| Portrait in Stained Glass |
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| by Bill Murchison | Tue, Feb 26, 2008, 12:28 PM |
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God knows how it came to this. Anyway just 78.4 percent of Americans currently profess affiliation with a Christian body. And a quarter of Americans 18-29 disclaim membership in any religion. Meanwhile 12.1 percent of adults describe their religion as “nothing in particular.” All this while Mormons and Muslims outbreed everyone else. Or so the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life Reports this week, having extensively surveyed “the U. S religion landscape.” We’re in for some soul-searching, it’s safe to predict, in confirmation perhaps of the uneasy feeling many have had for some decades as the secularists came to glare with sovereign contempt on public religious expression, and as bellicose atheist writers (e.g., Richard Dawkins and Christopher – meaning “Christ-bearer” – Hitchens) scaled the best seller lists. The Pew survey doesn’t suggest that Christianity is going into eclipse; rather, that particular ties among Christians, and particular ways of relating to the faith, are undergoing sharp change. As is everything else in our explosive environment, come to think of it. Some of us who have been around longer notice these things more intensively, but that’s just an aside. Among Pew’s other findings (35,000 adults were surveyed): · The number of religiously unaffiliated Americans is twice that of Americans who came to adulthood without prior affiliation. That is, half grew up to shed such affiliations as they started with. · The · The Catholics are bleeding members – increasing overall in number only on account of immigration. More than 10 percent of Americans are former Catholics. · Atheists outnumber Episcopalians; agnostics (the “show-mes” of religion) outnumber Episcopalians and Presbyterians together. Pew finds – this won’t surprise you much in the iPod/internet age – “that constant movement characterizes the American religious marketplace, as every major religious group is simultaneously gaining and losing adherents.” The word “marketplace” is worth dwelling on. A marketplace is where you buy commodities. Religion, to many moderns, is a commodity: a thing they shop for, Like bluejeans, chardonnay, automobiles, dishwasher detergent, private schools, costume jewelry, mobile homes, DVD players; for that matter, political candidates. When you find what you like, you buy it. If you decide it’s still important to you. The consumer model shapes everything else around us, Why not religion, as well? Here’s one rather large why-not. Because religion embodies Truth, or claims to do so. A consumer society spreads out various “truths” side by side in bins and invites the consumer to choose. Religion (Judaic or Christian) says, or is supposed to say, This is It. You’re here. Go no further. Choose now this day whom you will serve. It’s not what could be called a consumer-friendly approach, nor is there any reason for it to resemble such. Religion goes to the bottom of all concerns, and to the top as well. It tells of how things are. Not how we might like them. Are. A-r-e. Which sounds despotic. Twenty-first century Americans don’t enjoy being told how the cow ate the cabbage. They want to bring their own special insights to that appraisal – as indeed some of the more spacious-minded churches -- my Episcopalians come to mind, along with some others -- encourage them to do. (With what success you might note from the numerical decline my Episcopalians have experienced since 1965, when they were about twice as numerous as now – in profession at least. American Christians (for that matter Jews_) down in the dumps from contemplation of figures like those the Pew Forum supplies should take heart. For the simple reason that religion isn’t consumersism. It’s religion. God will have his way with the world that He himself -- so the Good Book instructs us – created ex nihilo; out of nothing. Whose people He made. Whose Affairs He continues to oversee. Surveys can be fun, as showing us what goes on in the minds of our neighbors. We might just recall it’s not necessary to take with utmost seriousness what our neighbors may be thinking.
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Comments (6)
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written by Old Red , February 26, 2008 Given the antics of religious leaders like Ted Haggerty and Robert Tilton and Jimmy Swaggart and Jerry Falwell and too many pedophile priests to name it is no wonder that organized religion has lost its allure. The era of Billy Graham and Pope John Paul II is over and a replacement is not even on the horizon. Instead we have televangelists preaching Prosperity Theology and begging for "Love Offerings" in the most demeaning fashion. The Ray Stevens song about "Would Jesus Wear A Rolex On His Television Show" is more appropriate now than ever.
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written by Byron George , February 26, 2008 Old Red, You are so right, but it is a sad statement that the few cast a dark veil over all. There are many Bible believing, preaching churches. Finding one can sometimes be difficult.
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written by randye , February 26, 2008 There has always been a marketplace of Christianity. From the first, you could choose between Paul and James, later the Gnostics, Arians, Luther or your own King Henry. The market allows people who would otherwise ditch their faith altogether to find a niche. After the relentless secularization of popular culture, 78.4% is surprising.
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written by ElHombre , February 27, 2008 'We might just recall it’s not necessary to take with utmost seriousness what our neighbors may be thinking.' Might? When did Mr. Murchison ever start?
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written by xyz , February 27, 2008 When did you? Or Old Red or Libby or Farinata X, for that matter?
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written by RelicMM , February 27, 2008 Polls are my very last resort for reliable data. Error estmates of 3% is ludicrous. God only built one Church. The most serious object for life is to find that Church and obey its requirements for salvation. But don't blame that Church for those whose actions belie what they errroneously claim to be. Write comment
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