalled church tax, which amounts to approximately
1 percent of their income. Austrians who do not
actively participate in their religious communities
frequently officially withdraw from them in order
to avoid paying this tax.
- Data as of December 1993
<Source 10 : Library of Congress / Country Study
/ Australia / Religion>
(3-3) Religions in Australia, 1996 Census
http://www.adherents.com/loc/loc_australia.html
(3-4) Australian Religion and Beliefs on the Internet
http://www-prod.nla.gov.au/oz/religion.html
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