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Conservative Christians creating next generation of atheists and agnostics

Posted on Saturday, June 30, 2012 at 10:00 AM

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Ask yourself, what have been the most signature events in worldwide religious faith in the last two decades?

It’s a simple enough question and the answer is mostly horrifying.

It’s planes flying into skyscrapers, it’s child molestation, it’s woman being stoned and murdered, it’s gays being bashed in the pulpits and on the streets, it’s women who use birth control being called sluts on the national airwaves, it's clergy secretly practicing what they publicly condemn, it’s Koran burnings, it’s hardworking nuns being persecuted by their out of touch superiors, it’s funerals being protested with placards and abuse, and on and on – so are you surprised that more and more young people don’t want to touch religion with a barge pole?

Ask yourself, is there anywhere on earth right now where religious faith is actually brightening the lives of millions as it builds for a peaceful tomorrow?

Or is it more accurately depicted like this: in daily portraits of Christians who are bracingly righteous in their own beliefs and intolerant of all others; in Muslims who oppress women and each other with their intolerant and restrictive religious codes; in Jews who oppress their Arab neighbors. Just turn on your television and these are the images of religious faith in action that the world sees.

So it’s not a trickle, this march of disillusioned and alienated young people leaving the church, it’s a flood, because the truth is they’re leaving in droves. Religion equals intolerance now, thanks to decades of undeniably supporting evidence. Research conducted by the pro-Christian Barna Group in 2007 on Americans age 16-29 found that 'anti-homosexual' was the dominant perception of modern Christians. Decades of God being used as a battering ram to bash gays have appalled them.

The biggest mistake that conservative church leaders are making here in the US is to double down increasingly on the positions that have already turned young people off. In recent years Tea Party politics have become so intertwined with conservative Christian faith here that they have become indistinguishable. Religious leaders have allowed and encouraged this, in fact.

The hardening of ideological attitudes on the right can also be explained by the pervasive influence of religion on conservative politics. Christian conservatives on the right have been increasingly blatant about their desire for religion to shape public policy – you need only look to candidates like Rick Santorum or political action committees like National Organization for Marriage or Focus on the Family to see that’s true. We’re at the point now that the Republican Party could be renamed the Christian Brotherhood without much difficulty.

But while the older generation of Christian conservatives have been flexing their political muscles they appear to have missed the fact that instead of crafting an enduring victory they’re actually shooting themselves in the foot.

Among America’s young, the rise of ‘none of the above’ on religious surveys has increased in recent years from traditional numbers like 5–10% to new numbers like 25–30%. That’s astronomical. That’s what you get for seeing the speck in other people’s eyes whilst you ignore the beam in your own.

4000 years ago God could flood the world from pole to pole and start all over again; He could level cities and part seas. But for the internet generation growing up now He's mostly seen by kooks in their toasted cheese sandwiches.

If conservative Christians want to remind us why He was celebrated in the first place they'll have to start by reminding themselves: will it be Fox News or Good News?


45 Comments

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Joe Kelsall, Ni aontaim leat. Ta Dia ann. I don't agree with you. God is there. God exists in the hearts of good men and women. What exists in the hearts of good people cannot be destroyed by unbelievers. I've tried the atheist route and found it empty and lacking. I don't care if people young or not young are becoming atheists. That has no effect on my belief in God. And I am a liberal person. However, as for myself, I believe in God and will continue to go to my church, worship and pray for as long as I live. Sure, people will mock and sneer about God, equating God with G_d, with Santa Clause, Easter bunny, etc. I don't care. Is cuma liom faoi sin. My prayer life and faith life does not depend on their approval or lack of it. Even if my church one day closed down much to their delight and their proud acclamations of "There is no God!", I would not lose my belief and my faith for what is in one's heart does not depend on a building or a physical structure to keep it alive.
I read that dinner suggestion and shouted "Yes!" What a great idea. At Bewley's in Dublin maybe, where Ciara can have some healthy veggies, Cahir can find coffee like Starbuck's, and Hollaback probably would like the same. Mayoman will have a fresh roast beef on multi-grain roll with all that green stuff they put on it in the little cafe not far from D's place (I'm not sure Mayoman realizes, but he's dined there with D, H, L, and me occasionally), and I'm sure it would be a great meet-up. (I eat anything that doesn't crawl away.) How about December after semester's end? Don't decline, please, because then I cannot enjoy thinking about it for the next five months, and I might really need a mood-saver fantasy after the US election in the fall! Maybe Seanomelb would fly in from down under?
Mayoman, I completely agree. I love reading their posts. Would love to have dinner with the 3 of them.
Some Christian schools in America are now teaching that man walked on the earth with dinosaurs and using the Loch Ness monster as proof so they can justify their discredited creationists theories.Cahir is spot on with his analyses.
D 18, my description was too simple and yours more accurate, thank you.
I'm always grateful to Cahir, hollabackgurl and eiriamach for their open-mindedness, clarity, intelligence and toughness. Walt Whitman would have called them "courage teachers". Whenever they write a word here; I read it attentively, consider it, and often learn.
If anyone really want to understand Thomas Jefferson then read the Qur'an. The Declaration of Independence is more in line with what is in the Qur'an than what is in the Bible. Thomas Jeffersons' qur'an is now kept in the Library of Congress in Washington D.C.
There is no God! It's all a myth spread by flabby thighed Chaucerian frauds like the late Pastor Hagee. Enjoy this life,'cos it's all there is!
Jefferson was not a 'very religious man'. He believed in a creator god who created man and the universe. But he didn't believe in an interventionist god. He didn't believe that Jesus was the son of god, he didn't believe in miracles or the supernatural. He was therefore a deist, i.e irreligious by definition. He wrote the jeffersonian bible, which is essentially the tradional bible with all the supernatural bits taken out (he viewed as a good book of morals, but to him it was merely the product of human agency). He was deeply anti institutionalised religion and seemed to be quite anti-clerical. Its important people actually realise this.
Jefferson was a very religious man, he feared government installing a religion and argued against any state sponsored religion. This does not say that he didn't believe fully in God and natural law.
Yes.
When the "Second Coming" arrives, there will be many stating " OOPS, I really screwed up !
Cahir --- Get a life -- A Christian life !!
Whats nice is that society as a rule is so more civil and respectful of each other these days.
No, it's not Santa Claus! The drift of the young away from religion is well studied. Pew Forum's 2007 U.S. Religious Landscape Survey noted that 18-29-year-olds dominate the group called "unaffiliated," the largest "religion" in the study. Pew's 2010 survey found the percentage of Millennials (born after 1980) who were unaffiliated holding steady at 25%, calling themselves atheists, agnostics, or "nothing in particular." This is double the rate of unaffiliated that existed in the 1970s and '80s. Most leave without affiliating with any other religion. Why? The 2010 study showed 79% of UNaffiliated Millennials believe "homosexuality should be accepted by society"--the largest approval rate, which was only 50% for the entire population in the study and 58% for religiously affiliated Millennials. "Nearly six-in-ten former Catholics who are now unaffiliated" left because they disagreed with RCC "on abortion and homosexuality, about half cite concerns about Catholic teachings on birth control and roughly four-in-ten name unhappiness with Catholicism's treatment of women." Many who disaffiliate "say they did so in part because they think of religious people as hypocritical or judgmental, because religious organizations focus too much on rules or because religious leaders are too focused on power and money" (2009 Pew's "Faith in Flux"). There's an abyss between the politics of conservative churches and the politics of American youth.




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