Article

The Orange Order: A Religious Institution or Implicit Religious Spinning?

Details

Citation

Stewart F (2015) The Orange Order: A Religious Institution or Implicit Religious Spinning?. Implicit Religion, 18 (2), pp. 177-207. https://doi.org/10.1558/imre.v18i2.27239

Abstract
Implicit Religion has long been utilised within academia, and religious studies in particular, as an analytical tool with which to examine and critique commonly held conceptions and iterations of what “religion” is or could be. However there is application potentiality outside of academia for Implicit Religion, and this paper seeks to utilise the power of such an approach to expose the oversimplified use of traditional religious categories in regards to the Northern Irish Troubles. By applying the framework of Implicit Religion, as outlined by Edward Bailey, to the Orange Order this paper seeks to demonstrate how it can provide key insights and understandings to a very complicated and confusing situation. In areas of extended conflict and civil war, religion as an identity marker is often ignored or subsumed within attempts to deal with immediate crises, disarmament and political stability. Using tools such as Implicit Religion could help to bring religion back into the wider picture of the social, political and cultural issues that surround such contexts as Northern Ireland. It should be noted, though, that this paper is not arguing that the Orange Order is a form of Implicit Religion or should even be considered as a new religious movement. This paper is using the tools of Implicit Religion and shining them on to the Orange Order as an example of how those tools can better reveal what is actually going on under the surface.

Keywords
The Orange Order; Implicit Religion; Politics in Northern Ireland;

Journal
Implicit Religion: Volume 18, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2015
Date accepted by journal01/03/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/24437
PublisherEquinox Publishing
ISSN1463-9955
eISSN1743-1697