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The function of the Religious Experience Research Centre is the study of contemporary spiritual and religious experience.  It is situated at the University of Wales, Lampeter, together with its archive of accounts of spiritual experiences and specialist library.

Image of old Building

The Research Centre was founded by Sir Alister Hardy in 1969 as the Religious Experience Research Unit at Manchester College, Oxford. It moved to Lampeter from its previous home at Westminster College, Oxford in July 2000.

The Centre's aim is to study, in a disciplined and as scientific a manner as possible, contemporary accounts of religious or spiritual experiences and to publish its findings.

The Centre's findings are published in books, reports, articles, occasional papers etc. the most important being, The Spiritual Nature of Man by Sir Alister Hardy, Exploring Inner Space and Religious Experience Today by David Hay, The Original Vision and Living the Questions by Edward Robinson and A Sense of Presence by Timothy Beardsworth. These are obtainable by purchase, or on loan, from the Centre. To see a full list, click on Publications and Books link

Research Projects completed or sponsored by the Centre include:

w Religious Experience as Liberation

-  Dr. David Hay

w Religious Experience in Childhood

-  Edward Robinson

w Religion and Values at 16 Plus

-  Edward Robinson & Dr. Michael Jackson

w Psychosis and Religious Experience

-  Dr. Michael Jackson

w Spiritual/Religious Experience in 
  Modern Society

-  Dr. Geoffrey Ahern

w Environmental Influences on the
  Nature of Religious Experience

-  William Ord

w The Relation of Functional Theology

-  Dr. Newton Malony

w Negative Religious Experiences

-  Dr. Merete Jakobsen

Current Projects/Initiatives include:

A study of the common features and common outcomes of spiritual/religious experience across religious traditions.
A study of the results of spiritual and religious experience.
Educational programmes, and a programme of lectures and workshops across the UK which increase awareness of research into spirituality and religious experience.
Running an MA course in Religious Experience in conjunction with the University of Wales, Lampeter [see M.A. Course]. The course can be residential in Lampeter or taken part-time at a distance.

The Centre welcomes accounts of spiritual/religious experiences (however people define these terms). Send an account of your experience to the Director of the RERC [address, click on Contacts]. All accounts are treated in confidence. Give as much information as possible, including what you think might have led to and/or 'triggered' the experience(s), when (including date if possible) and where you had the experience(s) and how it/they may have affected you subsequently. Please include, also, some personal details, eg. about your age at the time, religious upbringing and affiliation (if any) and anything else which you might think relevant.

Report on the China Project

For the past four years the main research of our Centre has been focused on a major project exploring religious experience in China. With the help of Professors Keith Ward and John Hedley-Brooke of the Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion at Oxford, Professors Xinzhong Yao and Paul Badham obtained a major grant from the John Templeton Foundation which made the research possible.  Assisted by scholars from seven Chinese Universities and with the support of 110 trained interviewers they gathered information from ten representative sites across China. 3196 long questionnaires were completed. These provided a mass of data on Chinese religious belief and practice. The research  attracted enormous interest and attention inside  China, and Professor Yao was invited to present the research  findings to universities across China and to the Central School of the Chinese Communist Party.

Among the more interesting findings were that though only 8.7% Chinese describe themselves as ‘religious’, 28.6% feel comforted or empowered through prayer and worship and 56.7% have experienced the influence of ‘a kind of power that people cannot control or explain clearly’. They identify this power with a religious being or force. 44% believe that life and death depend on the Will of Heaven and 41% agree with the statement that ‘we must do our best in life to glorify God/Lord of Heaven/the Buddha/Ancestors’. The survey found that atheistic ideological indoctrination in the workplace has become rarer in recent years and only 0.7% of the religious believers said that they had felt under pressure because of their religious beliefs. Firm atheists reject by 46.6% to 33.4% the idea that ‘Religion is the opium of the people’ and though 47.5% of firm atheists believe that ‘religion is cheating nonsense’, 34% disagree and 31.3% think that ‘Religion contains profound truth’. Religious believers understate their commitment. This is illustrated by the fact that only 4.4% claim to be Buddhist, and yet 27.4 % pray to a Buddha or bodhisattva and 18.2% acknowledge influence or control of the Buddha or a bodhisattva in their lives. Christianity is formally embraced by only 2.8% of the population, yet 11% seek to follow the way of the Christian God.

The project has also attracted  attention in the UK. Members will recall that both our Directors have given progress reports at our Open Days in Oxford as well as at  MA residentials at Lampeter and at our Annual conferences as well as speaking at a variety of other conferences and giving radio interviews.  Distinguished scholars in Turkey, Japan, India, Russia, Brazil, the USA and Taiwan have asked permission to adapt the  methodology and the questionnaire to their own countries and to engage in comparative studies with our Centre. Arising from this the British Association for the Study of Religions focused its 2007 conference on Religious experience in global contexts  and we were delighted that our Chinese colleagues as well as scholars from the other interested countries came to Edinburgh to present papers.

The initial findings of the  research are documented in a 274 page book from the University of Wales Press entitled Religious Experience in Contemporary China (2007) as well as in articles in the Journal Modern Believing (April 2006 and January 2008), the Journal of Contemporary Religion (July 2007) and the Chinese Journal of World Religions (Shijie Zongjiao, No.4, 2007).  Dr. Wendy Dossett cited some of the findings in her Guide to the new A level in Religious Experience,  and Marianne Rankin hopes to make use of the findings in her forthcoming textbook on religious experience. Further publications are being planned in both Chinese and English.

In the light of the success of the China project the Religious Experience Research Centre is working with the Ian Ramsey Centre to seek funding for a further project comparing religious experience across cultures and traditions. Our colleagues in Turkey, Japan, India, Russia, Brazil, and the USA have pledged their support but we will not know for several months whether or not  the Centre  can secure the necessary funding for this vast successor project. 


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