Bored With Religion

Author: DavidJones  //  Category: The Church

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USAToday.com revealed an interesting article today that says half of U.S. adults have switched religions. Here are some of the findings:

•The reasons people give for changing their religion — or leaving religion altogether — differ widely depending on the origin and destination of the convert: 71% of Catholics and nearly 60% of Protestants who switched to another religion didn’t think their spiritual needs were being met or they just liked another faith more, or they chainged their views on religious or moral beliefs.

•Life circumstances, not religious doctrinal differences, prompt most Protestants who switch denominational families (Baptist to Methodist, for example). Relocating to a new community (nearly four in 10) or marrying someone of a different tradition are the most oft-cited reasons. However, 36% cited “likes and dislikes about religious institutions, practices and people.

•Many people who left a religion to become unaffiliated say they did so, in part, because they think of religious people as hypocritical or judgmental, because religious organizations focus too much on rules or because religious leaders are too focused on power and money.

•Among the 16% of Americans who say they are now unaffiliated with any religion, most are former Protestants and Catholics who say they didn’t quit in a huff or get lured away by science or by atheist philosophy. About 70% say “they just gradually drifted away” from their childhood religion.

•Some people (16%) return to the fold, saying they tried another religion or two but are now back in the faith of their childhood.

“Combined with the 44% of the public that currently espouses a religion different than their childhood faith, this means that roughly half of the U.S. adult population has changed religion at some point in their life,” the report says.

Religious education or youth group participation seemed to make no dent, although people who say they participated frequently in worship services or Mass were less likely to switch.

The findings are pretty interesting, especially the last section I included. 

Your thoughts for all of the switching?

Read the full article here. 

Religion and Politics

Author: DavidJones  //  Category: Ethics, Politics, The Church

 

This morning I was alerted of a new video on YouTube. No, not Josh Groban singing TV themes from the Emmy’s (which was amazing!) but a new political attack. You can see the video above. 

Every 4 years, religion and politics seem to collide. People slam Bush for being too “Christian,” failing to realize that President Clinton visited more churches while seeking reelection than Bush did in 2004. Obama gets blasted for being a Muslim, even though he attends attended Trinity United Church of Christ.

Politicians and political machines don’t seem to care a thing about religion or spirituality during non-election years, Read more…

Does “Christian” Music Exist?

Author: DavidJones  //  Category: Music, Pop Culture, The Church, Youth Culture

If you attend or have ever attended a church, you know the debate over music can be very touchy. It’s not just a Christian vs Secular debate, but it goes deeper. Many people have tried to definite what “Christian” music is and what it isn’t. Do lyrics make something “Christian?” Is it the beat? Does “Christian” music even exist?

I started reading a book called Pop Goes Religion by Terry Mattingly. The book is a collection of articles Mattingly has written concerning the influence of faith in pop culture. In the first chapter, Mattingly has an article called “God and Popular Music.” In the article, Mattingly says “there are at least 6 or 7 competing definitions of ‘Christian music’ being used these days in a marketplace ruled by preachers and lawyers:”

1. “Christian music” consists of hymns

2. If music can be played or sung in worship services, then it’s “Christian.” Read more…