Monday, September 04, 2023

Secularization

Lyman Stone at the Institute for Family Studies points out a great flaw in the general narratives about why people don't go to church anymore: they all focus on what adults say are their reasons. Atheists and the other nonreligious focus on how unlikely it all seems, or the lack of toleration/social action/sincerity they see from the church, or personal narratives about what they were thinking about and looking for as young adults. Those who might be sympathetic to believers but church non-attenders cite things wrong with the church or with worship: politics, music, relevance.

But the decisions were made long before that. Almost all the secularization has occurred before age 22, sometimes long before. Parents who integrated their faith into the family activities - as had been done with them (mediated by a culture which did not bowl alone but encouraged everyone in voluntary groups) - have a much higher rate of children still in the faith.  It is not more education that causes all the smarties to rethink their faith, it is a culture that taught you young that you were going to center your life on school for a long time, quietly relegating faith to third, fourth, ninth place in your life.

I have an elaborate story of my early 20s, of influence of Tolkien, then Lewis, then writing a collection of songs about the Grail quest and wrestling personally with the same questions the characters faced; of planning to go to seminary but ceasing to go to church, and floundering in many ways, haunted by both my church upbringing and my abandonment of it. Very deep, very intellectual, very neat and coherent. But I could also say with truth "I was terribly sad.  I went back to church because nice ladies had given me cookies there when I was small, and told me I was wonderful, and cared about how I was doing. But no one thought I was wonderful , or cared about how I as doing, or gave me cookies now." 

Which was the truer narrative?  Wouldn't we all like it to be the ennobling careful consideration one rather than the rather pathetic one? But I could see in the nonreligious smarties even then that they were motivated by fashion, and tribal aspiration to seem wise and belong to the Inner Ring, however much they quoted philosophers. None of us comes to the faith by works, but by grace.

So all you nice ladies making cookies (or these days, approved healthy snacks), thenteaching the 13 y/o's how to teach songs with silly hand motions to 8 y/o's, all ye who have no training in hermeneutics and epistemology and theology - it might be thou who has more correctly interpreted, more deeply and accurately known, and more coherently organised the faith as received and delivered it onward. Go forth and bake.

4 comments:

james said...

"the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts"
But the material for thought comes from the experiences of their short lives.

I wonder if one of the differences is that there's less quiet lately.

G. Poulin said...

My wife and I belonged to a home-schooling collective of families while the kids were young. We showered the kids with all kinds of attention, took them on endless field trips, stuffed them chock full of both cookies AND apologetics --- and half of them still opted in the end for that crappy worthless pagan culture out there. Why? I don't pretend to know, but I suspect that as they got older, they realized that their Christianity was unacceptable to their wider circle of peers (peer culture being the only culture that young people really care about). What I wonder about is why the ones who remained Christian did so. It's a mystery.

Assistant Village Idiot said...

I think 50% is considered pretty good at this point, for the reasons you mentioned. Plus I know a few who are late returns, who have come back in their late 30s.

And another idea occurs to me, which I will make a separate post.

Michael Dyer said...

My father always believed that no one is a Christian who doesn’t choose to be, so we were exposed to it but it wasn’t forced on us. As a result it always felt like my choice, and so I never really drifted from faith.

The “problem” is your children have free will. They are faced with the same choice Adam and Eve faced, and they were perfect beings living in Paradise

The best inoculation is the gospel followed up with plenty of truth. All the things that lead us away from God, if they could be viewed in their entirety would always seem like an idiots idea at best or a living nightmare at worst.