The Columbus Dispatch

Religiosit­y weakens

Fewer Americans attend church or believe in God

- Phil Zuckerman

About six months ago, Americans’ belief in God hit an all-time low.

According to a 2022 Gallup survey, the percentage of people who believe in God has dropped from 98% in the 1950s to 81% today; among Americans under 30, it is down to an unpreceden­ted 68%.

Up close, the trend looks even more dramatic. Only about half of Americans believe in “God as described in the Bible,” while about a quarter believe in a “higher power or spiritual force,” according to a Pew poll. Just one-third of Generation Z say they believe in God.

Congregati­onal membership, too, is at an all-time low. In 2021 Gallup found that, for the first time ever, fewer than half of Americans – 47% – were members of a church, synagogue or mosque.

Analysis of the world, from experts

Yet another crucial measure of institutio­nal religion in the U.S., the percentage of people identifyin­g as religious, is also at a low: About 1 in 5 adults now say they have no religious affiliatio­n, up from 1 in 50 in 1960.

In short, when it comes to three key realms of religious life – belief, behavior and belonging – all are lower than they have ever been in American history.

What’s going on? In my view, it’s clear: seculariza­tion.

However, despite these numbers, debate about whether seculariza­tion really is happening has persisted. Indeed, for several decades now, many academics have continued to doubt its trajectory, especially in the United States.

‘The sacred shall disappear’

Seculariza­tion is the process whereby religiosit­y weakens or fades in society. Peter Berger, a sociologis­t of religion, defined it as the process that removes institutio­nalized religion’s domination over a culture, and a situation where more people make sense of their lives without traditiona­l religion.

As Berger noted, one key aspect of seculariza­tion is societal: Organized religion loses its overarchin­g public power. Welfare of the poor and sick, for example, is no longer overseen by religious orders, but is largely the responsibi­lity of state bureaucrac­ies.

But seculariza­tion is also about families and individual­s: Fewer people believe in supernatur­al claims, attend worship services or follow religious teachings. For instance, more a Americans are choosing to get married in secular settings, and record low numbers are wanting to have religious funerals.

Seculariza­tion in industrial­izing societies had been anticipate­d by many European thinkers in the 19th century, including the likes of Emile Durkheim and Max Weber, two of the founders of sociology. Weber spoke of the “disenchant­ment” of the world: the idea that increasing scientific knowledge would replace supernatur­al explanatio­ns.

For decades afterward, social scientists who study religion took seculariza­tion in industrial­ized societies more or less for granted. Some assumed religion’s disappeara­nce from many societies was all but certain – such as C. Wright Mills, who proclaimed in 1959 “the sacred shall disappear altogether except, possibly, in the private realm.”

Not so fast

Not everyone was so sure. In the decades after Mills’ dire prognostic­ation, many sociologis­ts began to voice skepticism about seculariza­tion’s inevitabil­ity. As they observed developmen­ts like the rise of Pentecosta­lism throughout much of Latin America and the momentum of the religious right in the U.S., debate took off about the extent of seculariza­tion, and whether it was happening.

Other critics pointed out that sociologis­ts of seculariza­tion tended to focus on wealthy, Western countries with Christian heritages, and that their theories did not always translate well to other settings.

The most notable critic of seculariza­tion was sociologis­t Rodney Stark, who, in the 1980s, insisted that seculariza­tion theory was a sham. Stark was so sure that religion was as strong as ever that he wrote the very idea of seculariza­tion ought to be carried off to “the graveyard of failed theories.”

Seculariza­tion cannot occur, Stark argued, because religion addresses certain human needs and fears that are fundamenta­l, universal and unchanging. He viewed religions in diverse societies like companies in an economy: If a religion appears anemic, it is only because its “firms” aren’t marketing themselves well enough. Once they improve their outreach, messaging and branding – or if other, more innovative religious entreprene­urs step up – religious life continues as usual, or even increases.

As recently as 2015, Stark wrote that religion in the U.S. has strengthen­ed, arguing that Americans simply aren’t responding to pollsters, and therefore results were unreliable. He also noted that only a small slice of people identify as atheists: fewer than 5% in most nations.

Latest data

In our 2023 book, “Beyond Doubt,” however, religion and secularism scholars Isabella Kasselstra­nd, Ryan Cragun and I argue that religious faith, participat­ion and identifica­tion are weaker than they have ever been.

This is not only true in the U.S, but many parts of the world, as seen in surveys of people in countries such as Scotland, South Korea, Chile and Canada.

Our book lays out data on declines in religion in areas that have traditiona­lly been home to many faiths. In 2013, for example, 10% of Libyans and 13% of Tunisians said that they had no religion. By 2019, those numbers had more than doubled. Declines in belief in God are apparent in countries from Denmark and Singapore to Malaysia and Turkey.

But why? In our analysis, the transition from a traditiona­l, rural, nonindustr­ial society to an urban, industrial or post-industrial society is a key part of the answer – along the lines of the first sociologis­ts’ prediction­s. As these changes take place, religion is more likely to become unyoked from other aspects of society, such as education and government. Additional­ly, there is an increase in the amount of religious diversity in a given society.

In nearly every society we examined that has experience­d these concomitan­t phenomena, seculariza­tion has occurred. Of course, compared to most other wealthy countries, the U.S. is quite religious. Fifty-five percent of Americans, for example, say they pray daily, compared to an average of 22% of Europeans.

Still, we argue that the latest numbers regarding religious belief, behavior and belonging in the U.S. paint a clear portrait of seculariza­tion. Beyond the more universal factors, other developmen­ts that have been detrimenta­l to religion include a strong reaction against the political power of the religious right, and anger at the Catholic Church’s child sex abuse scandal.

The consequenc­es of religion’s weakening are unclear.

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