Rising atheism in America puts 'religious right on
the defensive'
By Paul Harris in New
York for The Guardian
Saturday 1 October 2011
About 400 people are preparing to gather for a conference in
Hartford , Connecticut ,
to promote the end of religion in the US and their vision of a secular
future for the country. Those travelling to the meeting will pass two huge
roadside billboardsdisplaying quotes from two of the country's most famous
non-believers: Katharine Hepburn and Mark Twain. "Faith is believing what
you know ain't so," reads the one featuring Twain. "I'm an atheist
and that's it," says the one quoting Hepburn.
At the meeting, members of the Freedom From Religion
Foundation (FFRF) will hear speakers celebrate successes they have had in removing
religion from US
public life and see awards being presented to noted secularist activists. The US is
increasingly portrayed as a hotbed of religious fervour. Yet in the homeland of
ostentatiously religious politicians such as Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry,
agnostics and atheists are actually part of one of the fastest-growing
demographics in the US :
the godless. Far from being in thrall to its religious leaders, the US is in fact
becoming a more secular country, some experts say. "It has never been better
to be a free-thinker or an agnostic in America ," says Annie Laurie
Gaylor, co-president of the FFRF. The exact number of faithless is unclear. One
study by the Pew Research Centre puts them at about 12% of the population, but
another by the Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture at Trinity College
in Hartford
puts that figure at around 20%.
Most experts agree that the number of secular Americans has
probably doubled in the past three decades – growing especially fast among the
young. It is thought to be the fastest-growing major "religious"
demographic in the country. Professor Barry Kosmin of Trinity College, who
conducts the national Religious Identification Survey, believes up to a quarter
of young people in the US now have no specific faith, and scoffs at the idea,
prevalent in so much US media and culture, that the country is highly religious
or becoming more so. "The trending in American history is towards
secularisation," Kosmin said. He cites the example of the changing face of
Sunday in the country. It was not too long ago when many sporting events were
banned on Sundays and most shops were closed too. Now the opposite is largely
true. As in Britain , Sunday
in the US
has become a normal shopping day for many, or a day to watch big football or
baseball games. "The great secular holiday in America is Super Bowl Sunday. Even
in the deep south, the biggest mega-church changes its schedule to suit the
Super Bowl," Kosmin said. He also pointed to social trends – greater
divorce rates, gay marriage and much higher percentages of people having
children out of wedlock – as other signs that the religious grip on society has
loosened.
There are other indications, too. For a long time studies
have shown that about 40% of US adults attend a church service weekly. However,
other studies that actually counted those at church – rather than just asking
people if they went – have shown the true number to be about half to two-thirds
of that figure. More Americans are now choosing to get married or be buried
without any form of religious ceremony. At universities, departments devoted to
the study of secularism are starting to appear. Books by atheist authors are
bestsellers. National groups, such as the Secular Coalition of America (SCA),
have opened branches across the country. Herb Silverman, president of the
Washington-based SCA, lives in Charleston ,
South Carolina . His local
secularist group was founded in 1994 with 10 people, but now has 150 members.
"I've been living here in the buckle of the Bible belt since 1976 and
things are getting a lot better," Silverman said. Yet there is little
doubt that religious groups still wield enormous influence in US politics and
public life, especially through the rightwing of the Republican party. Groups
such as Focus on the Family are well-funded and skilful lobbyists.
Kosmin said the attention paid by politicians and the media
to religious groups was not necessarily a sign of strength. "When religion
was doing well, it did not need to go into politics. Secularity of our
population and culture is obviously growing and so religion is on the
defensive," he said. However, it is still a brave US politician who openly declares a
lack of faith. So far just one member of Congress, Californian Democrat Pete
Stark, has admitted that he does not believe in God. "Privately, we know
that there are 27 other members of Congress that have no belief in God. But we
don't 'out' people," said Silverman. Others think that one day it will
become politically mainstream to confess to a lack of faith as US political
life lags behind the society that it represents. "Politicians have not yet
caught up with the changing demographics of our society," said Gaylor.
[Interesting and heartening if true.]
6 comments:
Interesting indeed. I read a lot of secular blogs, so I hear of things at the front lines of this issue, but it's heartening to see figures that show literal belief in religion (or fundamentalism) on the wane. I listen to the current crop of politicians from the right and am absolutely flabbergasted. Views like what these people are espousing used to be scorned and rejected as ignorant and inexcusable. Now we have the so-called "Values Voter" coalition rejecting any candidate (John Huntsman) who won't embrace the crazy.
Ah! Now I know what those billboards are about. They caught my eye when I've driven past, but I didn't realize they were for a convention.
I must say, it kills me that regardless of the fact that people came to America for freedom from religious persecution there is so much emphasis put on believing in God from politicians, but even from people you come across in everyday life. I can't count the times that I've been scoffed at for not being religious, especially with my dad's side of the family being primarily Irish Catholic. What drives me up the wall even more is the extremism we see from many of the religious individuals on the political forefront, because thats really all it is, is another form of religious extremes.
That being said, I have read quite a few articles about schools starting Atheist Clubs, and even some holding moderated debates between religious clubs and the atheist clubs. I think that's quite awesome and it is showing some progress.
I agree with Wunelle. It's seen as a weakness to be reasonably rational and to believe in science, especially when you are a Republican.
I do think that it's becoming a little easier to be an atheist here, if just in the ability to find like-minded people. But I think that's more about having the means (the internet) than there actually being greater acceptance. There has always been a large unspoken group of non-believers even in those that go to church. But they have never felt they could speak out. Just in my own experience, the acceptance among Christians of me is hit-or-miss. Obviously, my wife is one and her pastor is great. But the vast majority not only don't accept it, they can barely conceive of it. It pisses me off how many people automatically assume you believe in God. It's such an insular condescending community that seems shocked when they come upon a non-believer.
It's good to hear we're going that direction, but you wouldn't know it by the number of religious crackpots spouting their nonsense here. Maybe that's why we're heading that direction. Maybe the crazies are getting so crazy no rational mind can side with them.
"But I think that's more about having the means (the internet) than there actually being greater acceptance."
I think this is exactly right. And I think the people who claim an iron-clad, fundamentalist belief are becoming more and more outspoken even as non-believers are becoming more visible. I wonder what the REAL numbers are and if / how they've changed over time?
wunelle said: I listen to the current crop of politicians from the right and am absolutely flabbergasted.
You're not the only one! I'm sure that if any politician over here said half of what your lot do they'd make themselves unelectable - and by extension whatever party they belonged to.
Hannah said: That being said, I have read quite a few articles about schools starting Atheist Clubs, and even some holding moderated debates between religious clubs and the atheist clubs. I think that's quite awesome and it is showing some progress.
It does seem to be pointing in that direction.
dbackdad said: It pisses me off how many people automatically assume you believe in God. It's such an insular condescending community that seems shocked when they come upon a non-believer.
I guess that they'd LOVE me then!
V V said: Maybe that's why we're heading that direction. Maybe the crazies are getting so crazy no rational mind can side with them.
There's definitely that - plus the idea that they're shouting louder and louder because fewer and fewer people are actually listening to them... and they know it!
wunelle said: I wonder what the REAL numbers are and if / how they've changed over time?
That's the big question. Surveys and questionnaires are all very well but they don't really give you the whole picture. I guess we can only look back in the years ahead and see the reality of it.
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