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Topic: CNN article: Less religious people in America now

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RockStarGirl avatar
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Subject: CNN article: Less religious people in America now
Date Posted: 3/10/2009 9:10 AM ET
Member Since: 4/20/2006
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I found this very interesting.  I've long suspected that there were less religious people in the US that didn't feel comfortable identifying themselves as either atheist/agnostic or non-religious.  It looks like times are changing, and people are being more honest now.  This is very encouraging!

http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/wayoflife/03/09/us.religion.less.christian/index.html

(CNN) -- America is a less Christian nation than it was 20 years ago, and Christianity is not losing out to other religions, but primarily to a rejection of religion altogether, a survey published Monday found.

Survey finds percentage of of Americans identifying themselves as Christian has fallen over two decades.

Survey finds percentage of of Americans identifying themselves as Christian has fallen over two decades.

Seventy-five percent of Americans call themselves Christian, according to the American Religious Identification Survey from Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. In 1990, the figure was 86 percent.

William Donohue, president of the Catholic League said he thinks a radical shift towards individualism over the last quarter-century has a lot to do it.

"The three most dreaded words are thou shalt not," he told Lou Dobbs. "Notice they are not atheists -- they are saying I don't want to be told what to do with my life."

At the same time there has been an increase in the number of people expressing no religious affiliation.

The survey also found that "born-again" or "evangelical" Christianity is on the rise, while the percentage who belong to "mainline" congregations such as the Episcopal or Lutheran churches has fallen.

One in three Americans consider themselves evangelical, and the number of people associated with mega-churches has skyrocketed from less than 200,000 in 1990 to more than 8 million in the latest survey. Video Watch CNN report on new study »

The rise in evangelical Christianity is contributing to the rejection of religion altogether by some Americans, said Mark Silk of Trinity College.

"In the 1990s, it really sunk in on the American public generally that there was a long-lasting 'religious right' connected to a political party, and that turned a lot of people the other way," he said of the link between the Republican Party and groups such as the Moral Majority and Focus on the Family. Video Watch author on mixing religion and politics »

"In an earlier time, people who would have been content to say, 'Well, I'm some kind of a Protestant,' now say 'Hell no, I won't go,'" he told CNN.

Silk also said the revelation that some Catholic priests had sexually abused children -- and senior figures in the church hierarchy had helped to hide it -- drove some Catholics away from religion.

And, he said, it is now more socially acceptable than it once was to admit having no religion.

"You're not declaring yourself a total pariah. The culture has changed in a way that makes it easier to say, 'No, I don't have a religion. Even in the past year, Mitt Romney and Barack Obama feel obliged to talk about 'those of no faith,' " he pointed out. Obama mentioned people without faith in his inaugural address in January, making him the first president to do so.

In the survey, one in five Americans said they have no religious identity or did not answer the question, and more than one in four said they do not expect to have a religious funeral.

The rise in what the survey authors call "nones" is the only trend reflected in every single state in the study, Silk said.

"We don't see anything else in the survey that is nationwide," he told CNN.

Still, Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, remained hopeful that people will return to their faith, noting there was a less dramatic decline in those affiliating themselves with a religion this decade than in the 1990s.

Perkins told Lou Dobbs he sees that decline easing, and he thinks soon religion will be an even greater part of people's lives.

"If this poll is taken next year will the outcome be different?" he asked. "As the economy goes downward, I think people are going to be driven to religion."

Other findings include:

• The percentage of Catholics in the United States has remained steady at about one in four since 1990, while the percentage of other Christians has plummeted from 60 percent to 50 percent.

• The percentage of Muslims has doubled since 1990, but remains statistically very small, only 0.3 percent in the original survey and 0.6 percent today.

• Mormons have remained steady as a percentage of the population, even as the number of people in the United States has grown. They make up 1.4 percent of the population.

• The number of Jews in the United States is falling if the category includes only those who define themselves as Jews religiously, but has remained the same if the category includes people who consider themselves ethnically Jewish.

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The survey polled 54,461 Americans between February and November of last year. Pollsters conducted the research in both English and Spanish.

The survey is the third in a series, following polls in 1990 and 2001.

Heloise avatar
Date Posted: 3/10/2009 11:57 PM ET
Member Since: 11/28/2006
Posts: 2,087
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It is very encouraging news.  I read numerous articles about this today.  I think that people are just fed up with the right-wing religious wackos who have been trying to turn this country into a theocracy.  A lot of this goes along with finally getting rid of George Bush and Co, who claimed that they were very Christian and wanted the right-wing Christians as part of their base. 

I also think that there are a lot of people who no longer afraid to admit that they really don't believe.  It's hard to admit that you are a non-believer if you have been raised in a church or if you think that society will look down on you.  There are also more multi-cultural families now and they might be less religious.  For example if the parents are different religions, maybe they don't raise their children in either one.  So there are probably more people being raised in a non-religious setting now.  Boy, I wish I had been one of them!!!

 



Last Edited on: 3/10/09 11:58 PM ET - Total times edited: 1
peculiarbookworm avatar
Amy
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Date Posted: 4/8/2009 10:22 AM ET
Member Since: 3/11/2008
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http://www.newsweek.com/id/192583?GT1=43002

The End of Christian America

The percentage of self-identified Christians has fallen 10 points in the past two decades. How that statistic explains who we are now—and what, as a nation, we are about to become.

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I wasn't able to read the entire article, but scanning through the comments made me laugh. Check it out.

Heloise avatar
Date Posted: 4/8/2009 11:17 AM ET
Member Since: 11/28/2006
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The comments are funny and sad at the same time.  Lots of wackadoodles out there.

 

kontessa avatar
Date Posted: 9/20/2009 10:37 PM ET
Member Since: 1/1/2009
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 So we should hit the age of humanity, love, and reason in another 100 years?   =)