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Thursday, June 17, 2021

The Good and the Bad of Losing Cultural Christianity


Earlier this spring, I took part in the “Culture Friday” segment on The World and Everything In It podcast. We discussed the Gallup “Houses of Worship” research that showed—for the first time in the eight decades of this survey—religious Americans to now be in the minority. Only 47 percent of Americans claim membership in a church, synagogue, or mosque.

The fading of cultural Christianity, even in traditionally Bible belt parts of the country, has stirred up all sorts of commentary, from the effects of expressive individualism on society’s thought patterns, to the syncretistic approach many adopt in terms of a more generic “spirituality,” and the privatization of belief that leads to conflict regarding religious liberty in the public square. Read More

Recommended:
Faith still shapes morals and values even after people are ‘done’ with religion
BBC’s ‘Can’t Get You Out of My Head’ Exposes the Poison of Individualism
In a Cultural Revolution, Sit Tight

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