RT Article T1 Sacro-Egoism and the Shifting Paradigm of Religiosity JF Implicit religion VO 11 IS 2 SP 153 OP 172 A1 Knox, John S. LA English PB Equinox YR 2008 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1690546204 AB Utilizing the methodology of the Kendal Project (Heelas et al. 2005), data collected from McMinnville, Oregon, was compared with data gathered from Kendal, England, to test British and American sociological theories of religion and specifically the "Spiritual Revolution" theory within the state of Oregon. The McMinnville Project evidence suggests that rather than a spiritual revolution in Oregon, by which churchgoing is declining and interest in a holistic milieu is expanding, "Sacro-Egoism" is the phenomenon that best describes the nature of personal spirituality in Oregon (and potentially the West as a whole). It points toward the relationship between secularization and the self, participation in religious practices and belief, and the emergence of a new, radical, individualized expression of faith. This paper contains a description of Sacro-Egoism and outlines key features of this modern personal approach to religiosity and spirituality: a radical authority/priority of the self, an antagonism or ambivalence to institutionalism, a personal or pragmatic commitment to the spiritual journey (specifically concerning Jesus and the Bible), and an openness to and toleration of non-traditional beliefs and practices. K1 Church work K1 Egoism K1 MCMINNVILLE (Or.) K1 Oregon K1 Religion K1 Religiousness K1 Secularization K1 Social Theory K1 Spirituality DO 10.1558/imre.v11i2.153