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Secular Dominance & Christian Hypocrisy
The End of Christian America
By Jon Meacham | NEWSWEEK
It was a small detail, a point of comparison buried in the fifth
paragraph on the 17th page of a 24-page summary of the 2009 American
Religious Identification Survey. But as R. Albert Mohler Jr.—president
of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, one of the largest on
earth—read over the document after its release in March, he was struck
by a single sentence. For a believer like Mohler—a starched,
unflinchingly conservative Christian, steeped in the theology of his
particular province of the faith, devoted to producing ministers who
will preach the inerrancy of the Bible and the Gospel of Jesus Christ as
the only means to eternal life—the central news of the survey was
troubling enough: the number of Americans who claim no religious
affiliation has nearly doubled since 1990, rising from 8 to 15 percent.
Then came the point he could not get out of his mind: while the
unaffiliated have historically been concentrated in the Pacific
Northwest, the report said, "this pattern has now changed, and the
Northeast emerged in 2008 as the new stronghold of the religiously
unidentified." As Mohler saw it, the historic foundation of America's
religious culture was cracking.
"That really hit me hard," he told me last week. "The Northwest was
never as religious, never as congregationalized, as the Northeast, which
was the foundation, the home base, of American religion. To lose New
England struck me as momentous." Turning the report over in his mind,
Mohler posted a despairing online column on the eve of Holy Week
lamenting the decline—and, by implication, the imminent fall—of an
America shaped and suffused by Christianity. "A remarkable culture-shift
has taken place around us," Mohler wrote. "The most basic contours of
American culture have been radically altered. The so-called
Judeo-Christian consensus of the last millennium has given way to a
post-modern, post-Christian, post-Western cultural crisis which
threatens the very heart of our culture." When Mohler and I spoke in the
days after he wrote this, he had grown even gloomier. "Clearly, there is
a new narrative, a post-Christian narrative, that is animating large
portions of this society," he said from his office on campus in
Louisville, Ky.
There it was, an old term with new urgency: post-Christian. This is not
to say that the Christian God is dead, but that he is less of a force in
American politics and culture than at any other time in recent memory.
To the surprise of liberals who fear the advent of an evangelical
theocracy and to the dismay of religious conservatives who long to see
their faith more fully expressed in public life, Christians are now
making up a declining percentage of the American population.
According to the American Religious Identification Survey that got
Mohler's attention, the percentage of self-identified Christians has
fallen 10 percentage points since 1990, from 86 to 76 percent. The
Jewish population is 1.2 percent; the Muslim, 0.6 percent. A separate
Pew Forum poll echoed the ARIS finding, reporting that the percentage of
people who say they are unaffiliated with any particular faith has
doubled in recent years, to 16 percent; in terms of voting, this group
grew from 5 percent in 1988 to 12 percent in 2008—roughly the same
percentage of the electorate as African-Americans. (Seventy-five percent
of unaffiliated voters chose Barack Obama, a Christian.) Meanwhile, the
number of people willing to describe themselves as atheist or agnostic
has increased about fourfold from 1990 to 2009, from 1 million to about
3.6 million. (That is about double the number of, say, Episcopalians in
the United States.)
While we remain a nation decisively shaped by religious faith, our
politics and our culture are, in the main, less influenced by movements
and arguments of an explicitly Christian character than they were even
five years ago. I think this is a good thing—good for our political
culture, which, as the American Founders saw, is complex and charged
enough without attempting to compel or coerce religious belief or
observance. It is good for Christianity, too, in that many Christians
are rediscovering the virtues of a separation of church and state that
protects what Roger Williams, who founded Rhode Island as a haven for
religious dissenters, called "the garden of the church" from "the
wilderness of the world." As crucial as religion has been and is to the
life of the nation, America's unifying force has never been a specific
faith, but a commitment to freedom—not least freedom of conscience. At
our best, we single religion out for neither particular help nor
particular harm; we have historically treated faith-based arguments as
one element among many in the republican sphere of debate and decision.
The decline and fall of the modern religious right's notion of a
Christian America creates a calmer political environment and, for many
believers, may help open the way for a more theologically serious
religious life.
Let's be clear: while the percentage of Christians may be shrinking,
rumors of the death of Christianity are greatly exaggerated. Being less
Christian does not necessarily mean that America is post-Christian. A
third of Americans say they are born again; this figure, along with the
decline of politically moderate-to liberal mainline Protestants, led the
ARIS authors to note that "these trends … suggest a movement towards
more conservative beliefs and particularly to a more 'evangelical'
outlook among Christians." With rising numbers of Hispanic immigrants
bolstering the Roman Catholic Church in America, and given the
popularity of Pentecostalism, a rapidly growing Christian milieu in the
United States and globally, there is no doubt that the nation remains
vibrantly religious—far more so, for instance, than Europe.
Still, in the new NEWSWEEK Poll, fewer people now think of the United
States as a "Christian nation" than did so when George W. Bush was
president (62 percent in 2009 versus 69 percent in 2008). Two thirds of
the public (68 percent) now say religion is "losing influence" in
American society, while just 19 percent say religion's influence is on
the rise. The proportion of Americans who think religion "can answer all
or most of today's problems" is now at a historic low of 48 percent.
During the Bush 43 and Clinton years, that figure never dropped below 58
percent.
Many conservative Christians believe they have lost the battles over
issues such as abortion, school prayer and even same-sex marriage, and
that the country has now entered a post-Christian phase. Christopher
Hitchens —a friend and possibly the most charming provocateur you will
ever meet—wrote a hugely popular atheist tract a few years ago, "God Is
Not Great." As an observant (if deeply flawed) Episcopalian, I disagree
with many of Hitchens's arguments—I do not think it is productive to
dismiss religious belief as superstitious and wrong—but he is a man of
rigorous intellectual honesty who, on a recent journey to Texas,
reported hearing evangelical mutterings about the advent of a
"post-Christian" America.
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