Saturday, November 21, 2009

Religion

Leaving Religion Behind: A Portrait of Nonreligious America

Nonreligious Americans represent the fastest-growing part of the nation's religious landscape

Posted March 13, 2009

When Greg Epstein arrived as humanist chaplain at Harvard University four years ago, just a handful of students would show up at his events, intended for nonreligious young people looking for a values system and a sense of community. The school's humanist chaplain, first installed on campus in the 1970s, had always taken what Epstein calls a "shy, retiring approach to his presence on campus."

But not Epstein. "The watchword now for young humanists and nonreligious communities like mine around the country is that we're going to be loud and proud," he says. "The time has come to recognize that whatever you choose to call us nonreligious people, we are an integral part of society and culture."

The message has found a receptive audience. All 1,000 tickets to Harvard's big annual event for secular humanists next month—a ceremony to present a humanist lifetime achievement award—have already been sold. And Epstein can't schedule more events quickly enough. "An enormous number of young people have left traditional religion behind," he says. "I'm overwhelmed by the number of people coming to me."

The phenomenon is hardly limited to the elite confines of Harvard Square. In fact, Epstein and the nonreligious students he leads are part of the fastest-growing demographic on the American religious landscape: those who claim no religion whatsoever.

According to a comprehensive national survey released this week by the Program on Public Values at Trinity College, those identifying with no religious tradition, or as atheists or agnostics, account for 15 percent of the population, up from about 8 percent in 1990. "No religion" Americans are the only religious demographic that's growing in every single state.

And in northeastern states like Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine, the "no religion" group has surged even more dramatically, shooting up 300 percent in the last 20 years and now accounting for a quarter or more of the population.

With as many Americans identifying as "no religion" as there are mainline Christians, Jews, and Mormons in the United States combined, the Trinity College survey has helped create a portrait of an exploding secular tradition that reveals commonalities beyond lack of belief.

It turns out that Harvard's Epstein, 32, is pretty typical. The Trinity College report, called the American Religious Identification Survey, finds that 60 percent of the nonreligious are men. They tend to be young, accounting for one in every three American adults under age 35. According to Trinity College Professor Barry Kosmin, a large chunk have baby boomer parents who came of age in the 1960s and wound up rejecting religion.

And Kosmin says that many of the 750,000 additional American adults who each year identify as having "no religion" are reacting to what he calls the "triumphalism and judgementalism of the Christian right."

A full quarter of those identifying as "no religion" in the Trinity College report are former Catholics, many of whom were turned off by the church sex abuse scandals of the past decade. That helps explain why the Northeast now rivals the Mountain states and the Pacific Northwest—whose frontier beginnings established rugged individualist traditions that resisted organized religions—as the most secular parts of the country. "Despite the population growth, New England has lost 1 million Catholics" in the last decade, says Kosmin. "The trend in the Catholic Church has been obscured by the large number of people from Latin America who've filled the pews as the Irish Americans left them."

Other religious traditions feeding the "no religion" boom are Judaism and Asian religions like Buddhism and Hinduism. While people who leave mainline Protestant churches often find new spiritual homes in evangelical or nondenominational megachurches, the Trinity survey shows that former Catholics, Jews, Buddhists, and Hindus are much more likely to abandon religion altogether. Nearly half of "no religion" Americans come from Irish, Jewish, or Asian backgrounds.

Only a small minority of the nonreligious call themselves atheists or agnostics, but just 21 percent believe in a personal God, compared with 70 percent of all Americans. "They're the inverse of the rest of the American population," says Kosmin. "Three in four Americans want a religious funeral, but in this group, three in four don't."

The growth of nonreligious America has obvious implications for the religious traditions that the nonbelievers are leaving and also for the public square, where religious Americans have tried to reassert their influence in recent decades. Roughly half of "no religion" Americans are political independents, with many fleeing the GOP since the rise of the religious right. About 30 percent are Democrats, while just 12 percent are Republicans.

As their numbers grow and the stigma of being nonreligious fades, nonbelievers are beginning to raise their voices to combat the influence of religion in politics. "I wouldn't have even called it a movement up to a few years ago, but more a club of the like-minded," says David Niose, president of the American Humanist Association. "But now we're unifying people who are secular and humanists into a lot more of a defined demographic. We want a place at the table."

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Reader Comments

im a christian

i know how u feel. i search around a bunch of different reliogions because i didnt know what was the the truth. after a while i found christianity. i founnd that i like it and i believed in what they said, but i didnt believe in all the christain churches. i searched a bunch of them and finally found THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS and i found that i believe what their church said the best. most know it as the MORMAN CHURCH and they have the bible, but they also have THE BOOK OF MORMAN, THE PEARL OF GREAT PRICE, and THE DOCUMENTS OF COVANANTS. maybe u should read them. they might help u understand christianity better. they might not, but u never know until u try it.

thanks for your time and bye

Thanks so much for the conversation.

Thank you for your kind words Dryfire, it has likewise been refreshing to 'talk religion' with an understanding Christian who doesn't automaticaly think I'm evil or something just for simply being an atheist.

It's interesting that you describe God as omnipotent, omniscience (the capacity to know everything infinitely, also commonly attributed to God) requires that an omnisciencent being can see, or knows, what will happen in the future. Not what 'might' happen but what 'will' happen. If this is the case and if a truly omnisciencent being exists, then the future is pre-determined and if the future is pre-determined with no chance of us changing it, then logicaly free will cannot exist.

If God exists in the way the Bible describes him, then that makes us little more than automatons carrying out a set of pre-programmed actions.

Personaly, I'd like to think that my life has a little more meaning to it than that.

I agree that all good conversations must come to an end. I wish you a peaceful and happy future and I hope that our conversation inspires you to continue to study the history of your religion. And remember, if a total stranger does you a good deed, pay it on and help make the world a better place. ;)

Sir, it's been a pleasure.

Quazi.

Interesting

The first answer is indeed admirable, but unfortunately I feel compelled to bring up Ecclesiastes. A rather cynical point of view, but it does have a message I would like to impart to you. In summary, Solomon (the book itself and tradition seems to indicate that these are his words) found everything to be meaningless. How could this be? This man who lived during the golden age of his country (which was relatively peaceful), wealth of great immense, wisdom given from God, and his very own harem. (Maybe that was the problem. He just had too many in-laws!) How could this man have nothing to be happy about? He built the temple for his God, but he is still not happy. The only thing he found to be worth a man's trouble was to obey the Lord (Ecc. 8:12) even when doing what is evil seems profitable. Of course you might say that this can be expected by any religous book in that we are to obey our divine master. In that case, it just seems to make sense to me to please the righteous Judge of the universe. Yet, as I have said before, the answer was admirable and you are entitled, as a human being, to your own opinion.

I guessed the historian part during our discussion, though the musician and a painter is a surprise. I play the trumpet myself, but I don't think I can consider myself a true professional. Maybe an experienced ameteur. Also, from the way you answered your second question you might want to add a philosopher.

Which of course leads us to your last answer. I completely understand and agree that it is aggravating to feel inferior to someone else or to be subjugated by another. You might identify well with the Leviathan in Job 41:1-9. Like animals we are to procreate. Does "be fruitful and multiply" ring a bell? Servitude. A rather cruel and disgusting word. Yet can you be an equal to an omnipotent God? Who is righteous while you fall short of His glory. (I'm sorry if this seems I'm going on a "Hell and brimstone" sermon.) Yes, we are to serve God. Christians, and saddly many who bear the name don't do this, are to obey the commands and teachings of God like the Ten Commandments, the Sermon on the Mount, the instructions of the apostles and the prophets, etc. Is there anything terrible about loving your neighbor or not to lust after a woman? As for the desire to know, I doubt God wants us to stay in the dark about things. However, I do believe God doesn't want us to put our hopes and trust into it, because again I point back to the message of Ecclesiastes.

I thank you for answering me. Your honesty and sincerity is refreshing. One last thing. I don't know how much longer we will be able to keep up this dialogue. I do wish if you would find someone nearby to answer your questions. I'm not tired of doing it, but it would be more beneficial for you if you were to find someone a little more local. Don't expect all of your questions to be answered to your expectations. Be patient and understanding.

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