The Week
September 8, 2017
 
The dangers of the great American  unchurching
 
Damon Linker
 
 
Americans  are abandoning religion in droves. 
That's  the clear takeaway from two crucially important polls released 
earlier this week  — one from the Public Religion Research Institute and 
another 
from the Pew  Research Center. 
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, while the share of those 
who 
call  themselves "religious and spiritual" has declined from 59 percent to 48 
percent.  That's a dramatic change for a mere five years, and it builds on 
longer-term  trends. 
The _PRRI  poll_ 
(https://www.prri.org/research/american-religious-landscape-christian-religiously-unaffiliated/)
 , which is far more ambitious, places 
the Pew findings in a broader  context, showing that white Christians now 
comprise less than half of the  population; that the relative size of the 
white evangelical Protestant, white  mainline Protestant, and white Catholic 
populations is declining rapidly; that  24 percent of the country is 
religiously unaffiliated; that the share of young  people (aged 18-29) in that 
unchurched group is 38 percent; and that nearly all  of the growth in the 
numbers 
of the religiously unaffiliated has taken place  since the early 1990s, when 
their share of the population consistently averaged  a comparatively paltry 
8 percent. 
Add  up the findings and assume current trends continue and we're left with 
a picture  of the United States as a country in which established religious 
traditions and  institutions are in sharp decline — and therefore in which 
culture and politics  are rapidly secularizing. 
Liberals,  who are often secular in orientation, will likely respond to the 
news by  rejoicing. With the religiously unaffiliated flocking in _much  
greater numbers_ 
(https://www.prri.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/PRRI-AVA-Widening-Gap-Religious-Political-Affiliation-.png)
  to the  Democratic Party 
than the GOP, this would seem to be another confirmation of the  "_emerging  
Democratic majority_ 
(http://theweek.com/articles/701336/foolish-complacency-optimistic-liberals) " 
thesis that has captured the imaginations of so many 
on  the left over the past decade and a half. 
But  the enthusiasm is unwarranted. Whatever the left's electoral gains 
following  from the increasing secularization of the country, they are likely 
to be  balanced out by other changes that may well prove to be far more 
pernicious.  There is no guarantee that the transition to a more purely secular 
culture and  politics will proceed smoothly — or that the resulting 
post-religious culture  and politics will even end up being especially liberal. 
More  traditional religious believers already feel under siege from the 
federal  government and an often overtly hostile surrounding culture. Liberals 
tend to  dismiss this as paranoia and whining. But as we saw with Democratic 
Sen. Dianne  Feinstein's _harsh  questioning_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2017/09/07/did-a-democratic-senator-just-accuse-a-judicial
-nominee-of-being-too-christian/?utm_term=.c3c04eb50bee)  on Wednesday of  
judicial nominee Amy Barrett, a devout Catholic, the impression isn't wholly 
 without foundation in reality. (Back in June, Bernie Sanders posed  
similarly _accusatory  questions_ 
(https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/06/bernie-sanders-chris-van-hollen-russell-vought/529614/)
  to a 
conservative  evangelical nominee for the Office of Management and Budget.) The 
message  conservative believers hear from liberals and the left is clear: If 
you 
hold  traditionally religious views, you will be treated as an unwelcome 
outsider in  American public life. 
This  hostility has provoked a shift in the goals and outlook of 
traditionalist  Christians. Where once they thought of themselves as a "moral 
majority" that  might retake political and cultural institutions and transform 
them 
in their  image, now they merely want to ensure that the government's power 
to persecute  them is restrained. (Hence the emphasis of the dwindling 
religious right on  religious liberty protections.) 
Hence  also the strategic (some say cynical) alliance many evangelicals 
forged with  Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign. There is 
abundant _anecdotal  evidence_ 
(http://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/is-the-nashville-statement-a-surrender/)
  that the alliance may  well backfire, 
hastening the exit of young (overwhelmingly anti-Trump)  evangelicals from 
the faith. But those evangelical leaders who supported and  continue to 
stand by Trump would likely say that this eventuality makes it even  more 
essential to establish a strong presidential protection racket for  religious 
institutions. The smaller and less powerful the church becomes, the  more 
persecution it is likely to face in an increasingly secular (and sometimes  
even 
explicitly anti-religious) common culture. 
In  this respect, the rise of Donald Trump to the presidency was driven in 
part by a  precipitous collapse in the power of the churches in American 
public life. 
And  that brings us to a second and even more troubling consequence of 
America's  growing secularization.
 
 
Liberals  tend to assume that those who have left religious traditions and 
institutions  behind will end up being … secular liberals, which is to say 
paragons (in their  own eyes) of liberal tolerance and moral virtue. But not 
only is this belied by  the occasionally harsh anti-religious fervor of many 
secular liberal pundits and  public officials. It's also contradicted by 
the rise of the post-religious  right. 
There  is no guarantee at all that those who leave religious institutions 
and  traditions behind will end up on the liberal left. As Trump's strong 
support in  the GOP primaries among _non-religious  Republicans_ 
(http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/07/21/churchgoing-republicans-once-skeptical-of-
trump-now-support-him/)  attests, a  significant number of the 
post-religious (especially those who are _less  well educated_ 
(https://www.prri.org/research/american-religious-landscape-christian-religiously-unaffiliated/)
 ) 
could well end up on the nationalist alt-right. 
_Ross  Douthat_ 
(https://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/16/opinion/sunday/in-defense-of-the-religious-right.html?mcubz=0&_r=0)
 , _Peter  Beinart_ 
(https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/04/breaking-faith/517785/) , 
and The  
Week's own _Pascal-Emmanuel  Gobry_ 
(http://theweek.com/articles/687808/didnt-like-christian-right-youll-really-hate-postchristian-right)
  have all 
noted the  ominous emergence of a post-religious right, and have made the point 
that the  left's most vociferous critics of the old religious right (of 
which I _was  once one_ 
(https://www.amazon.com/Theocons-Secular-America-Under-Siege/dp/1400096855) ) 
may well end up ruing the decline and fall of their 
former  opponents. 
A  post-religious America will be very different from the country we've 
known up  until quite recently. Not all (or even many) of the changes will be  
improvements.

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