Quote from following article:

"...religions, including Judaism, can only hope to thrive if they serve a 
purpose

that is not met elsewhere in society. It is all well and good to perform good 
deeds,

but if religions do not make themselves indispensable to families,

their future could be bleak "


Once again a writer simply "does not get it." This statement happens to be very 
true, but

it also is largely irrelevant. Why? Because the beliefs of Christians and Jews, 
qua religion,

have lost credibility. Not 100% but among the young that is almost the case, 
well above 3/4ths,

and all cohorts, even seniors, show diminishing appeal of traditionalist 
beliefs.


It is a fact that a religious faith needs to offer something that is not 
offered elsewhere

in society. Valid point.  And it is also valid to say that a religion needs to 
minister to

families with kids of else it will die. And some religious groups do that quite 
well.

Regardless, most of the young  -in their mid teens-  cease believing. And that,

not something else, is what most explains the collapse.



Can this change?  I do not think so,  even if in a few locations someone might 
come up

with a new concept that works.  But there would be no chance for a really new 
idea to

migrate to the larger denomination, to capture the minds of any establishment, 
because

so much is invested in the way things are, viz, or the way they were.


Hence, religious people doubling down on traditional beliefs.


I have no animus against traditional faiths, in fact, if I can be a help in 
some way,
count me in.  But it has been decades since I could possibly believe in the core

of traditional faiths, any traditional faith.


Much better for me to set out on my own and see what I can do.

Maybe I will fail, who can say? But what it for sure is that the religious 
status quo

is a sure ticket to nowhere.  I need to at least try to see what I can do.



Billy






---------------------------------------


Tablet


Why Social Justice Is Killing Synagogues and Churches

Data suggests that the more a religious movement is concerned with progressive 
causes, the more likely it is to rapidly lose members

By Joel Kotkin<https://www.tabletmag.com/author/jkotkin/>
March 1, 2019 • 12:00 AM



“If it turns out that there is a God … the worst that you can say about him is 
that basically he’s an underachiever.”—Woody Allen


If you go into a Reform or Conservative temple, it’s likely that you will 
notice two things: The congregation is becoming smaller and older. Across the 
United States and Europe, Jewish 
congregations<https://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Columnists/Think-Again-Can-the-Reform-Movement-staunch-the-bleeding-336238>
 are aging at a rapid rate, a phenomenon increasingly common for mainstream 
religions across the high-income world.

Overall, the American Jewish 
population<https://www.simpletoremember.com/articles/a/jewpopdrops/>—unlike 
that of demographically 
robust<https://mosaicmagazine.com/essay/2018/05/israels-demographic-miracle/> 
Israel—is on the decline, with a loss of 300,000 members over the past decade, 
a number expected to drop further<http://www.pewforum.org/2015/04/02/jews/> by 
2050. The median age of members of Reform congregations is 54, and only 17 
percent of members say they attend religious services even once a month. 
Four-fifths of the movement’s youth are gone by the time they graduate high 
school. The conservative movement is, if anything, in even worse shape: At its 
height, in 1965, the Conservative 
movement<http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/22439> had 800 
affiliated synagogues throughout the United States and Canada; by 2015 that 
number had fallen to 594.


But Jews, and their religious institutions, should not feel singled out. The 
share of Americans who belong to the Catholic 
Church<https://www.nationalreview.com/the-morning-jolt/the-catholic-church-drives-the-nail-into-its-own-moral-authority/>
 has declined from 24 percent in 2007 to 21 percent in 2014, a more rapid 
decline according to 
Pew<http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018/10/10/7-facts-about-american-catholics/>,
 then any other religious organization in memory. There are 6.5 former 
Catholics in the U.S. for every new convert to the faith, not a number 
suggesting a very sunny future.


The mainstream Protestant 
churches<http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/05/18/mainline-protestants-make-up-shrinking-number-of-u-s-adults/>
 are not exactly filling the sanctuaries either. Some, like the internally 
conflicted 
Methodists<https://www.wsj.com/articles/methodist-church-faces-possible-schism-over-gay-rights-11550757600>
 have seen their number of North American congregants drop from 15 million in 
1970 to barely half that today. Since 2007 alone, America’s mainstream churches 
have lost 5 million members, and even the once vibrant evangelical 
movement<https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/2017/1010/Amid-Evangelical-decline-growing-split-between-young-Christians-and-church-elders>
 is losing adherents outside of the developing world. Ever more 
churches<https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-to-do-with-empty-churches-11548978752>,
 particularly in urban areas, are being abandoned, turned into bars, 
restaurants, and luxury condos. And nothing augurs worse for the future than 
the fact that American 
millennials<https://www.prri.org/research/prri-rns-poll-nones-atheist-leaving-religion/>
 are leaving religious institutions at a rate four times that of their 
counterparts three decades ago; almost 40 percent of people 18 to 29 are not 
unaffiliated.


This decline is not necessarily a reflection of less spiritual feeling: 
Two-thirds of unaffiliated 
Americans<https://caspertk.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/how-we-gather.pdf> still 
believe in God or a universal spirit. The Pew poll 
shows<http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2017/09/06/more-americans-now-say-theyre-spiritual-but-not-religious/>
 that since 2012, the share of Americans who describe themselves as “spiritual 
but not religious” has surged from 19 percent to 27 percent five years later.

Why, then, the decline in religion? For one thing, young Americans have 
different habits. Rather than join institutions, millennials, argued Wade Clark 
Roof, author of the book Spiritual 
Marketplace,<https://press.princeton.edu/titles/6679.html> are indulging in a 
kind of “grazing,” finding their spiritual fixes in various different places 
rather than any one organized church. As sociologists Robert Putnam and David 
Campbell explained, those in this age group “reject conventional religious 
affiliation, while not entirely giving up their religious feelings.”


But the consumption habits of the young aren’t the only reason for America’s 
religious drought. Religious institutions and ideas are currently under 
political attack, predominantly from the left, with some progressives, such as 
California’s Dianne Feinstein or New Jersey’s Cory Booker, appearing to see 
embrace of Christian dogma, or even membership in such anodyne organizations as 
the Knights of 
Columbus<https://www.jns.org/opinion/is-it-okay-for-congress-to-target-catholic-groups/>,
 as cause for exclusion from high judicial 
office<http://thefederalist.com/2019/02/08/cory-booker-neomi-rao-unfit-office-supports-natural-marriage/>.


This trend is reinforced by the 
media<https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/belief/2010/jan/19/religion-media-bbc>
 , which is often dismissive of traditional faith. There has been a powerful 
tendency<https://nypost.com/2019/01/25/exposing-the-times-anti-christian-bias/> 
to demonize and suggest the worst of motives among the faithful, which was 
evident in the rush to judgment about the alleged racism of the Covington, 
Kentucky, religious 
students<https://nypost.com/2019/01/25/exposing-the-times-anti-christian-bias/>.
 Before the facts proved claims of racism to be false, newspaper accounts and 
tweets<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/01/covington-pile-on-symbolism/580918/?utm_source=fbb&fbclid=IwAR2sASoe99HqI9tlZ8nZar_hUlKtkMzI_HkkLg4qfmIWJXZnhk0YeWAfI0c>
 from journalists endorsed actions against the students, sometime including 
violence, in ways more reminiscent of Joseph Goebbels than Joseph Pulitzer.


As in many cases, this bias reflects the groupthink nurtured at our leading 
universities. Evangelicals and religious conservatives barely exist in the 
country’s leading theological seminaries, where they are 
outnumbered<https://www.nas.org/articles/homogenous_political_affiliations_of_elite_liberal>,
 by some estimates, 70 to 1 by liberals, and evidence suggests that those 
espousing traditional religious views are widely discriminated 
against<https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2010/07/30/no-christianity-please-were-academics>
 in academic departments.


In this difficult environment, many religious movements—Reform 
Judaism<https://reformjudaism.org/social-justice>, mainstream 
Protestantism<https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-in-the-pews-politics-is-convulsing-mainline-churches-1525445467>,
 and increasingly the Catholic Church under Pope Francis—have sought to 
redefine themselves largely as instruments of social justice. Although doing 
good deeds, or mitzvot, long has constituted a strong element in most 
religions, the primary motivation of the faith community traditionally focused 
on heritage, spirituality, and family. In their haste to be politically 
correct, even Catholic private schools such as Notre Dame are rushing to cover 
up murals of 
Columbus<https://www.wsj.com/articles/catholics-against-columbus-11548376196>, 
and, in one California case, a private Catholic grammar school has gone as far 
as hiding statues of 
saints<https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/aug/25/calif-catholic-school-removes-alienating-religious/>.


Yet rebranding themselves as progressive often brings religious activists into 
alliances with people who reject their core values. The Catholic left, for 
example, allying itself with the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, 
implicitly embraces the advocates of the most extreme abortion liberalization. 
Sometimes, these linkages are ironic: Faith in Public Life, for example, a 
strident “religious” group advocating a progressive anti-Trump line, gets much 
of its funding from George 
Soros<https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/aug/30/george-soros-catholic-useful-idiots/>,
 arguably the world’s most well-heeled and active promoter of atheism.


For their part, progressive Jews, embracing the notion of tikkun olam, face a 
similar dilemma. In their rush to oppose President 
Trump<https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2016/10/donald-trump-anti-semitism-young-jews-214314>,
 with his occasional despicable winks at alt-right groups, many Jewish 
activists have collaborated with the organizers of the Women’s 
March<https://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/276694/is-the-womens-march-melting-down>,
 including enthusiastic backers of the most influential 
anti-Semite<https://spectator.org/americas-most-vile-bigot/> of our time, 
Nation of Islam head Louis Farrakhan.


Deep blue cities and the progressive feeding lots of the academy—strongholds of 
progressivism—are precisely where support for such anti-Jewish measures as the 
BDS movement 
<https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/07/universities-must-oppose-immoral-dangerous-bds-movement/>
 is strongest. Anti-Semitism is particularly rife not in conservative Southern 
schools but in progressive places like San Francisco 
State<https://www.algemeiner.com/2017/07/19/is-san-francisco-state-university-stoking-antisemitism/>;
 in that city, the ultimate progressive stronghold, a leftist gay Jewish café 
owner<https://www.dailywire.com/news/39751/leftists-target-their-own-leftist-jewish-cafe-hank-berrien>
 recently has been subject to repeated protests for being a “Zionist 
gentrifier.”


This alliance with anti-Semites and those opposing the existence of the state 
of Israel pushes the limits of cognitive dissonance. Jews in the U.K. are 
confronted with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, who 
defends<https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/29/opinion/antisemitism-europe-jews.html>
 not only anti-Zionist but also traditional anti-Semitic tropes. Recently 
progressive heartthrob Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, herself an adopter 
<https://www.timesofisrael.com/progressive-democrat-who-upset-ny-incumbent-accused-israel-of-massacre-in-gaza/>
 of anti-Israel memes about Gaza and other occupied areas, gushed over her 
recent “lovely and wide-reaching” 
conversation<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/alexandria-ocasio-cortez-jeremy-corbyn-phone-call-twitter-labour-congress-a8761806.html>
 with Corbyn, the West’s most politically prominent Judeophobe.

Indeed, despite the impression left by some progressive Jews, the largest 
threat to Jews in America stems not from the isolated and pathetically 
small<http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/the-administration/348137-the-real-threat-to-our-republic-is-the-orwellian-antifa>
 lunatic fringe of white supremacists. The most anti-Israel members of 
Congress<http://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/129256/74-anti-israel-democrats-ben-shapiro>,
 as well as on the local 
level<https://mosaicmagazine.com/essay/2018/05/israels-demographic-miracle/>, 
come primarily not from the right wing of the GOP but the burgeoning left wing 
of the Democratic 
Party<https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/07/us/politics/democrats-israel-palestinians.html>.
 Democratic 
voters<https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/right-turn/wp/2015/03/27/republicans-democrats-and-israel/?utm_term=.c4e8a70fa1f4>—as
 well as key constituencies like 
minorities<https://www.adl.org/sites/default/files/documents/assets/pdf/press-center/adl-survey-attitudes-towards-jews-in-us-2013.pdf>
 and 
millennials<https://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/225169/pew-poll-jews-elicit-warm-feelings>—poll
 consistently less sympathetic to both Jews and 
Israel<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/02/03/upshot/which-country-do-americans-like-most-for-republicans-its-australia.html?_r=3>
 than older, generally white Republicans.


Is there a way back from this sorry state of affairs?


However satisfying to its practitioners, the emphasis on social justice is 
clearly not attracting more worshippers. Almost all the religious institutions 
most committed to this course are also in the most serious 
decline<http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2017/10/how-churches-die.php>, 
most notably mainstream Protestants but also, Catholics and 
Reform<https://urj.org/what-we-do/social-justice> and Conservative Jews. The 
rapidly declining Church of England, which is down to 2 percent share among 
British 
youth<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/sep/07/church-in-crisis-as-only-2-of-young-adults-identify-as-c-of-e>,
 is burnishing its progressive image by adding the use of 
plastics<https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/15/world/europe/lent-plastic-church-of-england.html>
 to its list of Lenten sacrifices, but seems unable to serve the basic 
spiritual and family needs of their congregants.


In contrast, more conservative faith 
organizations<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/nov/17/literal-interpretation-of-bible-helps-increase-church-attendance>
 generally enjoy better growth, and higher birthrates, particularly in the 
developing world . The University of London’s Eric 
Kaufmann<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/237662050_Shall_the_Religious_Inherit_the_Earth_Demography_and_Politics_in_the_Twenty-First_Century>
 explains in his important book Shall the Religious Inherit the 
Earth?<https://books.google.com/books?id=0wCVCDlo40oC&dq=kaufmann,+shall+the+religious+inherit+the+earth&source=gbs_navlinks_s>
 that if current trends continue, the more fundamentalist family-centered 
faiths seem most likely to survive. Already, for example, Orthodox Jews, 
historically a small subgroup, are projected to become the majority of the 
Hebraic community in Britain by 
2100<https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/oct/16/majority-of-british-jews-will-be-ultra-orthodox-by-end-of-century-study-finds>,
 and already constitute some 
three-fifths<https://www.jta.org/2016/04/18/politics/7-things-to-know-about-the-jews-of-new-york-for-tuesdays-primary>
 of Jewish children in New York.


Orthodox Jews and evangelicals may be finding common 
ground<https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-new-jewish-christian-amity-1536356083>, 
then, but the future of religion overall does not seem a bright one. It’s hard 
to imagine most young Jews becoming Orthodox, or casual Christians embracing en 
masse Mormonism or evangelical Christianity. Instead, the future seems to point 
to a smaller, more conservative religious community, isolated amidst an 
increasingly secularized culture.


To survive, less traditionalist faiths need less “virtue signaling” and more 
emphasis on serving the needs of congregants. Marshall Toplansky, who advises 
Church World Services, a major Protestant aid group, suggested that groups like 
Mormons and evangelicals who focus on providing services for families and their 
local communities fare far better than those more tied to strictly a social 
gospel. Toplansky said that many mainstream churches “have overlooked the value 
of building grassroots relationships with their donors,” who sometimes do not 
share the progressive ideology of the clerical class. Without engaging the 
faithful and addressing their needs, he noted, “people stop identifying with 
their local institution and stop participating in the local activities that 
defined them to begin with.”


Catholicism, now under a reforming and politically progressive pope, faces a 
similar challenge. It is losing adherents, not only in North America and 
Europe, where his views are popular, but also his homeland of South 
America<http://www.pewforum.org/2014/11/13/religion-in-latin-america/>, where 
the church is steadily losing out to more conservative evangelical churches. 
Until the 1960s, at least 90 percent of Latin America’s population was 
Catholic, but that number has fallen to under 70 percent. Today, roughly 1 in 4 
Nicaraguans, 1 in 5 Brazilians and 1 in 7 Venezuelans are former Catholics. The 
one place where the church is growing most, Africa, is dominated by 
conservative bishops often at odds with Francis.


Anthony Lemus, an influential lay Catholic, believes the church’s future relies 
on remaining true to its principles while refashioning its message to serve its 
adherents’ worldly, as well as spiritual, needs. An astrophysicist brought up 
in a deeply Catholic East Los Angeles household, Lemus is working with a 
prominent Catholic theologian, Rev. Robert Spitzer, on rewriting of the 
Catholic Catechism to make the faith more accessible to the new generation. He 
also supports efforts to improve services from the church—day care, athletic 
clubs, camps—that might attract young families back to the faith.


“Today’s generation is more in tune with value-add products and services 
influencing their lives immediately, and the relevance of faith competes with 
these promotions,” he said. “A ‘sticky’ rebranding of the importance of faith 
formation’s value in everyday life is key to reposition its importance for 
living a holistic life.”


Ultimately, as Lemus suggested, religions, including Judaism, can only hope to 
thrive if they serve a purpose that is not met elsewhere in society. It is all 
well and good to perform good deeds, but if religions do not make themselves 
indispensable to families, their future could be bleak. As we already see in 
Europe, churches and synagogues could become ever more like pagan temples, 
vestiges of the past and attractions for the curious, profoundly clueless about 
the passion and commitment that created them.


-- 
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