The trend of Americans exiting the pews, never to return, has been steady for some years now and shows no signs of slowing down. According to a new Gallup poll released this week, only 47% of Americans polled in 2020 belong to a house of worship, which is the first time that number has fallen below half of the country since they started polling Americans on this question.
But what's really interesting is that the collapse in church membership has happened mostly over the past two decades. Since Gallup started recording these numbers decades ago, church membership rates were relatively steady, with only the smallest decline over the decades. In 1937, 73% of Americans belong to a church. In 1975, it was 71%. In 1999, it was 70%. But since then, the church membership rate has fallen by a whopping 23 percentage points.
It is not, however, because of some great atheist revival across the land, with Americans suddenly burying themselves in the philosophical discourse about the unlikeliness of the existence of a higher power. . . . A 2017 Gallup poll finds that 87% of Americans say they believe in God. So clearly, what we're seeing is a dramatic increase in the kinds of folks who would say something akin to, "I'm spiritual, but not big on organized religion."
Blame the religious right. Until recently, the U.S. was largely unaffected by the increasing secularization of many European countries, but that started to change dramatically at the turn of the 21st century. And it's no mystery why. The drop in religious affiliation starts right around the time George W. Bush was elected president, publicly and dramatically associating himself with the white evangelical movement. The early Aughts saw the rise of megachurches with flashily dressed ministers who appeared more interested in money and sermonizing about people's sex lives than modeling values of charity and humility.
Not only were these religious figures and the institutions they led hyper-political, the outward mission seemed to be almost exclusively in service of oppressing others. The religious right isn't nearly as interested in feeding the hungry and sheltering the homeless as much as using religion as an all-purpose excuse to abuse women and LGBTQ people. In an age of growing wealth inequalities, with more and more Americans living hand-to-mouth, many visible religious authorities were using their power to support politicians and laws to take health care access from women and fight against marriage between same-sex couples. And then Donald Trump happened.
Trump was a thrice-married chronic adulterer who routinely exposed how ignorant he was of religion, and who reportedly — and let's face it, obviously — made fun of religious leaders behind their backs. But religious right leaders didn't care. They continually pumped Trump up like he was the second coming, showily praying over him and extorting their followers to have faith in a man who literally could not have better conformed to the prophecies of the Antichrist. It was comically over the top, how extensively Christian right leaders exposed themselves as motivated by power, not faith.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, then, Gallup's numbers show numbers of religiously affiliated Americans taking a nosedive during the Trump years, dropping from 55% of Americans belonging to a church to 47%.
[T]he drop-off in religious affiliation is, researchers have shown, likely less about people actively quitting churches, and more about churches being unable to recruit younger followers to replace the ones who die. As Pew Research Center tweeted in 2019, "Today, there is a wide gap between older Americans (Baby Boomers and members of the Silent Generation) and Millennials in their levels of religious affiliation."
[Y]oung adults, even those who went to church with their parents, do have to make an active choice to join a church as adults. And many are going to look at hypocritical, power-hungry ministers praying over an obvious grifter like Trump and be too turned off to even consider getting involved.
In 2017, Robert P. Jones, the head of the Public Religion Research Institute and author of "White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity," spoke with Salon about how the decline in religion is concentrated largely among young people. There's "a culture clash between particularly conservative white churches and denominations and younger Americans," he explained, noting that young people were particularly critical of anti-science and homophobic rhetoric from religious leaders.
It's a story with a moral so blunt that it could very well be a biblical fable: Christian leaders, driven by their hunger for power and cultural dominance, become so grasping and hypocritical that it backfires and they lose their cultural relevance. Not that there's any cause to pity them, since they did this to themselves. The growing skepticism of organized religion in the U.S. is a trend to celebrate. While more needs to be done to replace the sense of community that churches can often give people, it's undeniable that this decline is tied up with objectively good trends: increasing liberalism, hostility to bigotry, and support for science in the U.S. Americans are becoming better people, however slowly, and the decline in organized religious affiliation appears to be a big part of that.
Thoughts on Life, Love, Politics, Hypocrisy and Coming Out in Mid-Life
Sunday, April 04, 2021
How the Christian Right Is Killing Religion in America
It is Easter Sunday and church membership in America is at a new low point and not because of the Covid-19 pandemic which has forced many church services online. (I suspect a year of not physically attending church may further accelerate the phenomenon since many will realize they haven't been struck dead by a lightning bolt for missing church) Rather, much of the exodus from church affiliation is due to disgust with organized religion and the moral bankruptcy and greed of self-styled religious leaders and the near limitless hypocrisy of misnamed "conservative Christians" who for years have put anti-abortion and anti-gay efforts ahead of following Christ's admonitions to help the poor and homeless and to not make wealth one's god. Losses in church membership has been the worse in the Catholic Church where the world wide sex abuse scandal combined with a fanatical adherence to 12th century to sex and sexuality have finally convinced many life long and younger Catholics to walk away. Among Protestants, much of the disgust stems from the fusion of evangelical/Southern Baptist churches with the Republican Party and the embrace of Donald Trump, perhaps the most morally bankrupt public figure in many generations. The irony is that Republicans continue to pander to and attempt to give special rights to a shrinking right wing Christian base which is only serving to alienate even more members of younger generations. A piece in Salon looks at the phenomenon which, in my view is a positive thing. Here are excerpts:
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I think that it may be worth mentioning that although the actual collapse of church membership began during the W administration, the basis for the collapse was set during the time of Ronnie Rotten, with the growth of the television scamvangelists such as Jim and Tammy Bakker and of Trinity Broadcasting, and their exposures as grossly shearing their sheep for the acquisition of personal plunder on a scale that could not be ignored, even by the willing gullible.
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