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Secular Dominance & Christian Hypocrisy
What's happening to
religion?
Mike Hendricks
The cover of the April 13, 2009, Newsweek magazine shouts in bright red
words against a black background, "The Decline and Fall of Christian
America."
The article that addresses this statement is actually titled "The End of
Christian America" and reports that the percentage of self-identified
Christians has fallen 10 percentage points in the past two decades. Even
though dramatic, this pales in comparison to Europe, where only 10
percent of French Catholics attend church regularly, 7 percent of Church
of England members attend church more than once or twice a month, 11⁄2
percent of Sweden Lutherans, formerly the state religion, go to church
at all, and in Ireland, which has traditionally had the highest church
attendance of any country in Western Europe, the percentage professing
to be Christians has dropped from 85 percent to 60 percent in the past
25 years.
Back in America, the percentage of people who claim no religious
affiliation at all has nearly doubled since 1990, from 8 to 15 percent;
the Pew Reports says it has doubled from 8 to 16 percent.
In terms of voting, people with no religious affiliation has grown from
5 percent to 12 percent in the past 20 years, roughly the same
percentage of the electorate as African Americans.
The number of people willing to describe themselves as atheist or
agnostic has increased about fourfold from 1990 to 2009; from 1 million
to about 3.6 million. That is about double the number of Episcopalians
in the United States.
So what do we make of this? Are we turning into a Godless world on the
eve of destruction or is this a natural progression, an evolution if you
will, of rational thought? Obviously the answer lies in who one talks
to. Religious people will say the former, secular people will say the
latter. Secularism, in fact, is defined as people putting their trust in
reason, science and the power of the individual.
The decline in religiosity in Europe has been going on for a long time
but it's a relatively recent phenomena in the United States. We went
through a period of religious decline in the 1960s and '70s where
average weekly church attendance dropped from around 60 percent to 40
percent, prompting the controversial "Is God Dead?" cover on a major
magazine during that period.
Paraphrasing an old line, the report of God's death was greatly
exaggerated, because church attendance leveled off at about 40 percent
and stayed there until just recently, making the United States a more
religious country than any of its western European counterparts.
But now the decline has started again and there are many reasons for it.
One can go into any church in American and find two population groups
always over-represented and one population group significantly
underrepresented. The old and the young go to church and most of the
people in between don't. The current popular theory as to why this is
says that the young are there because they're just learning, the old are
there because they're much closer to the end than the beginning and
they're trying to cover their bets and the people in between have other
things to do.
Actually, most of the experts predicted this decline to occur much
sooner around the globe. Their logic was that as man continued to answer
the great mysteries of the world through science, the need for
other-worldly answers would continue to decline. We remember the
travails of Galileo who was imprisoned and threatened with death for
religious heresy when he suggested that the Sun was the center of the
Universe instead of the Earth. Of course he was right.
Later as we began to understand the weather from a scientific
perspective, it became clear to most that hurricanes, floods, tornados,
hail, sleet, and snow came from nature and not from God. As probes have
reached the outer limits of the universe, we have had to address the
fact that this planet we inhabit is nothing more than a pin prick on the
body of the cosmos.
Can science disprove the need for religion or the existence of God?
It cannot.
Religion is based on faith and belief; science on observable, testable
conditions that produce facts. Believers will continue to believe,
regardless of scientific findings and science will continue to press on
to answer the great questions still facing mankind, regardless of
religion. Can they co-exist?
Of course they can if each side will allow the other the privilege of
doing so. Tolerance, understanding, love, and diversity have been the
hallmarks of this great country of ours and there's no reason why that
can't continue to be as long as we respect the beliefs of our fellow
man, regardless of what those beliefs are.
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