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cynatnite

(31,011 posts)
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 03:19 PM Jun 2012

3 reasons young Americans are giving up on God

Young Americans are drifting away from God, according to a new Pew Research Center poll. Only 67 percent of Americans under 30 say they "never doubt the existence of God." That's down from 76 percent in 2009 and 83 percent in 2007 — a 15 percentage point drop in just five years. Why the big change? Here, three theories:

1. Fundamentalists are turning off some young people
Blame it on the Religious Right, says Stephanie Mencimer at Mother Jones. "Younger Christians are turned off by attacks on gays and lesbians." Baby boomers and older Americans have believed in God for so long, says James Joyner at Outside the Beltway, that their religious beliefs don't falter as our society rapidly evolves toward greater acceptance of divorce, premarital sex, women's equality, and gay rights. "Younger folks are simply more likely to figure that, if their religion is teaching them things that they believe to be silly — such as that homosexuality is wrong — then their religion must be silly, too."

2. Atheists and agnostic role models are getting more vocal
Older Americans are holding fast to their beliefs, says Sahil Kapur at Talking Points Memo, with 80 percent to 90 percent saying that they never doubt God's existence. But younger Americans have been exposed to "a new movement of atheist or agnostic thinking during the last decade — spearheaded by high-profile authors like Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, and Sam Harris." This poll appears to confirm that these influential intellectuals are "steering younger people away from traditional beliefs long held by their parents." With greater acceptance, says Ronald A. Lindsay at The Huffington Post, young atheists are finding it safe to "come out."

3. Liberal attacks on religion are to blame
Christianity is "the one religion left that can be hated without running afoul of political correctness," says Drew Belsky at The American Thinker. In an era when the federal government is forcing religious institutions, contrary to their religious beliefs, to give people insurance coverage for contraception, says Bishop Edward Burns at The Southeast Alaska Catholic Online, it's pretty undeniable that religion, and religious freedom, are under siege. Most Americans still believe in God, but they have to defend their faith or the attacks will take a toll.

http://news.yahoo.com/3-reasons-young-americans-giving-god-134300470.html

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Warpy

(111,319 posts)
4. You've got a lot of company there
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 03:29 PM
Jun 2012

If you miss the community, I understand that liberal Episcopalian congregations, the UCC, and the Unitarians have offered safe havens to believers who want belief without all the bullying that usually goes along with it.

Drale

(7,932 posts)
6. It wasn't bullying that drove me away
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 03:33 PM
Jun 2012

I was tired of the hypocrisy and being told what to do by old men who had never really lived life. How can you tell someone not to have sex until marriage if your a lifelong virgin?

Warpy

(111,319 posts)
10. Uh, that's bullying
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 04:49 PM
Jun 2012

Just know there are a few congregations out there that don't do that. They're there if you need them.

cbayer

(146,218 posts)
12. You represent the fastest growing demographic when it come to believers/non-believers.
Sat Jun 16, 2012, 12:47 PM
Jun 2012

The "nones" (no religious affiliation, but not necessarily not religious)

Warpy

(111,319 posts)
2. A "religious institution" is a church
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 03:28 PM
Jun 2012

A hospital owned by a religious institution is a business. The church can rant and rave all it wants to about contraception in its churches. It can't bully non Catholics it employs by denying women the basic health care that contraception is for most of us.

Liberal attacks, my flabby old ass. Freedom of religion is not the freedom to bully unwilling people into living according to a church's dogma.

onlyadream

(2,166 posts)
3. Both my kids
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 03:28 PM
Jun 2012

Don't believe in God, even tho I do. I don't believe in man made religion. They were exposed to too much evangelicals and it affected them, they even say that is what happened.

cynatnite

(31,011 posts)
5. There should actually be a #4 to this list...
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 03:30 PM
Jun 2012

The fourth being the internet. I think it has made a profound impact on belief verses nonbelief.

 

southernyankeebelle

(11,304 posts)
8. I believe in god very much. My god doesn't hate anyone. As long as you treat all people
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 03:40 PM
Jun 2012

right then god will love everybody. I am sick and tired of hearing its the liberals fault. That isn't true. I know many liberals who believe in god and believe like I do.

ladym55

(2,577 posts)
9. As long as Christianity keeps drifting rightward and spewing hate, look for more losses
Thu Jun 14, 2012, 03:48 PM
Jun 2012

The only voices of "Christianity" we hear are those demanding "religious freedom" so that they can deny women control of their own health care or those screaming that marriage has "always been one man and one woman." When those are the voices, people will turn away. There is no longer any discussion of loving one another or helping each other. Jesus was apparently a supply sider, totally opposed to unionization and helping the poor. Who knew?

My children have turned away from organized religion. I don't blame them. I'm drifting away myself because even as a UCC member, I find that my local church is all about making the wealthy members happy, not about following Christ's teachings.

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