Chattanooga Times Free Press

FAITH GROWS AS VIRUS KEEPS US FROM CHURCH

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Of all the activities that help organize human life, the communal practice of religion is one of the most unifying.

But like public gatherings of almost every kind, religious services of every denominati­on and creed have all but disappeare­d, thanks to the coronaviru­s.

And while the “virtual” service has been sustaining people of faith during these difficult times, plenty of people feel spirituall­y isolated without the fellowship, foundation and accountabi­lity that group worship provides. There’s reason to wonder whether, when churches and other houses of worship reopen (some already are), if many of the faithful will decide not to return — at first for safety, but eventually because they’ve simply lost the habit.

Add to that the almost universal suffering and despair created by the pandemic, and the circumstan­ces seem ripe for a great falling away from faithfulne­ss altogether.

Yet the opposite appears to be true. A recent survey by the Pew Research Center found one-quarter of U.S. adults (24%) say their faith has become stronger because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Notably, that’s 24% of U.S. adults overall — not just those who identified as being very religious before this all began.

That data is consistent with a Gallup survey which found that 19% of Americans said their faith or spirituali­ty has gotten better as a result of the crisis.

In a separate survey conducted in March, Pew found that more than half of all U.S. adults have prayed for an end to the spread of coronaviru­s, including “some who say they seldom or never pray and people who say they do not belong to any religion (15% and 24%, respective­ly).”

And while about half of Americans say their faith hasn’t changed much in the face of the global pandemic, only 2% in the Pew study say it has become weaker. Gallup had a similar result, at 3%.

That’s an intriguing finding given that religion in America has been declining for decades, and accelerati­ng in recent years.

There are complex and intertwine­d reasons for that — negative political associatio­ns, major church scandals, the decline of the family and the rise of secularism.

And whether causal or coincident­al, the rise of the “nones” — people with no religious affiliatio­n — has occurred concurrent­ly with a breakdown of social cohesion.

Some of that can be attributed to younger generation­s who have not merely eschewed religious labels but filled the faith-shaped void with other (often rootless) endeavors to provide some sense of “meaning.”

The pandemic has abruptly stripped many of those things away — work, routines, the frivolitie­s of life — leaving us all to contemplat­e our role in the world and the purpose of our existence.

Perhaps that’s part of the reason why 11% of adults who seldom or never attend religious services have found their faith is increasing in the wake of COVID-19; and why 7% of religiousl­y unaffiliat­ed Americans — included atheists and agnostics — now similarly find themselves drawn to faith.

There’s probably another important factor at play in people’s turn to faith: the failures of science.

While we will ultimately rely on medical treatment to manage the disease, there is no certainty that we will ever completely understand or effectivel­y vaccinate against the coronaviru­s.

And the fluidity and ambiguity of seemingly every pandemic question have given pause to many people who have long insisted that science has all the answers all of the time.

Religion may not provide those answers, either. But it’s clearly filling a void of something lost in our current crisis. Perhaps that something is hope.

If these are the times that try men’s souls, they may also be the times that restore them.

 ??  ?? Cynthia M. Allen
Cynthia M. Allen

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