Showing posts with label American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American. Show all posts

07 April 2009

Please Participate - 2009's BLOG AGAINST THEOCRACY

DON'T FORGET

If you support the
SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE
and you have a blog,
please participate in the
2009 event April 10-12
BLOG AGAINST THEOCRACY
by posting something in support of
church/state separation and
against religious interference in
government or government support
of religion or religious organizations.

For more information on this year's event
and some logos you may use on your own
blog click HERE.

15 March 2009

GODLESS NUMBERS RISE


        According to a 2008 survey just released by American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) and reported in a story in USA Today, people who call themselves Christians in the U.S. has dropped 11% in the last 18 years. The Bible Belt is not as Baptist as it was, the Rust Belt is less Catholic, and throughout the country people are exploring fringe religions or dropping religion completely. 
        Survey co-author Barry Kosmin says, "More than ever before, people are just making up their own stories of who they are. They say, 'I'm everything. I'm nothing. I believe in myself.'"
        In  the 1990 ARIS survey Kosmin concluded that many saw God as a "personal hobby." Today, he says, "Religion has become more like a fashion statement, not a deep personal commitment for many."
        USA Today writer Cathy Lynn Grossman says that we have become a nation of freelancers when it comes to religion.

ARIS 2008 Survey findings include:
        • Americans claiming no religion is 15%, up from 8%
          in 1990
        • This non-religious category outranks every other
          major religious group except Catholics and Baptists.
        • Baptists stand at 15.8%, down from 19.3% in 1990
        • Mainstream Protestsants are in sharp decline.
          Methodists dropped from 8% to 5%
        • Jewish numbers declined from 1.8% to 1.2%
          (some surveys show higher numbers, but those 
          include "cultural" Jews who don't necessarily 
          practice their religion)
        • Muslims have doubled from 0.3% to 0.6%
        • Challenges to Christianity don't come from other
          religions but from rejection of all forms of religion
        • Nearly 2.8 million people identify with new
          movements such as Wiccan paganism.
        • While Oregon previously led the nation in those who 
          responded NONE when asked to identify a religious
          affiliation, Vermont now leads the country with 34%

        A 48 year old woman from Rutland, VT says she is upfront about being an atheist because "It's important for us to be counted. I'm a taxpayer and a law-abiding citizen and an ethical person, and I don't think people assume this about atheists."

Factors which played some role in declining numbers among the religious include:
        • News stories about sexual abuse by clergy
        • Young people affiliating with coworkers and online 
          friendships more than in churches.
        • People moving from strongly-religious older
          communities 
        • The "piety gap" between those who support gay
          marriage, abortion rights, and stem cell research and
          those who don't

        "Rise of the Godless," a report in National Journal, widely read by members of Congress, stated:
        "In the past, politicians in Washington and elsewhere could largely ignore the Godless. But those days are over. With their numbers growing, nonbelievers are intent on pushing a political and legislative agenda governed more by cool reason than by faith."

The USA Today story includes much more information.
Click HERE for interactive graphs and videos.
See also: Rise of the Godless from National Journal (in pdf format)
and The End of Christian America from Newsweek.
(Thanks to FRED from NV for alerting
me to the Newsweek article.)

07 January 2009

WHAT IS A FREETHINKER?

According to Susan Jacoby in her 2004 book (pp 4-5): FREETHINKERS, a History of American Secularism the term freethought "...first appeared in the late 1600s and flowered into a genuine social and philosophical movement during the next two centuries..."

The author continues: "American freethought derived much of its power from an inclusiveness that encompassed many forms of rationalist belief... Freethought can... be understood as a phenomenon running the gamut from the truly antireligious... to those who adhered to a private, unconventional faith revering some form of God or Providence but at odds with orthodox religious authority. American freethinkers have included deists, who, like many of the founding fathers, believed in a 'watchmaker God' who set the universe in motion but subsequently took no active role in the affairs of men; agnostics; and unabashed atheists. What the many types of freethinkers shared, regardless of their views on the existence or nonexistence of a divinity, was a rationalist approach to fundamental questions of earthly existence ---a conviction that the affairs of human beings should be governed not by faith in the supernatural but by a reliance on reason and evidence adduced from the natural world. It was this conviction, rooted in Enlightenment philosophy, that carried the day when the former revolutionaries gathered in Philadelphia in 1787 to write the Constitution."


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