Adventists for Tomorrow

Our mission is to provide a free and open medium that will assist individuals in forming accurate, balanced, and thoughtful opinions regarding issues within and without the church.

You are not logged in.

Announcement

Due to a large increase in spam, I have frozen forum registration. If you are new to the site and want to register, e-mail me personally at vandolson@gmail.com. Thank you.

#1 08-18-09 6:01 pm

elaine
Member
Registered: 12-28-08
Posts: 1,391

Religion in the U.S. Today

The latest issue of Newsweek has a provocative article:  &#34;&#40;Un&#41;wired for God&#34; on people&#39;s religious beliefs. <BR> <BR>Excerpts:  <BR> <BR>The number of American non-believers has doubled since 1990, a 20008 Pew survey found, and increased even more in some other advanced democracies.  What&#39;s curious is not so much the overall decline of belief &#40;which has caused the Vatican to lament the de-Christianization of Europe&#41; as the pattern. <BR> <BR>In a paper last month in the online journal Evolutionary Psychology, Gregory Paul finds that <BR><b>countries with the lowest rates of social dysfunction--based on 25 measures, including rates of homicide, abortion, teen pregnancy, sexually transmitted disease, unemployment, and poverty--have become the most secular.  Those with the most dysfunction, such as Portugal and the U.S., are the most religious, as measured by self-professed belief, church attendance habits of prayer, and the like. </b> <BR> <BR>He posits that, rather than being wired into the brain, religion is a way to cope with stress in a dysfunctional society--the opium-of-the-people argument.

Offline

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB