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BY ED VITAGLIANO
| AFA Journal News Editor
No Christian parent wants to hear the words "apostasy" and
"my child" uttered in the same sentence, for the very thought that
our children may be falling away from Christianity is or
should be terrifying.
But with the stakes so high, Christian parents and church leaders
must be willing to ask difficult questions. What is it that young
people, who have been raised in church and self-identify as Christians,
actually believe? Is it connected at all with the historic Christian
faith?
Some individuals who work in the social sciences have begun asking
such questions. For example, Christian Smith and Melinda Lundquist
Denton, sociologists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, began with data gleaned from the largest and most detailed
study of teenagers and religion ever undertaken, the National Study
of Youth and Religion (NSYR). Smith and Denton added the results
of follow-up, face-to-face interviews with more than 250 of the
youth who participated in the NSYR study. The authors then distilled
the results in their riveting book, Soul Searching: The Religious
and Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers.
What Soul Searching reveals is a generation of kids who
claim to be Christian, but many of whose beliefs are not even remotely
orthodox. (See AFA Journal, Nov/Dec 2005.) Smith and
Denton said, "Rather more subtly, Christianity is either degenerating
into a pathetic version of itself or, more significantly, Christianity
is actively being colonized and displaced by a quite different religious
faith."
In Real Teens: A Contemporary Snapshot of Youth Culture,
pollster and researcher George Barna, whose Barna Research Group
follows religious and spiritual trends in America, summed up that
"different religious faith" in a single word: "Whatever." That word,
which is nothing more than a verbal shrug of the shoulders at the
thought of absolute truth, "has become the mantra of the emerging
generation."
What is ironic about this is that the majority of teens in the
U.S. actually hold a very positive view of religion, and churchgoing
youth consistently answered surveys like Barnas and the NSYR
by stating that God and religion were very important in their lives.
According to Soul Searching, in interviews many teens "said
things like, Oh, [religion is] really important, yeah,
Its the center of how I live my life, and Faith
influences many of my decisions."
But what did they mean when they made such statements?
Moralism
run amok
In trying to characterize what churchgoing kids
actually believe, Smith and Denton coined the phrase "Moralistic
Therapeutic Deism." Each word presents a core facet of what is becoming
the dominant religious view among the nations youth.
First, they explained, the religious beliefs of many teens are
moralistic because they see faith as being essentially related
to mere human goodness. In other words, kids believe "that central
to living a good and happy life is being a good, moral person. That
means being nice, kind, pleasant, respectful, responsible, at work
on self-improvement, taking care of ones health, and doing
ones best to be successful."
And thats where religion fits in. "Most U.S. teens think
that one of religions primary functions is to help people
be good," said Soul Searching.
Orthodox Christian doctrine teaches that goodness is neither an
inherent human trait nor, even if it were, is it sufficient for
a saving relationship with God.
But thats just the problem. Many religious teens do not hold
to an orthodox Christian belief concerning goodness and salvation.
Barna noted from his research: "Amazingly, even though they have
personally prayed to accept Jesus Christ as their Savior, half of
all born-again teenagers believe that a person can earn his or her
way into heaven."
Smith and Denton said, "Viewed in terms of the absolute historical
centrality of the Protestant conviction about salvation by Gods
grace alone, through faith alone and not by any human good works,
many believe professions by Protestant teens, including numerous
conservative Protestant teens, in effect discard that essential
Protestant gospel."
If religion is important only to help people live good lives, might
it not also be true that the definition of a "good" life would differ
from individual to individual?
In fact, that is what the majority of youth believe. "In this context
the very idea of religious truth is attenuated," Soul
Searching said, "shifted from older realist and universalist
notions of convictions about objective Truth to more personalized
and relative versions of truth for me and truth
for you."
This rigidly individualistic view of religion "is not a contested
orthodoxy for teenagers," the book said. "It is an invisible and
pervasive doxa, that is, an unrecognized, unquestioned, invisible
premise or presupposition."
Having completely digested the doctrine of inclusivity and diversity,
it is no surprise that typical responses in the Smith and Denton
interviews were statements like, "Who am I to judge?," "If thats
what they choose, whatever," "Each person decides for himself,"
and "If it works for them, fine."
With a view of religion that is so intertwined with individualism
and which rejects any transcendent truth, it is also not surprising
that the majority of teenagers reject the very idea that religion
is necessary at all.
Most American teenagers "do not view religion as necessary
for anyone being good because they see many means to being good
and many good non-religious people. Hence, most U.S. teenagers conclude
that religion is a non-necessary condition for achieving one of
[religions] primary functions. In other words, the thing religion
specializes in does not actually require religion to achieve. Consequently,
many U.S. teenagers construct religion in non-essential terms, as
an optional individual lifestyle choice that does indeed help many
people but is certainly not itself ultimately necessary."
"Religion
helps me feel happy."
The second facet of Smith and Dentons
portrate of dominant religion in America is that it is therapeutic.
That is, faith is meant to make a person happy, and help him get
through life much as a therapist does.
This means that concepts like repentance from sin, praying for
Gods mercy and grace, or faithfully "living as a servant of
a sovereign divine" are absent from the religious lives of many
teens, and even many so-called Christian teens.
"Rather, what appears to be the actual dominant religion among
U.S. teenagers is centrally about feeling good, happy, secure, at
peace. It is about attaining subjective well-being, being able to
resolve problems, and getting along amiably with other people."
In their interviews, the researchers logged the number of teens
who mentioned certain key phrases. When it came to what the researchers
called the "historically central religious and theological ideas,"
few teens uttered them, if at all. For example, only 47 mentioned
"personally sinning or being a sinner," and the numbers trailed
off dramatically after that. Next on the list: Only 13 mentioned
"obeying God or the church." Concepts such as "the kingdom of God"
or "the grace of God" were even less frequently mentioned
by only five teens and three teens, respectively.
On the other hand, 112 teens spoke about "personally feeling, being,
getting, or being made happy" because of religion. And that was
simply the number of teens who mentioned such words in connection
to religion. Teens used the specific phrase "feel happy"
more than 2,000 times!
Smith and Denton said: "What our interviews almost never uncovered
among teens was a view that religion summons people to embrace an
obedience to truth regardless of the personal consequences or rewards."
"Heaven
and stuff"
The final characteristic of the prevailing
religious view among American teens was deism. It is "about
belief in a particular kind of God: one who exists, created the
world, and defines our general moral order, but not one who is particularly
personally involved in ones affairs especially affairs
in which one would prefer not to have God involved. Most of the
time, the God of this faith keeps a safe distance. He is often described
by teens as watching over everything from above."
In fact, most teenagers beliefs about God and their own religious
faith were so vague as to be almost incomprehensible. Smith and
Denton found "the vast majority of [teens] to be incredibly inarticulate
about their faith, their religious beliefs and practices, and its
meaning or place in their lives" (emphasis in original). The vast
majority of these churchgoing youth, they said, "simply could not
express themselves on matters of God, faith, religion, or spiritual
life."
Consider the response in one interview, when a 17-year-old Presbyterian
boy was asked to describe his Christian beliefs: "Um [pause], I
dont know, I just, uh, just like anybody else I guess. Theres
nothing really to say, I dont know, just the Presbyterian
beliefs. Just like I believe in all the sin and stuff and going
to heaven and stuff, life after life."
Or this 13-year-old Catholic girl: "Im not sure, not sure,
I cant remember what I believe. Oh, mm-mm, yeah, like Jesus
and God and them guys. That he is alive and watching over us."
Smith and Denton reminded the readers of Soul Searching
that "these were not throw-away comments of teens, these were their
main answers to our key questions about their basic personal religious
beliefs."
Some parents might be tempted to think, "Well, my teenager cant
articulate much of anything at his age." But Soul Searching
insisted that the problem was not related to their age. "Many of
the youth we interviewed were quite conversant when it came to their
views on salient issues in their lives about which they had been
educated and had practice discussing, such as the dangers of drug
abuse and [sexually transmitted diseases]."
And these kids were not stupid, as if knowing details of their
own faith was somehow beyond their intellectual capacity. "In the
end, many teenagers know abundant details about the lives of favorite
musicians and television stars or about what it takes to get into
a good college, but most are not very clear on who Moses and Jesus
were," the researchers noted in Soul Searching.
A
parasitic faith
Smith and Denton are careful not to overstate
their case about Moralistic Therapeutic Deism by implying that it
is in any sense an official religion competing with Christianity,
and thus successfully proselytizing Americas teenagers.
Instead, their description is of a phenomenon that is more insidious,
and they sounded more like science fiction writers than social scientists.
Moralistic Therapeutic Deism "is simply colonizing many established
religious traditions and congregations in the United States," and
"becoming the new spirit living in the old body. Its typical embrace
and practice is de facto, functional, practical, and tacit, not
formal or acknowledged as a distinctive religion."
Thus it operates as "a parasitic faith. It cannot sustain its own
integral, independent life; rather it must attach itself like an
incubus to established historical religious traditions, feeding
on their doctrines and sensibilities, and expanding by mutating
their theological substance to resemble its own distinctive image."
This is why religious teenagers can remain happily within their
original faith traditions, while believing in things diametrically
opposed to the actual tenets of that religion.
This parasitic faith, Soul Searching said, has been alarmingly
successful. Smith and Denton said they had come to believe "that
a significant part of Christianity in the United States is actually
only tenuously Christian in any sense that is seriously connected
to the actual historical Christian tradition, but has rather substantially
morphed into Christianitys misbegotten step-cousin, Christian
Moralistic Therapeutic Deism."
If this is the diagnosis of the disease, what is the treatment?
While the suggestions made by Smith, Denton, Barna and others will
be treated more fully in the concluding article of this series,
Soul Searching seemed clear in its assessment that the church
and Christian parents have failed in the task of educating
youth about the core beliefs of Christianity.
In what was perhaps the saddest comment in the entire 300-pages
plus of Soul Searching, the researchers said: "Indeed, it
was our distinct sense that for many of the teens we interviewed,
our interview was the first time that any adult had ever asked
them what they believed and how it mattered in their life" (emphasis
in original).
If true, that statement represents a situation which is a travesty.
And rather than worrying about whether or not apostasy may come
to America in the future, perhaps we should mourn the fact that
it is already here.
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