Manawatu Standard

Religion losing its grip on US

- Philip Bump

What’s surprising about rapper Lil Nas X’s effort to stir up controvers­y by selling Satantheme­d sneakers isn’t really that he’s leveraging religion for outrage.

It’s a tried-and-true technique for entertaine­rs, particular­ly those whose futures might look a bit dimmer than their pasts. What’s surprising is more the outrage attempt actually got some traction.

Governor Kristi L. Noem, R-S.D., attacked the sneakers as ‘‘outrageous, disgusting and perverted,’’ an excoriatio­n that the rapper quickly embraced. Over at Fox& Friends, co-friend Pete Hegseth got mad about Nike producing the shoes . . . until the show’s meteorolog­ist informed him that Nike wasn’t making them.

The sneakers were part of an effort by Lil Nas X to draw attention to his new song, ‘‘MONTERO’’ – the video for which includes his giving the Dark Lord a lap dance. It’s just pure, distilled controvers­y bait of the sort we’ve seen so many times over the past few decades. And yet it still manages to gin up controvers­y.

All of this overlaps with a more interestin­g bit of news centred on America’s religious fervour.

In 2020, Gallup’s measuremen­t of the percentage of Americans who identified religion as very important dropped to 48 per cent, the lowest on record. The change since 2019 was not significan­t; two years ago, the figure fell beneath 50 per cent for the first time. But that the figure remains so low is remarkable.

Particular­ly when coupled with another record low found in Gallup’s poll. Last year, only 30 per cent of the country reported having attended a religious service in the prior week.

There is, of course, amassive caveat to that number, which Gallup’s Megan Brenan is quick to note: the coronaviru­s pandemic made it far more likely that Americans would avoid inperson services. Nonetheles­s, the figure is the continuati­on of a trend. In 2019, the three-year average of this figure was about 34 per cent, down from the threeyear average in 2009 of 41 per cent.

The shift toward a less densely religious country has been predicted for some time. In 2015, Pew Research Center released projection­s of religious density around the world, estimating that between 2010 and 2050 the percentage of Americans identifyin­g as Christian would decline by 12 percentage points and the percentage of ‘‘unaffiliat­ed’’ Americans would increase by 9 points. The new Gallup data reflects movement in the same direction.

What isn’t clear, though, is how much of this is a shift in behaviour and how much is a shift in identifica­tion. This was the point made by CEI’S Richard

Morrison on Twitter: maybe there’s just less of a cultural push to affiliate with religion as robustly as was once the case. Maybe, in other words, the number of Americans identifyin­g as religious and saying they went to church or synagogue within the past week was inflated by the sense that such things were believed to be culturally important or by actual attendance at services for the same reason.

There are underlying demographi­c shifts which might contribute to the shift as well. Younger people are less likely to identify as religious than older Americans, for example. As America’s older population declines in size (he said gently), the density of non-religious people might be expected to increase.

America’s older population is also more likely to be white and presumably less likely to listen to artists like Lil Nas X. So even as religion grows less important to Americans overall, it remains very important to a lot of Americans – particular­ly older, more conservati­ve Americans. And so, despite how nakedly eager the ploy was for attention, a Republican governor and a conservati­ve television show take Lil Nas X’s bait.

 ?? WASHINGTON POST ?? Pews sit empty inside the Life Centre Internatio­nal Church in St. Louis.
WASHINGTON POST Pews sit empty inside the Life Centre Internatio­nal Church in St. Louis.

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