Exploring Religious America, Part One

 

BOB ABERNETHY: We begin today a series of special reports we call “Exploring Religious America.” We ask: How religious are we, and how are we religious?

The answers: We are very religious, but perhaps not as religious as we say we are or used to be. At the same time, for the country as a whole, we are religious in an extraordinary number of ways. In the most recent surveys, as for many years, 90 percent of Americans tell pollsters they believe in God or a higher power. Sixty percent say they pray every day.

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Even half the people who profess no religion say they pray, too. The number of these so-called seculars — atheists, agnostics, and other unchurched — is going up: one survey says it is now 14 percent. But the overwhelming majority of Americans say they are religious and 80 percent identify themselves as Christians, worshipping in 300,000 congregations in more than 4,000 denominations.

In partnership with U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY conducted a national poll on religion and spirituality in American life. Eighty-seven percent say religion is important in their lives. Eighty-three percent say they have experienced God’s presence or a spiritual force that felt very close, and 46 percent say they have felt this many times. More than three fourths say religious faith has been important in dealing with the attacks of last September 11.

Also, a dramatic shift: when we asked Christians if their religion is the only one that is true, 77 percent said no, all religions have elements of truth. Alan Wolfe is a sociologist at Boston College.

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ALAN WOLFE (Boston College): Given our history, it is absolutely remarkable, and it testifies to probably the single biggest change in the way people think about religion. I mean, there really was a time when to say “I’m religious” would mean to say “My way is the only way.” And that is not how people speak anymore. They recognize that there are many paths and many ways.

ABERNETHY: Another change is the country’s unprecedented religious diversity, and today, in Part One of our new series, we look at diversity’s challenges and consequences.

Diana Eck of Harvard University studies what she calls the new religious America. She is a United Methodist who teaches Asian religions.

DIANA ECK (Harvard University): In simple terms, we have become the most religiously diverse nation on earth. And I believe that. People will say, well, look at India. Look at Canada. Look at Britain. But if you really look at it… you have something much more complex than we see… in any other part of the world.

ABERNETHY: Once, many Americans liked to call ours a Christian nation. Then, beginning in the 1950s, the phrase became our “Judeo-Christian heritage.” Now, since the Immigration Act of 1965 welcomed many more people from Asia and Africa and the Middle East, who brought their religions with them, people speak of an America that has become “multifaith.”

For much of American history, many Protestant Christians were intolerant of Catholics, Mormons, and other non-Protestants. But now, our new poll shows most Americans are extraordinarily tolerant… or at least like to think they are. Four out of five Christians say they are tolerant of people of other religious faiths. (But only half of non-Christians think Christians are tolerant.) And three quarters of Christians say America’s religious diversity is a source of strength and vitality to everyone’s individual beliefs. But all that tolerance may not be based on knowledge. Big majorities admit they are unfamiliar with the basic teachings of Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism. And experts say even these numbers may be low.

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Even bigger majorities say they do not personally know anyone of those faiths. And 48 percent even say they do not know anyone who is Jewish. One reason most Americans know so little about other religions is the geographical clusters in which we worship. Measured by their predominance in each county, Catholics are concentrated in the Northeast and Southwest, Lutherans in the upper Midwest, with Methodists, Presbyterians, and others in a strip beneath them. Baptists sweep across the South. And Mormons are concentrated in Utah and the mountain states.

After September 11, there were some hate crimes. But they prompted strong, immediate condemnation. Meanwhile, national political and religious leaders organized interfaith events to help send the message that the country’s enemy was not Islam but terrorism. There was great demand for Islamic leaders as speakers, and learning about Islam became a new national pastime. Nevertheless, in spite of all the efforts at understanding, favorable opinions of Islam have fallen about 10 points since 9/11. Moreover, 39 percent of Americans, in our poll, say there is a larger number of violent extremists within Islam than in other religions.

And — perhaps reflecting talk of war with Iraq — more than two thirds say they expect a bigger conflict between Christian and Islamic nations.


BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: The actual number of all America’s Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, and other non-Christian believers is probably no more than six percent. Still, many Americans want tighter restrictions on immigration, and the growing visibility of new immigrants in many communities is testing the majority’s tolerance.

Jeff Sheler, religion writer for U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, covered one such test in suburban Atlanta, Georgia.

JEFF SHELER: Lawrenceville, Georgia — a suburb of Atlanta — deep in the Bible Belt, and also home to thousands of Muslims. They’ve built more than a dozen mosques and schools in the area. But they are far outnumbered by Southern Baptists and other Christians. Gary Laderman is a religion professor at Emory University in Atlanta.

Dr. GARY LADERMAN (Emory University): The kind of pluralism we’re seeing is unheard of, and we don’t know what the response is going to be.

SHELER: The community did respond when a mosque in Lawrenceville bought this plot of land next to a new subdivision and across the street from a Methodist church and cemetery… and asked the county for permission to turn their land into an Islamic cemetery. The community’s response? “Not in MY backyard!”

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DREW JOHNSON (Neighbor): Number one, they put the cemetery in the middle of a subdivision — health issues, property value, safety for kids.

MOIZ MUMTAIZ (Cemetery Supporter): We have worked with the county and with the neighbors to make sure their property values don’t go down. At the same time, we have to do what our rights are in terms of religious rights.

SHELER: For many residents, the Muslim practice of wrapping the unembalmed body in a shroud and burying it within hours of death, without a casket, is unacceptable. Funeral services at the nearby Methodist cemetery follow more familiar customs.

HEATHER STONECYPHER (Neighbor): I didn’t see a man in a sheet being toted around on someone’s shoulders. I mean it was a coffin, it was very discreet, it was a very quick service, and I didn’t have to be exposed to potential health hazards.

SHELER: But were health, safety, and property-value concerns the real issue? Or was something more behind the neighbors’ opposition?
County Commissioner John Dunn says he tried to give the Muslims a fair hearing.

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JOHN DUNN (Gwinnett County Commissioner): The sense that I got was, you know, “We have Christian cemeteries in our country. And we believe that in America, land of the free, we should have a cemetery here. Now, what do we need to do to make this come to pass?”

SHELER: Dunn ordered soil sample and water table studies requested by the community, checked with state and federal health officials and others, and concluded that a cemetery at the site would pose no health hazard. But the neighbors were not satisfied. They complained that another Muslim cemetery south of Atlanta, near Lovejoy, was a hazard and an eyesore.

DREW JOHNSON: The issue is we’re afraid there’s going to be an unsightly scene in our backyard as far as unkept cemetery and gravesites, open graves, sunken graves, general appearance of the place, and degeneration of our property value.

SHELER: Hafiz Khan, the imam at the Lawrenceville mosque, was willing to compromise on some traditional Muslim burial practices in order to satisfy the neighbors’ objections.
Dunn says he tried to find a middle ground.

Mr. DUNN: Obviously, I wasn’t going to require that they embalm. I wasn’t going to require that they have a hermetically sealed casket in a hermetically sealed vault, because that would seem to strike at the foundation of their burial beliefs. So I didn’t want to do that. But what I did want was something that was safe.

SHELER: The commission approved the cemetery, with conditions: Unlike the Islamic cemetery in Lovejoy, people would be buried inside wooden caskets and open-bottomed vaults, no graves would be dug more than 24 hours in advance, and an eight-foot-high wooden fence would surround the cemetery. Leaders of the mosque agreed, even though it meant modifying their traditions.

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Mr. MUMTAIZ: But that does not violate the Islamic burial process in any way.

SHELER: Still, the residents were not happy, and several homes have gone up for sale. That leaves Dunn and others convinced that something more was afoot.

Mr. DUNN: Every time that I’d come up with an answer, a solution to one of their questions, it seemed like there was always something else that would come up.

SHELER: Joshua Salaam of the Council on American Islamic Relations says it’s not unusual for religious intolerance to show itself in land-use cases such as this.

JOSHUA SALAAM (Council on American Islamic Relations): It happens enough where many times it’s worthy to investigate the issue, and that’s what we’ve found.

SHELER: Members of the mosque seem satisfied and are moving forward. But Professor Laderman of Emory University says the Muslim compromise on burial practices illustrates the kinds of accommodations religious newcomers often must make in adjusting to new surroundings.

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Dr. LADERMAN: But the Christian groups also in the area will have to modify their stance about religious toleration, about religious openness to new people in the community.

SHELER: One adjustment local Christians may have to consider, Laderman says, involves proselytizing.

Dr. LADERMAN: Well, the recent resolution by the Southern Baptists to proselytize Hindus, for example, as a primary goal in their missionary activity. I think that’s an extreme reaction, and that doesn’t sit well with many people who want to celebrate American religious freedom.

SHELER: Pastor James Merritt, president of the Southern Baptist Convention, leads a church one town over from Lawrenceville. But he supports diversity and is not convinced adjustments are needed.

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JAMES MERRITT (President, Southern Baptist Convention): One of the things that I’m grateful for in America is that we do have religious diversity.

SHELER: But that doesn’t lessen his commitment to evangelism.

Mr. MERRITT: Evangelism for a Christian is not an option. It’s an obligation.

Dr. LADERMAN: I don’t think you’ll find any religious groups giving up their belief in a Truth with a capital “T”. But, in terms of daily practice, in terms of how they arrange and schedule their lives and their communal rituals, there will probably have to be adjustments.

SHELER: As the nation becomes more religiously diverse, experts say American culture itself is likely to face difficult adjustments. And not everyone is ready for that.

Dr. LADERMAN: It’s going to be difficult to for the nation to hold all of these forces together, especially because they have such a wide-ranging, diverse number of values — value systems and sacred texts and commitments and motivations.

SHELER: Living together peacefully and productively in a patchwork of religions, many experts say, will require a greater commitment to local interfaith activities — to personal engagement with people of other faiths in local civic projects and in interreligious dialogue.

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Gerald Durley is a Baptist minister and leader of Atlanta’s interfaith community.

Pastor GERALD DURLEY (Missionary Baptist Church): If there’s ever to be a civilization that is somewhat progressive, people must understand one another, trust one another, and respect one another.

Mr. MERRITT: A lot of times what people are interested in, in these interfaith gatheringss is basically, “Let’s all come together and,” implicitly, “let’s affirm the truth claims of one another and let’s affirm that we’re all equal and that your claim is no more valid than mine and mine is no more valid than yours.” And, obviously, as a Christian, believing that Christ is not just a good way to heaven or the best way to heaven, or even the Baptist way to heaven; that he is the only way to heaven, we can’t compromise that singular belief.

SHELER: In spite of their religious differences, Christians and Muslims in Lawrenceville did find a compromise on the cemetery.

Mr. MUMTAIZ: I think the purpose of our religion is to promote peace, and that’s our goal.

Dr. LADERMAN: It was probably a big deal to make the change, ’cause they would prefer not to. But, on the other hand, this is a face of Islam that we need to see more of, I think, in America, which is one that is about being good neighbors.

SHELER: For RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY, I’m Jeff Sheler in Lawrenceville, Georgia.


ABERNETHY: According to our new poll, one quarter of American Christians — like James Merritt of the Southern Baptist Convention — say they have a duty to convert people of other faiths. Twenty-four percent. But 70 percent say Christians have a duty to be tolerant of people of other faiths and leave them alone.

Sociologist Robert Wuthnow of Princeton University says this tolerance reflects a huge change in certainty.

ROBERT WUTHNOW (Princeton University): For many, many centuries, Christians have thought they had the truth, and that other people did not have the truth in the same way. And now, Christians are not quite so sure of that. They are more likely to say, “This is true for me.” And that radically changes the meaning of truth, when it’s just true for you and not necessarily true for somebody else.

ABERNETHY: Professor Wuthnow sees a question.

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WUTHNOW: How much are people thinking deeply about the truth of their own religion, their belief in Christianity, and what they mean by other religions being true? I don’t think a lot of people have really sorted that out, and I think that’s going to be a big issue for people in churches, pastors, people in seminaries, to start sorting out or finding some clear guidance.

ABERNETHY: Tolerance of other religions may already have changed how many evangelicals think about proselytizing. Alan Wolfe.

WOLFE: What they say is that “My commitment to evangelize is for me to live the best life that I can, for me to be a witness to Jesus by being exemplary in what I do.” And more and more that’s what the duty to evangelize consists of.

ABERNETHY: Diana Eck of Harvard says religious diversity presents Christians with an obligation to listen.

ECK: I think the thing that many people who are not Christians feel about Christian evangelism and mission is that it is so one-way, it is so one-sided. And it has, it has all mouth, you might say, and no ears. And I think that’s — as a Christian, I would say that is a wrong understanding of what kind of relationship we should have with people of other faiths.

ABERNETHY: Among other lessons, Professor Eck thinks Christians can learn from Hindus new ways of thinking about the many attributes of one God; from Buddhists, an emphasis on compassion and being mindful; from Muslims, the habit of stopping everything five times a day to pray; and from all, hospitality.

ECK: I think Christians need to recognize across the board that the Christian church does not have a corner on compassion and love, the virtues that are called in St. Paul’s letter to Galatians the “fruits of the spirit.” These are things that are widely shared, and we need to keep our eyes open for them wherever we find them.

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ABERNETHY: America’s democracy and freedom, and ideal of equality, have changed virtually every previous religious immigrant group, and Alan Wolfe says it will continue to do that. He spoke of Muslims.

WOLFE: Muslims who come here from very, very traditional religious environments are already changing their religion. You can’t have the traditional Islamic attitude toward women that you might have had in Pakistan or Saudi Arabia, come here to this country, and keep it up. It’s not going to last. The culture is going to influence you, and you are going to change. And that is very much what happened to Catholics, and it is very much what happened to Jews.

ABERNETHY: Our poll asked Americans whether they think having many different religions in the U.S. makes it harder to keep the country united. Fewer than a third say it makes it harder; 62 percent say it does not.

Diana Eck says she is optimistic that the U.S. can be both religiously diverse and united.

ECK: We have this challenge in the United States to do something that has really never been done before, which is to create a multireligious and democratic state.

ABERNETHY: Summing up, there’s been a historic shift in the variety of religions in America, in the confidence of Christians that theirs is the only truth, and in greater tolerance of the religions of others. That’s our report on diversity — Part One in our new series, “Exploring Religious America.” In the next two weeks, we look at Christianity and the experience of being Protestant or Catholic. Then, American spirituality, in churches and outside them. Finally, we will try to measure the strength of American religion in the face of all the ideas and forces that challenge it.

Gary Laderman Extended Interview

Read excerpts from Jeff Sheler’s interview with Emory University religion professor Gary Laderman:

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On the accommodations of new religious groups to the wider American culture:
That is a fundamental part of the story of American religious history. Religious groups that have come from different parts of the world and that are indigenous to American society generally have to make accommodations to the larger, mainstream American culture. The Muslims in Lawrenceville, Georgia are no different in many respects. Part of what they will have to do is adjust, adapt traditions to local and national laws and culture. It can be difficult to make these kinds of adjustments. And it can lead to fracturing within different religious traditions. Some people will interpret these kinds of changes in more fundamental ways. Others may take a more liberal approach and make the necessary adjustments to fit into the society they live in.

On pluralism and diversity:
Religious pluralism is a two-way street. Religious diversity is a two-way street. Both the mainstream culture and the religions on the margin will be impacted by just living together — just by proximity, by sharing the same culture. The Muslim groups are going to make their adjustments so that they can fit in; but the Christian groups will have to modify their stance about religious toleration, about religious openness to new people in the community. And it generally also leads to many efforts to educate the public, so they will learn more about Islam than probably they ever thought or imagined they would.

On going beyond mere tolerance:
Religious pluralism as it exists today, I think, is unprecedented. It’s really a new kind of social situation and social reality. So we don’t exactly know how Americans are going to live with this kind of religious pluralism, with this kind of religious diversity. Unfortunately, American religious history is full of violence and persecution and discrimination against outside religious groups. But, again, I think this is a new phase of American religious history. The kind of pluralism we’re seeing is unheard of, and we don’t know what the response is going to be. The new reality of religious pluralism in America — it’s going to take a while for that to settle in and for the people who have been there and who are part of the mainstream religious culture to adjust to a new presence, especially in [the] public arena, where the voices of outside religious groups, non-Christian religious groups, are becoming increasingly vocal.

On the future:
The long term is difficult to predict. Based on the past, you can see that certain more fundamental groups within Christian society have reacted fairly strongly and negatively [to religious diversity]. But that’s not the only story for Christians. A big part of American religious history is cooperation, openness, adjustment, change to new kinds of religious situations and realities. My own optimistic sense is that it’s promising. People will learn to live together, but that doesn’t exclude the fact that there’s likely to be more extreme reaction. The recent resolution by the Southern Baptist[s] to proselytize Hindus, for example, as a primary goal in their missionary activity — I think that’s an extreme reaction, and that doesn’t sit well with many people who want to celebrate American religious freedom… it’s hard to predict, but there are certainly groups that want to maintain a Christian predominance in culture and feel threatened by these new groups. I think for most religious groups there is going to be some level of adjustment to the new religious reality of multiple religious communities existing in one metropolitan area. It will lead some to be more active in reaching out. Others will pull back and try to maintain their own exclusive community. But everyone’s going to have to learn about different religions. Just the aftermath of 9/11 led so many people to learn more about Islam. It also led people to react based on stereotypes that were very uninformed and ignorant. But these are two sides of the coin. There’s a great deal of interest in education. Public schools are going to have to face up to the challenge that, in fact, it is a much more valuable tool to teach children about different religions than to try to keep religion and learning about religions — which is different than proselytizing — out of the classroom. I hope we would see at many levels of society an education process taking place that leads the community just to learn — what does a Hindu believe, what does a Buddhist do? That’s not going to pose a big danger. It may help to build bridges and encourage tolerance — tolerance without saying, “You have to compromise everything that you believe in.”

On the new reality of the religious public arena:
Part of this new phase that we’re entering, where there’s this great degree of religious pluralism and diversity, is leading to what I would call a “de-Christianization” of the public arena. Christianity has been the dominant religion, historically, in America. Protestantism especially had a fairly hegemonic place in public culture. Now we are in a new reality, a new situation that is a little bit different and, I think, is diminishing in some way that presence in public culture. There are a great many more religious voices present. That is going to require Southern Baptists, other evangelicals, other more conservative Christian groups to adjust, to adapt, to find ways to live with this more publicly present religious pluralism.

On what holds religious America together:
It’s going to be very difficult to find the glue that holds all of these religious communities together. Historically, that has been easy to do when we thought of our nation as a nation of Catholics, Protestants, and Jews. Now it is a nation of Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs — a whole amalgam, a whole range of different kinds of religious communities. It’s going to be difficult for the nation to hold all of these forces together, especially because they have such a wide-ranging, diverse number of values — value systems and sacred texts and commitments and motivations. The question of what holds us all together is going to be difficult to answer.

On religion diversity and shared values:
I don’t think it necessarily means greater secularism. I personally find that secularization thesis off the mark. Again, I would rather talk more about de-Christianization. People are still religious, and religion is still a part of American culture. People are becoming less religious, [but] they’re finding other ways to express their religion. One of those ways we, as a nation, express our religion and certain kinds of religious commitments is our commitment to the dollar, to capitalism. That’s one thing that all these different religious communities share and live by, to a certain degree. Another example might be voluntarism — people committed to being active in their community and neighborhood through their church or synagogue. That, too, is a common, shared value. Identifying those common, shared values will be a challenge; but they will require people from the media, from academia, from religious communities themselves to reflect about what is it that holds us all together.

On the future of religious pluralism:
I’m a historian. I look to the past. It’s hard for me to think about the future. But my sense is that, because of our new religious pluralism and the fact that we’re the most diverse nation on the face of the earth, we will see more and more interfaith cooperative efforts taking place. I would imagine they would take place from the ground up, locally. Often, they’re going to focus on specific, local issues of great concern. I’ve already seen evidence of these kinds of interfaith, common efforts taking place locally around issues of public health, issues of crime, issues of abuse — things like that. That’s where the action is. Clearly there will be the threat of more aggressive, violent actions, I think, based on history. The other side of that is the promise of a greater sense of toleration and bridge building in ways that may be unheard of around the world today between Muslims and Jews, Christians and Buddhists — things you don’t usually see happening and, historically, again, are fairly rare. But that’s part of the climate that we live in, and it’s part of the promise of the future for religious diversity here.

On religious beliefs and interfaith dialogue:
With increasing religious diversity, most religious communities and groups are going to have to make accommodations. I don’t think they have to compromise central elements of their faith. But their daily practice, how they arrange and schedule their lives and their communal rituals — there will probably have to be adjustments. And they already make adjustments in many ways. Southern Baptists look today nothing like they did 150 years ago. I mean, Jimmy Carter, part of the Southern Baptist community, has a very different understanding of religious pluralism than the more conservative people who are running the Southern Baptist Convention today.

So part of what we’ll see is that within all these different religious traditions there is incredible diversity. It’s not just diversity between religions; it is internal religious diversity, which is, again, part of American religious history. That leads to sectarianism, denominationalism, fragmenting, and fracturing within the community. Some of that fragmenting will lead members of the community to be more accommodating and more open to religious dialogue. But others may find that more threatening and may try to maintain a kind of purity of tradition that may be difficult. We see that with Orthodox Jews, for example. They’re part of the community, but they also maintain a very strong and closed sense of their own religious community and concerns.

On religious diversity and truth:
I don’t think you’ll find any religious groups giving up their belief in a Truth with a capital “T.” In a way, they will try to maintain that hold. It’s essential that they do. I don’t think religious pluralism is going to lead to complete religious relativism — especially internally for these communities. On the outside, we are going to have to live with a kind of relativism that, again, in the public arena has been unheard of. How do we live with all these multiple communities and competing expressions of ultimate truth in ways that allow them to maintain their integrity but, on the other hand, make the kinds of accommodations that many will have to, and many will want to, in order to live in modern America? These different religious groups will have to, as I see it, lead a double life. On the one hand, they will maintain their commitment to ultimate religious Truth, with a capital “T.” But they will have to also live according to an American cultural and, I would argue, religious system that has to do with commitment to democracy, to freedom — those kinds of ultimate truths for many Americans. And they will have to in some way maintain the delicate balance of keeping to their traditions and their own internal, religious values but also living according to, in many cases, a different American value system — and, I would argue, historically an American value system that is rooted in white Protestantism. Civil religion, the cultural religion [to which] many of the different religious groups will have to accommodate, is, I think, at bottom, a form of Protestantism that is rooted historically in our national soil.

On the dominance of Protestantism:
Just how American culture operates and the kinds of historical values and themes we see so deeply rooted in an American way of life — I find that those are clearly and explicitly connected to the white Protestant experience, from the early settlers and early colonies through the nineteenth century. That is the established, mainstream, public culture that most new religious groups have to adapt to and accommodate to. That’s still, in many ways, the heart and soul of American public culture. But it is diminishing now. Now these other groups and the presence in the public sphere of Hindus, Buddhists, New Agers, Jews will lead to a diminishing of that Protestant cultural presence in the public arena.

On civility and religious tolerance:
When it comes to interfaith dialogue, interfaith cooperation, you can’t force people to come to the table. The only people who are going to come to the table are those members of these different religious communities who respect the right of other religious groups to exist, to share in community planning, and to participate in trying to right the wrongs of our society. The people who will come to the table will probably still cling to their sense of truth, but they won’t necessarily find the other people at the table to be demonic or on the wrong path. I think you’ll see just a greater degree of respect for the right of these other groups to exist and a willingness to work together. We live in a society with all kinds of extreme views on what the truth is and a variety of different lifestyles. For the most part, even though there are instances where there’s a limit to that, people live together even though they may not agree with one another.

On the place of Christianity in American culture:
When I talk about de-Christianization, I’m mainly speaking of how Christianity is losing its primary hold on public culture and religion in public culture. What we’re seeing is a new phase of Christianity in America, where it is still the dominant religion by far — 70, 75 percent of the American people. We’re not necessarily talking about numerical changes or changes in theology as much [as] about the cultural hold that Christians have had in the public arena for many Americans.

Christians have historically learned to live with other religious groups without necessarily changing their views about Christ or the kinds of values that they live by. It’s not necessarily the case that with greater religious pluralism you have to completely rethink your religious viewpoints. It may challenge you to consider what are those core religious viewpoints that you won’t compromise, but it doesn’t automatically translate into, “Well, we have to soften our religion. We have to say there may be other paths up the mountain.Ó It’s going to be a little more complicated than that, and not necessarily such a huge shift for people. I don’t think people will assume they have to adopt a relativistic outlook, if they live with their neighbors. When it comes to religion, we are talking about values and beliefs that are absolute in many ways. So it’s a contradiction. But so much of social life is full of contradictions. They’re going to have to keep these commitments but also open up lines of communication and build bridges with other religious communities that have a very different understanding of the cosmos.

On proselytizing:
Some religions will have to cut back on their proselytizing, I would think. But it may not necessarily be the case. We may see more division within different denominations or religious groups, especially those that have proselytizing as a major component of their reason for being. Others in the group will pull back on that commitment, on that mission of proselytizing their neighbors. But others will stick to it. And I think you’ll see more internal division about what to do with the new social face of American religion.

On the public arena:
In my mind, the public arena encompasses everything from the streets of the city to the media. It also includes civic activities — participation in local governments, local organizations. It also has to do with education: What are the shared visions that children learn about and are basically socialized to understand? It is where people come together to deal with issues of social justice, of crime — of points in our society where we have a common concern and express that concern in a public way.

On religious accommodation:
Within different religious communities there are segments that are more accommodating and more open to assimilating than others. The typical example in American religious history is Judaism. Judaism, in the course of its history here, basically fragmented into different denominations. On the one side, you have Reform Jews who are much more willing to accommodate to mainstream Protestant culture. On the other hand, more Orthodox Jews are less willing to accommodate. We may see that with Muslims. We may see a fragmentation take place where some are more willing to adjust and, in a way, conform to the mainstream American system. Others may be less willing. Buddhism is very user-friendly, in many ways, so it’s easy to accommodate. Hindus may have more restrictions and laws that may make it difficult. But I think you will see this turmoil take place for many religions trying to adjust to the pluralism that exists today. [In Lawrenceville, Georgia, the Muslims] came up with a compromise that in no way sold their religion short. Whether it was a big deal or not — it was probably a big deal to make the change, because they would prefer not to. But on the other hand, this is a face of Islam that we need to see more of, I think, in America, which is one that is about being good neighbors.

Diana Eck Extended Interview

Read more of Bob Abernethy’s interview with Diana Eck:

Q: You begin A NEW RELIGIOUS AMERICA by saying that, without many of us noticing it, there’s been a huge change in the religious landscape in this country in the last generation or so. Describe that change.

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A: Well, I could describe it in a couple of ways, but maybe the way that is most easily apprehensible is the actual physical landscape. Now, if you drive down the interstate outside Toledo, you might see a huge mosque rising from the farmlands. Or, if you head out into the suburbs of Houston, you would see mosques and Hindu temples. If you turn off the little road on which the Boston Marathon starts outside Boston, there’s a sign that points to the Hindu Temple of New England.

So there’s a way in which the physical landscape of our country has changed with the new immigration that has brought people of all different cultures and nationalities from all over the world, with their religious traditions, to the United States.

Q: And the result of that diversity has been what?

A: Remarkable. I mean, if we were to look at what the religious landscape figuratively and architecturally looks like today, as opposed to 30 years ago, we have extensive Buddhist traditions, [with] places like Los Angeles now really the most complex Buddhist city in the entire world. We have Hindus who have come not just from India but from Trinidad and the Caribbean. We have Muslims who have come from the Middle East and from India and Pakistan and Africa and Indonesia. We have people of other South Asian religious traditions.

Q: And what has happened in this country as a result?

A: Well, in simple terms, we have become the most religiously diverse nation on earth. I believe that. People will say, “Well, look at India. Look at Canada. Look at Britain.” But if you REALLY look at it, if you add to the tremendous religious diversity of India all of the Southeast Asian, East Asian, and Latin American, Hispanic, Latino traditions; if you add to the vibrancy of the religious traditions of a place like Britain today, which is also multireligious, all that we have gained from both East and Southeast Asia and South America, you have something MUCH more complex than we see in any other part of the world.

Q: The absolute number of Muslims and Buddhists and Hindus and others is still really very small as a percentage of the whole. Why, then, is the change so important?

A: Well, I think it’s important in a number of ways. First, the Muslim population, though small as a percentage of the whole, is now just about on a parity with the Jewish population. And we know how important that is as a significant minority, a visible minority, in the United States. The other thing is that I believe EVERY community begins to change in its texture and its structure when the Protestant and Catholic churches and the synagogues are joined by even one or two Hindu temples, by a gurdwara. I’m thinking of Oklahoma City, for example: six or seven mosques, a couple of Hindu temples, a Jain temple, a Sikh gurdwara. That really changes the landscape for everyone.

Q: Why have you written that this is as difficult a challenge for America as race?

A: Well, because I think that religion in one way does not yield to or submit to the kind of ethnic, racial, and cultural melting pot forces that we have seen in the past. Religions don’t melt with quite the same, you might say, generational, submissive nature. It is really true that we begin to recognize a kind of diversity that is marked by religion in ways that are not quite as rigid when we look at race.

Q: Many Americans still use the language of a “Christian nation” to describe the way we are — maybe not exclusively so in numbers, but as far as the dominant culture is concerned. What does the new diversity do to that idea?

A: Well, I think we’re not in any constitutional sense a Christian nation. There is a way in which Christian values actually shaped the constitutional structure of our country. And one of those was the value placed on freedom of conscience and freedom of religion. The First Amendment really looked at the importance of there not being an establishment of religion, as so many Christian immigrants had known in other parts of the world, and there being free exercise of religion, free exercise of conscience.
Now, in some ways, these DID come out of the Christian values of our founders, but they really protect that same kind of free exercise for EVERYONE. As James Madison put it in his “Memorial and Remonstrance,” we can’t insist on that freedom of conscience for ourselves without recognizing that same freedom for people who haven’t seen fit to see the truth as we’ve seen it. So there IS a way in which this new diversity really tests us to make good on the foundational constitutional values of our country.

Q: In our history, there has been a great deal of intolerance — violence toward the newcomer who was different. How serious a problem do you think the hate crimes against these new immigrants have been?

A: I think it’s a serious problem wherever it occurs. Certainly, if you’re a Muslim whose mosque has been attacked by arson in Minneapolis, for example, it is a very serious problem.

But the response to that problem has displayed a kind of generosity and hospitality, even an interreligious cooperation, that is really the more important side of the story. Bricks [are] thrown through the windows of a new mosque in Illinois, for example, and within a few days, the entire interfaith community in Chicago comes together to carry these rubble bricks out of the mosque in an expression of solidarity. It’s THAT side of it that I think is very important.

Q: If there should be a severe economic recession, would you expect to see a lot more of these hate crimes?

A: I don’t think so. I don’t think that most of them are economically motivated. There have been some instances in which people fear the foreign because they fear the foreigners are taking jobs. But on the whole, I think they’re simply expressions of a kind of fear of difference that is NOT economically motivated.

Q: Where do you think the majority of Americans will see the effects of this new immigration the most? I’m thinking about zoning issues and workplace stress issues and things like that. Where do the cultures come together?

A: I would say probably the first and most important [place] is in our public schools. The children in our public schools are going to school with people of many different cultures. They’re speaking many different languages and bringing to school with them many different religious backgrounds. And so it’s in the schools, in the PTAs that people are likely to find this new religious America — where the rubber hits the road.

The workplace, of course, is also very important. Statistics in the 1990s have shown that the number of instances of discrimination in the workplace have risen dramatically.

Q: We talk about diversity. We talk about pluralism. We use the words interchangeably. What does “pluralism” mean to you?

A: Pluralism really means what we do with all the diversity that is ours, how we engage with it, IF we engage with it. It means not just the ghettoization of diversity: here we all are, and we’re all different from one another. But it means ENGAGING with that in some way. And that may be the engagement of parents of different children in the public schools. It may be the engagement of an interfaith council. It may be the engagement of an employer with the new diversity of the workplace. But it means ADDRESSING diversity, trying to build the bridges of communication and traffic that enable our diversity to build relationships.

Q: Why should we do that? Why not just say, “Okay. If you want to worship that way, go ahead and worship that way. I leave you alone, you leave me alone.”

A: We DO encounter one another. That really is the issue. We live in the United States today in such close quarters with religious diversity that we really need to understand more of who we are when we say, “We, the people of the United States.” That’s a pretty big statement, and we need to be able to have some sense of who these neighbors are.

The hate crimes that you mentioned, for example, are mostly generated out of the kind of half-baked, tolerant truths that we carry around with us in our heads. And I think that to break down some of the stereotyping and walls of misunderstanding, we actually need more relationship than we have.

Q: Let’s say that we all got into dialogue with each other and, as a result of that dialogue, we discover — as I think we probably would — just how different we are, different in some very fundamental beliefs, such as who Jesus was. Could the dialogue that comes out of this effort to cope with pluralism — could that, in fact, lead to more difficulty in relations, rather than less?

A: I don’t think so. I think the most precious thing that people of different religious traditions have in common is a clear understanding of their differences. It’s OKAY if we’re not all the same. And, in fact, the building of relationship and coming to a clear understanding of who the other is may make us understand OURSELVES more deeply.

Q: But what does that mean for the idea of truth? I am committed to certain truths. You are committed to certain truths. If my neighbor has a commitment to something that is fundamentally different from mine, how do I relate to that? A: Muslims will often say, “God has made us into many races and families and tribes so that we may KNOW each other.” But that difference is not a threat to us. Difference is an opportunity for UNDERSTANDING.

It may be that we hold VERY different truth claims. But one of the things that’s important in the United States, I believe, is to be able to make a distinction between our theological beliefs — our religious beliefs — and the things that knit us together as a nation — our civic beliefs and values, if you will. And our CIVIC beliefs are premised on the free exercise and the nonestablishment of religion. And we protect that for EVERYONE, whether we agree with them theologically or not.

Q: Many Christians — evangelical Christians, especially — feel not just a duty but a real commission by Jesus himself to evangelize non-Christians, to try to preach to them and convert them. In this new America of many religions, what do you say to people who feel this deep, deep obligation to convert others?

A: One of the most important things to say is that the obligation of a Christian is not only [to] witness to people of another religious tradition but to listen to whatever witness they may have. And once you are speaking and listening, you’re already in dialogue.

I think the thing that many people who are not Christians feel about Christian evangelism and mission is that it’s so one-way; it’s so one-sided. It is all mouth, you might say, and no ears. As a Christian, I would say that’s a wrong understanding of what kind of relationship we should have with people of other faiths.

But I think we also need to see clearly the ways in which WE are perceived by others. Having Hindu and Muslim and Buddhist neighbors enables us to hold a mirror up to ourselves, as well.

Q: Do you think, in this new situation, that Christians in this country should stop trying to proselytize others?

A: I think there are appropriate places for proselytizing or for mission, but there are also inappropriate places. That doesn’t mean that we should stop evangelizing either here or elsewhere, but it DOES mean that the attitude of relationship we need to have with neighbors of other faiths is something that requires a real seeking of dialogue and not the one-way process of mission.

Q: What is an evangelical Christian, for instance, supposed to do about such scriptural language as, “I am the way, the truth and the light” — that “Nobody comes to the Father, except through me”? That’s pretty exclusive. What is somebody supposed to do about that?

A: I think the problem with that sentence is, [in] the first place, it’s torn right out of the context of Scripture. It was never intended to mean, “I am the way, and when Mohammed comes in 700 years, people will have nothing of the word of God through him,” or, “I am the way, and Hindus and Buddhists have seen nothing of the way of truth and righteousness and inner light.”

That’s not what it meant. It is a pastoral statement of Jesus on the night before he died to his disciples. To attempt to make it the answer to any kind of questions we might want to ask about theological truth does violence to that Scripture.

Q: You spoke about listening, as well as speaking. What are the most important things Christians can learn from Muslims and Buddhists and Hindus and others?

A: The most important thing that we can learn FROM people of other religions is ABOUT people of other religions — to develop relationships with them as neighbors and as citizens.

One of the other things I would say, however, is that hospitality is one thing that people of many of these religious communities in the United States have developed to a high art. And I say that from personal experience, having dropped into a Sikh gurdwara in Freemont, California or in some part of New Jersey and found that just about any time of the day I would be welcomed, I would be given a meal, I would have people to talk to who would tell me about their faith. There’s a kind of hospitality that comes with some of these religious traditions that is really wonderful. And it often makes me think about what the stranger who dropped into my United Methodist church might feel on a Sunday morning.

Q: What can non-Christians learn from Christians?

A: Because this society has been shaped by freedom and democracy and a kind of voluntary spirit that came from our constitutional framework, there is a way in which the energy of America’s voluntary religious communities — many of which are Christian — has really begun to rub off in the religious communities that have come here.

Q: It’s hard to remember a time in history when there has been a society as religiously diverse as this that has been peaceful. Has anybody ever achieved this kind of mutual respect that we need to achieve now?

A: There have been periods in the multireligious history of many parts of the world in which people have managed to live together peacefully. Now, there are people who would say the most effective form of a pluralistic society, the most effective government, can only be totalitarian, in which there really is a very strong state to keep all the diversity, all of the ethnic or religious elements in balance.

We have this challenge in the United States to do something that has really NEVER been done before, which is to create a multireligious and democratic state. And, in fact, the multireligious America is an EXTENSION of our commitment to a constitutional democracy. And we have an opportunity to create such a state in a world that has very few models for this kind of religious pluralism.

Q: Would it be fair to say that the way to do that is not so much through discussions of theology as it is through personal contact?

A: Absolutely. There are many ways in which people come together creating an interfaith public square, you might say. Some of it is through the personal contact — the interfaith dialogue that is right there in the workplace at the water fountain — and some of it is in the school, and some of it is in other civic arenas. But it really is personal contact that makes the difference.

Q: How would you rate the chances of success — of our achieving what nobody else has done?

A: I rank them pretty high. We have a society that is very committed to a kind of neighborliness, maybe over and above everything. And when we look at the way in which this has been expressed in the United States, even despite the new challenges of the last 30 years, I think we’re looking at a very optimistic scene, indeed.

Q: How should Christians and Jews and others relate to Buddhists, who do not believe in a transcendent god?

A: The problem is continually wondering how CHRISTIANS are going to deal with all of these things. Part of the problem is that most Christians in the United States are pretty abysmally ignorant about the religious traditions of the rest of the world.

The first thing that Christians need to do is to get out there and UNDERSTAND what it means for a vibrant religious tradition that has transformed the whole of Asia and now is beginning to transform America — what it MEANS for a vibrant religious tradition not to use the symbol “god” in the way we do.

I think Christians have a VERY steep learning curve in the United States and have to learn a lot more about the religious traditions of the rest of the world.

Q: And what about Hindus, with — I don’t know — 330 million deities?

A: That’s right.

Q: How do they interpret that?

A: Well, they need to ask Hindus how THEY interpret it, because there’s a way in which the Hindu tradition was made for the American project. “E pluribus unum” is our national motto. And, in a way, “Out of many, one” is also the theological motto, you might say, of the HINDU tradition. Go into a Hindu temple, in Livermore, California, for example, and you’ll see lots of shrines to different names and forms of God. But almost every Hindu will say, “In name and form there are many, but we also believe in one god. We have many names, many attributes, many ways of seeing the divine. In fact, the ways of seeing the divine are limited not by God’s capacity to be present, but by our human capacity to SEE.”

So open your EYES. Let’s try to understand what it MEANS to speak of the “many-ness” of God. And Hindus can really help us with that.

Q: You yourself have been on the same path that you recommend for all the rest of us. How has this knowledge that you’ve gained about so many other religions strengthened you?

A: It certainly has strengthened the relationships that hold me in place in life. Hindu teachers, dear Buddhist friends, Muslim co-workers and colleagues — all of them are part of the nourishing family that I stand in the midst of. In my own faith, it’s made me much clearer about the great mystery that is the divine truth, and the humility that all of us need to comport ourselves with if we’re to understand that. We’re not in the position of being the judges of others, nor in the position of being able to fully understand what, as we would put it, “God is up to” in the world. And I think our Hindu and Buddhist and Sikh and Muslim neighbors help us along that path of understanding.

Q: In the dialogue that you hope will develop, what do you think are the most important things that the non-Christian religions can learn from American Christians?

A: I think one of the things that is most important about the United States is the cherishing of religious freedom. People have come to the United States from all over the world with the notion that religious freedom is something that this country supports. Muslims are grateful for that. People who have come from parts of the world where religious freedom is not allowed are grateful for that. That IS something that the United States has to contribute as a supportive environment to these new religious communities.

One of the things that interests me most is that in recent polling that has been done among Muslims in America, more than 70 percent think it’s very important for Muslims to participate in the American political process. That means the kind of engagement that we hope for from citizens is now a real value in the Muslim community as well. And certainly the last few years have seen this play itself out.

Q: I’m mindful of Christians who feel threatened by people who are NOT Christians, by people who believe very deeply in different ideas about God. What do you say to a devout evangelical Christian who feels that there is something about the new religious America that challenges the truth of Christianity?

A: Well, I would say they need to be able to open their minds to the truth of CHRISTIANITY, then. One of the most startling things about the entire experience of Easter and the Pentecost was that most of the people who came to call themselves Christians didn’t recognize what Christ was doing, didn’t recognize him when he was walking along the road side by side with them, didn’t recognize him when he was standing on the bank of the lake, didn’t recognize the outpouring of the Holy Spirit.

I mean, these mysteries are things that the Christian church does not have locked up in its own treasure chest, but are mysteries that we need to be alert to. And I fully believe that people who have a very tidy view of Christianity, as if all the mysteries have been solved, need to open their eyes AGAIN to “what God is DOING in the world,” as some of us might put it.

Many things that I talk about in A NEW RELIGIOUS AMERICA are really lessons for Christians from our neighbors of other faiths. One of the stories I tell toward the end is of a Vietnamese Buddhist temple in Boston, in the suburb of Roslindale, where the magnificent image outside of the bodhisattva of compassion, named Kuan-yin, was smashed by neighborhood vandals — boys in the projects next door — out of some of the same kind of fear that you mentioned.

And in the course of deciding what to do when the vandals were caught, the Vietnamese Buddhists set an example of forgiveness for the whole city. They refused to bring the boys to court. They invited the entire neighborhood to a kind of festival of forgiveness. They had a picnic. They had a neighborhood cleanup. Catholics from the neighborhood parish and people from all over Roslindale were participating in this. They invited the vandals. And the boys went in and saw what happened in the temple, saw people at prayer.

I remember talking with one of them. His name was Angelo. And the president of the temple, when he welcomed Angelo and embraced him, had said, “Your name means ‘angel’ — a guardian angel. And we’re going to make you the guardian angel of this Vietnamese Buddhist temple.” They basically displayed the kind of ethic of love and forgiveness that most Christian churches would CHERISH.

Christians need to recognize across the board that the Christian church does not have a corner on compassion and love and the virtues that are called in Saint Paul’s letter to the Galatians the “fruits of the spirit.” These are things that are widely shared, and we need to keep our eyes open for them — WHEREVER we find them.

When I talked to Angelo a little later, he said, “You know, if I had known ANYTHING about what went on inside this temple and about these people, I would never have DONE this.” And that’s a lesson for all of us.

Alan Wolfe Extended Interview

Read more of Bob Abernethy’s interview with sociologist Alan Wolfe:

Q: If you stood off and looked at the whole American religious scene now, what would stand out?

religiousamerica-post01-wolfe

A: Well, whatever you want to call the old-time religion doesn’t seem to be that much a presence in American life anymore. If you think that religion is what you saw if you watched the famous movie INHERIT THE WIND, with the born-again Christians out there demonstrating against the modern world — that’s not what religion is anymore. Even among people who would call themselves conservative Christians, it’s a very, very different way of understanding what faith is and what the Lord requires, and I think [it] influences all of America’s religious traditions.

Q: Different in what ways?

A: Well, it’s much more different in the sense that I think the individual just plays a much bigger role. It’s not that God plays a smaller role, necessarily. That can vary from one tradition to another. But the idea that religion is going to be a set of commandments that are written in stone, for which obedience is sacrosanct, and there’s going to be no questioning of what those commandments are — that’s just not a realistic picture of where Americans are these days with respect to religion.

It’s no coincidence that people in this country made a best-selling book out of something called CONVERSATIONS WITH GOD. God is someone you talk to. He’s not someone who only talks to you and you only listen.

Q: Move away from a formal idea of authority to a more personal, individual approach to religion. What are the big things going on? Everybody talks about “spirituality.” What does that mean to you?

A: I know there’s a lot of talk about it. I actually find, I have to tell you, in my own surveys, that it’s not a term that resonates very deeply. I mean, I hear about it all the time when I read magazines and so on. But when I actually go out and talk to Americans, I’ll ask them questions like this: “You know,” I’ll say, “There’s been a lot of talk about spirituality. Does that word mean something to you? It’s different from religion.” And in a few places you’ll get, “Oh, yeah. I’m into some kind of New Age thing.” But I don’t think it cuts very deep.

I think religion is religion. Spirituality is spirituality. And when people discuss their faith, I think they’re using pretty much the general idea of what we mean by that. For most Americans, that’s still Christianity. It’s still pretty much of a monotheistic idea.

Obviously, there’s more religious diversity in America now, but some of the most orthodox religious believers are recent immigrants. The notion that the country is being swept away in a kind of vacuous, empty spirituality I don’t see as really descriptive.

Now, it’s true that there’s a lot more of that on college campuses. So that may be more in our future. A lot of people have talked about this, and you certainly see it at many college campuses. But maybe it’s the kind of thing that will also be outgrown by younger people. You know, when people look to religion, they do want something there. They don’t want it to be just vacuous, I think.

Q: Do you think that there has been a softening of people’s commitment to what used to be the fundamental religious ideas?

A: I think that the notion that there are specific ideas associated with specific religions [has] been lost in American culture to a significant degree. People might say that they’re Lutherans or Calvinists or whatever, but that doesn’t mean they could tell you what Martin Luther stood for, or what John Calvin stood for. In that sense, the traditions resemble each other, I think, more. Protestantism influences Catholicism, and Catholicism influences Protestantism, and both are influenced by Judaism in return. I think that’s certainly taken place.

Q: Let’s move on to this idea you have proposed and that you call “moral freedom.” Describe that, would you?

A: I didn’t start out to write a book called MORAL FREEDOM. I started out trying to find out by interviewing ordinary Americans what their views were about some of the classic questions of virtue and vice and the role they play in trying to lead a good life. The idea of moral freedom was just not really there.

It was after I listened to people and heard SO much of what they were saying as reflecting a desire on their part to play a role in constructing their own view about morality that the term “moral freedom” really began to emerge. And I began to ask myself: we celebrate the fact that our country has economic freedom, and that’s something most people love. Conservatives love it, and liberals love it in their own way. And we celebrate the fact that we have a lot of political freedom.

But then we stop and say, well, you know, the idea that you should make money — that’s fine. The idea that you should vote for whomever you choose — that’s fine. Those are part of the American idea. But then it comes to morality, suddenly people say, “No. In the realm of morality you’ve got to obey authority, and you’ve got to receive wisdom, and essentially you’ve got to follow time-honored rules.”

And more and more Americans, whatever their faith and whatever their political views, scratch their heads. And they say, “Yeah, I know. I was told that. My grandparents believed that. But if I’m going to vote for whomever I want and, you know, start any business, why do I have to accept someone else’s morality? I want the freedom to play a role. Not to be an anarchist and say anything goes, not even to be a relativist. But I want to play a role in shaping those rules that determine what the moral structure of our country should be.” That came across pretty powerfully.

Q: Deciding for one’s self what’s good, what’s bad, and what you should do in a certain situation?

A: That’s right. The idea of moral freedom, if there’s any problem with the notion, is that it seems to suggest this idea of a kind of anarchy — that anything goes. But that’s not what it’s about. What it’s about is that there are many moral traditions. Some have good ideas, some don’t, and so on. And people want to be able to bring the best of many different moral traditions together. People believe in certain kinds of moral truths. They believe in right and wrong. They know that there are things that are good and things that are evil, and they don’t want to be told what to do. They don’t want to be told what that means in specific circumstances. When it comes down to the concrete, they want to have some role in applying these things.

Q: For many, many people morality still depends on authority — the authority of God, of Scripture. What happened?

A: Well, we are a country that to some degree has always been suspicious of authority. Remember something called “populism”? Populism was a nineteenth-century movement that believed people respected positions of authority. Bankers and industrialists were lining their own pockets, and there was a deep suspicion in some of the most conservative corners of the country of that kind of authority.

We have a kind of populism in our morality that’s very much like the populism we used to have about big trusts and monopolies and so on. There’s always been an American tradition of being somewhat skeptical about authority. It’s not that we’re against authority. It’s that we believe that authority has to PROVE itself.

So when it comes to religious authority, the question people are going to ask is, “Well, have those in positions of authority in religious traditions proven themselves well?” And to some degree they have, but to some degree they haven’t. We have had evangelical ministers who’ve been engaged in various kinds of scandals. We’ve had Catholic priests who’ve done horrible, horrible things in terms of sexual abuse. I could go on with rabbis and so on. But I think there IS a sense in which there’s a certain basis for WONDERING about authority when people claim it.

I can’t tell you how much damage to the authority structure of religion has been done by the Jimmy Swaggarts and the Jim Bakkers and so on, one after another. It’s damage. There’s damage there.

Q: You were talking about people wanting to be able to choose among different moral traditions. Does the same individualism apply when it comes to religions?

A: More and more people ARE choosing their own faith. And when I say that, I make reference to the fact that increasingly we have the phenomenon of switching from one faith to another. But I even mean that for people who STAY in the same faith. More and more people will be “cradle Catholics,” as they’re called, who remain Catholic. But they will SAY that they have CHOSEN to remain Catholic, that it’s not just something that they inherit in a certain sense.

You have to ask the question: Are religions stronger for that or weaker? There’s a kind of person who thinks that religions are weaker, because they should have all of this tradition and authority behind them. And consequently, something’s wrong if people think that they can be cafeteria shoppers.

But I really stand with people like Father Andrew Greeley, for example, who said that when people CHOOSE Catholicism — even if they’re born Catholic — it actually makes the tradition stronger; that they’re BRINGING something to it. They’ve chosen it. It MEANS something to them. He finds that for a number of Catholics the symbolism and the rituals of the Church are enormously meaningful, and they’re enormously meaningful because they speak to the individual.

Q: I have heard it said that, in general, for a lot of people, specific beliefs, doctrines, and creeds have become much less important as far as finding meaning there is concerned. Practices and things people do have become much MORE important. Can you talk about that a little bit?

A: Some churches make the creed very important to what they do. The Reformed Church, for example, which has a strong influence in states like Michigan and places like Grand Rapids — there are credo statements that people are expected to sign. I’m sure that most people who belong to that tradition have a good sense of what the creeds are and what they mean. In that sense, you could say that theology is part of their religious experience.

But I think for more and more Americans, it’s not the case. Nondenominational churches are very, very popular in the country, because people want to identify in a tradition — say, Protestantism, but in the broad sense of Protestantism and not in the narrower sense of a particular denomination within Protestantism.

The creeds themselves — people have died over the years, fighting for these creeds. We don’t do that. It’s often said that America is one of the most religious countries in the world. I think that’s true. It’s almost always added that we’re one of the least THEOLOGICAL countries in the world — which I think is equally true. We do not kill each other over creeds.

Now, if you really, really believe that your creed is right and that other creeds are wrong, you’re going to look on that with a certain amount of dismay; but I’m going to look at it by saying, “But I think it’s pretty good that people don’t kill each other over creeds.”

Q: One of the interesting things in your book is what you found when you asked people about “virtue.” Talk about that.

A: Well, the word “virtue” is big… in circles of writers and intellectuals who are constantly lamenting the lack of commitments to the virtues in our culture. William Bennett wrote THE BOOK OF VIRTUES, and it became a big best-seller. I hear about the virtues all the time, so I thought it would be a good idea to talk with people about what their virtues are.

But I met a stumbling block in doing that. I would begin by asking people about the word “virtue” itself and its opposite, “vice,” and I got a lot of blank stares. People in America don’t like to talk about abstractions. They’re happy talking about “the virtues” — such things as courage and honesty and loyalty. But the idea of virtue as an abstraction is not one that grabs people’s attention.

People weren’t saying, “Oh, virtue. That means returning books to the library on time.” And vice — actually, people know the word “vice” a lot more than they do the word “virtue.” It reminds them of MIAMI VICE or vice squads and things like that. But you have to get concrete when you talk to people and not stay at an abstract level.

Q: So in a society of more and more moral freedom, what are the virtues that people really think are important?

A: The ones that I spent a lot of time talking with people about — because people do think they’re important — are virtues like loyalty and honesty and forgiveness and self-discipline. Those are the four virtues on which I focused. They’re all important. I think everyone recognizes that there has to be loyalty. Or else, if there’s not loyalty, we’re all just self-interested people who’re running around doing whatever is best for us. I don’t expect that most Americans would know the name of Thomas Hobbes, but they understand that in a world without loyalty, we would live the way Hobbes described life — as being “nasty and brutish and short.” People understand that. They understand it’s important.

They understand honesty is enormously important — that you can’t have a society in which everyone disrespects the truth. But they also understand that these things can’t be taken as absolutes. You can’t say, “Be loyal all the time.” A lot of the Americans I talked with would add an adjective before the word “loyalty,” and that adjective was the word “blind.” They would say, “I believe in loyalty, but I don’t believe in blind loyalty.” Blind loyalty was a virtue they associated with other countries. Japan would come up — kamikaze pilots, or people falling on their swords. That may be very unfair to the Japanese culture. I don’t know. I’m not an expert on Japan. But I’m an expert on this country’s cultural views. And that kind of loyalty, where you blindly follow whoever tells you what to do — that’s not what people mean by loyalty.

Q: Is there such a thing as one virtue or characteristic that you found people in this country prize the most?

A: I really think that “niceness,” as funny as that may sound, is one of the most widely prized virtues. We have a society of people who want to be nice, and they want to be thought of as being nice. They want other people to be nice to them. It’s easy to scoff at it, and it’s easy to say, “Well, we’re actually really NOT a very nice country. After all, we have capital punishment, and that’s not very nice.” You can be skeptical of the idea. But it is something that people really value. In fact, I was constantly being told by people that if the virtue of niceness comes into conflict with another virtue — say, the virtue of honesty, and being honest means that you’re going to say something that’s not going to be nice, that’s going to be cruel — people would much rather be nice and dishonest than honest and cruel.

There was a wonderful political philosopher who died a few years ago and who had enormous influence, at least on me — a Harvard professor named Judith Sklar. She wrote that the first commandment of a liberal sensibility (not understood in a very capacious way) is avoiding cruelty. When you see cruelty in the world, of which there is an enormous amount, it really is a pretty important virtue. It’s a virtue that people often scoff at. The late Allan Bloom wrote a best-selling book called THE CLOSING OF THE AMERICAN MIND. In it he humorously put down his students at the University of Chicago. He said, “You know, all they want to do is be nice.” When I read that, I say, “Well, what’s wrong with THAT?” given how much cruelty there has been in the world and how much cruelty there still is.

Q: This idea of moral freedom seems to imply to some people a kind of “anything goes” idea. To whatever extent that’s true, is it likely that moral freedom will lead us to a time when we need more civil authority because we don’t carry around in us anymore the kinds of absolute internal direction that we used to?

A: The founders of the United States really did believe that a society that was going to have political freedom needed people to have an inner compass — that they had to be guided by their own strong sense of morality, or else they would abuse their freedom. We could say that there has been a kind of weakening of that inner moral compass in the United States. If there’s more of “Well, what’s in it for me?” then freedom is in danger. I do think that society requires commitments to certain kinds of moral ideas. It requires belief in common conceptions of right and wrong. I just wonder how we’re going to reestablish it. The question is not do we live in a situation of moral anarchy or moral authority. You have to have moral authority. I am not an anarchist. I’m not a libertarian. I’m a very strong believer in the idea that moral authority constitutes the glue that holds us together. I just think in very, very practical ways that you’re not going to reestablish this sense of authority by doing things the way institutions used to in the old days, where you basically had someone who was in charge pronounce what the authority was going to be and then expect that everyone else is going to follow. There’s a certain kind of conservative who laments the decline of moral authority and says that back at some previous time — say, the Great Generation of World War II — there was more respect for authority, and the country has lost something because it’s lost that respect for authority. To a certain degree that’s true. It would be very, very hard to imagine that if there were an Adolf Hitler in the world right now, and that [if] this country were threatened by him, that a generation of more narcissistic Americans could go out there and do what that Great Generation did to save freedom. It’s a very, very serious issue. It worries me. On the other hand, when we look back at that period, when so many people did respond to the call of authority, we also had a tremendous amount of racial segregation. We had a tremendous amount of segregation by sex, and so on. Can’t we create a new centering for authority now that deals with the way people are now? I think we need institutions. But those institutions have to transform themselves in some way to respond to what I’m calling “moral freedom.”

Q: What are the implications for religious institutions?

A: There are certainly strong implications. Maybe I can answer with an analogy here. To me, the future for religious institutions is actually based on what’s happening in an entirely different realm — the realm of medicine. I remember a time when, if you got sick, you went to the doctor or, heaven forbid, the hospital. And you were told, “This is what you do,” and “I’ve diagnosed your condition, and you follow my orders. I prescribe the medicine, and you take the medicine.” That’s not the way it works anymore, and most doctors recognize that if they try to do that, people are going to find another doctor, because we have something now called a “second opinion.” You the patient want [to] know more. You ask the doctor questions. You say, “Why should I take that, rather than that?” You look up something on the Internet to see about it. You want your doctor in there talking to you and with you, but not at you anymore. You could call what religious leaders need to do a kind of second-opinion morality, if you want to make the analogy with the medical sphere. Religious leaders have to recognize that they just can’t sit there like the doctors used [to] sit there and write a prescription for what ails people spiritually, or what ails people in the religious realm. They have to recognize that they’re dealing with free agents who have opinions of their own. I’m not a religious leader. I’m not responsible for a flock or a congregation. And it’s easy for me, perhaps, to give this advice, because I don’t have to deal with the consequences. But I would tell religious leaders that under the old model, based on the analogy with the old doctor, there was a lack of confidence in people themselves. As a doctor, or as a priest or a pastor, or as a rabbi — you knew what was best. You had a certain amount of feeling that those people out there, your parishioners, really didn’t know what was best for them, and you were going to tell them.

That attitude is one you’ve got to change now. You’ve got to work with people much more. Trust them. Maybe they’ll leave you. But maybe they’ll come back. You know, for every person who leaves a particular faith, there’s another person who comes back. And you’ve got to be prepared to recognize that, in the course of a person’s life cycle, they’re going to go through changes. One of the most interesting changes in our religious life is the life cycle itself. People’s need for religion alters as they go through the life course. [There is] a certain period of time when they don’t want to deal with religion. Then they have kids, and then they want to deal with religion. Then they get older, and they don’t. Then they get too old, and they do. If you’re a religious figure, you’ve got to recognize that when they go through one of those phases where they’re less interested in what you have to offer, they’re probably going to come back to you later.

Q: By and large, it seems to me that we have shown a remarkable acceptance of religious diversity. I’m wondering if you agree with that. And, if so, why do you think that is?

A: I very much agree. I think the history here is very, very instructive. We started out pretty much as an overwhelmingly Protestant country, although there were Catholics here, especially in Maryland, from the start. When we had the big Irish immigration and then the Polish and Italian and German immigration of Catholics to the United States in the latter part of the nineteenth century, it wasn’t well received by the Protestant majority. We had the equivalent of religious wars in this country — vicious fights. I come from Boston, where the fights were probably more vicious than anywhere else. Boston had the largest Know-Nothing party in the United States. And the Know-Nothings were as anti-Catholic as you could be. Now, we’re talking about Christians here. We’re talking about Protestants and Catholics, both of whom believe in Jesus Christ. And yet, even though they both believed in Jesus Christ, you had this tremendous amount of hostility. Then Jews came. And they don’t believe in Jesus Christ. But we got a little more tolerant here. We invented a new religion. We’re very inventive people, so we invented one called “the Judeo-Christian tradition” [that] actually never really existed, since Jews and Christians have been killing each other a lot over the years. But we called it the Judeo-Christian tradition, and we managed to stretch our boundary a little bit more. It wasn’t easy. There were acts of anti-Semitism here — serious acts of anti-Semitism. But compared to Germany, we managed to do that.

Even with all that, however, I don’t think anyone back in the 1940s and 1950s could have predicted that there would have been as much religious diversity as we’ve gotten with so little conflict and so little violence associated with it. Given our history, it is absolutely remarkable, and it testifies to probably the single biggest change in the way people think about religion. There really was a time when to say, “I’m religious,” would mean to say, “My way is the only way.” And that’s not how people speak anymore. They recognize that there are many paths and many ways. We should congratulate ourselves for doing that, because so few countries really have [done it]. Even in countries that have had a long history of having more than one religion, it’s often polarized, with each one having its own subculture. We have some of that here. It’s not that your average Christian wants to walk into a mosque and see what’s going on there. But there’s more intermarriage. Especially with younger people, you’re going to get much more of an intermixing. It’s not going to be just each religion in its own ghetto anymore.

Q: But to what extent does that suggest that at least some of us don’t cling quite so tightly as we used to to the idea of “our truth”?

A: People are not confident about their truths anymore. Truth has taken a pretty severe blow. If you are a person who believes in a kind of absolute truth, this is one of the main problems you find with America these days. You look out and you say, “No one believes in the old truths anymore.” There’s something positive to be said about being a little less confident that you have the truth and that everyone else doesn’t. There’s remarkable eclectic borrowing. Kids on college campuses these days who consider themselves religious will take a little bit of Thomas Merton, a little bit of Gandhi, a little bit of Mother Teresa, a little Elie Wiesel, Vaclav Havel, and they put it all into a mix. You say, “Hey, these are very, very different traditions.” And they’ll shrug their shoulders and say, “Well, maybe they are, but they speak to me.” That’s the important criteri[on] here.

Q: How can people who believe very strongly that they have a duty to evangelize, to try to spread the gospel of Christianity and convert non-Christians, live in a society of increasing religious diversity?

A: Well, they do, and they have to adjust. I actually think there have been big adjustments already. My research and my experience with evangelicals tells me that, while nonevangelicals have a notion that to evangelize means that you actually go out and knock on doors and say, “Hey, here I am. Here’s the good news,” that’s not quite how it works. When you actually talk to evangelicals, they’re told that they ought to evangelize, but they worry about it. Like any Americans, they’re a little bit insecure about going up to perfect strangers. They don’t want to be rebuffed, and they don’t want to be seen as telemarketers who call you in the middle of dinner. They say, “My commitment to evangelize is for me to live the best life that I can, for me to be a witness to Jesus by being exemplary in what I do.” And more and more, that’s what the duty to evangelize consists of. It’s not all that different from people who wouldn’t describe themselves as evangelicals do. They also want to lead a good life. So the idea of evangelizing from witness is, I think, much less threatening.

Q: You’ve written in the past about people not wanting to be judgmental. It has a real bearing on how to develop tolerance and respect for people who are very different.

A: Nonjudgmentalism is really a very, very powerful idea. And you find it just as powerfully in evangelical Christian communities as you do anywhere else. I have transcripts from interviews where people will say things like, “You know, I used to believe that because I’m an evangelical I have the truth. But now I realize through my experience of being born again that other people will do things in their own way.” That whole experience of being born again creates in people a sense that, “Since I’m going through a second birth, maybe there’s always a chance that someone else will do that, as well.” I think the metaphor works as a kind of insurance policy. So many people will change their religions, and so many people who don’t change their religions will have their children marry someone outside the faith, that if you want to make sure that you haven’t offended a future husband for your daughter, you’d better not say anything intolerant about any religion, because you don’t know what religion she’s going to take somebody home with — right? Tolerance, nonjudgmentalism becomes an insurance policy in that sense. More and more people come into contact with people of different faiths. That’s a new reality about American religion, as well.

Q: If more and more people in a specific religion feel uncertain about the bedrock truths of that tradition, doesn’t that imply a not very healthy future for that particular faith?

A: It implies a very, very different kind of future. I think that’s true. It’s a future that can’t be based on a creed that claims to speak to a particular kind of truth. So the question for its future is, what will it base itself on? Can it base itself on something else? Judaism, for example, is a religion that bases itself on observance and on ritual and, I think, flourishes because of that. It doesn’t necessarily require a particular commitment to a particular truth. Many Jews would say that what’s most attractive to them in Judaism are the commandments to keep kosher and to obey the Sabbath, and not necessarily to think that God commanded them. The observance comes even before the belief, to a certain degree. For many Catholics in America what they identify with as Catholic are the observances, the rituals, the wonderful images that they associate with the tradition. If faith in God is part of that, fine. But if it’s not … the interesting thing for me about American Catholics is the surveys are absolutely clear: 75, 80, 90 percent say that you can be a good Catholic and practice birth control; you can be a good Catholic if you’re divorced. Even 50 or 60 percent say you can be a good Catholic and be gay. Now, these are contrary to the Church teachings. You would think that if people really disagree with the Vatican on something that John Paul himself considers so important, and the Vatican considers so important that it puts it in an encyclical and codifies it and says it’s a universal truth — you would think that a person who says, “No, I don’t think that’s true” would then say, “therefore, I can’t be Catholic.” But no. That’s not what they say. They say, “I disagree with the pope, but I’m as Catholic as I can be.” That, again, raises the question of what makes a religious tradition strong. Catholicism is strong because people want to identify with it. It means something to them that they want to be Catholic. It’s not strong because it says, “Here’s the truth. And if you don’t obey it, we’re going to excommunicate you.” The Catholic Church used to excommunicate lots of people — [that’s] not the way you make a strong church.

Q: This climate of freedom to choose for myself what I think is right and wrong and how I want to worship — where does that leave Protestants?

A: Protestants have a big advantage in all this, I think, because it’s always been a church that’s emphasized the individual and the voluntary character of faith — the individual as his own priest. American religion has been colored by Protestantism from the beginning. In fact, Protestantism and its voluntary character, its emphasis on freedom, has influenced all the other religions in America. Catholics and Jews have both been Protestantized. They’ve had to adapt to a Protestant environment. It’s often said, but it bears repeating, that to be Catholic in America is not the same as to be Catholic in Europe. And, certainly, to be Jewish in America is not the same as being Jewish in Israel. There is an American version of Judaism and an American version of Catholicism that are distinct because of our commitment to freedom. Much the same is going to happen to Islam and any other religion that comes here. Already, Muslims who come here from very, very traditional religious environments are changing their religion. You cannot have the traditional Islamic attitude toward women that you might have had [in] Pakistan or Saudi Arabia, come to this country, and keep it up. It’s not going to last. The culture’s going to influence you, and you’re going to change. That’s very much what happened to Catholics, and it’s very much what happened to Jews.

Q: There’s a school of thought that says, at least for Protestants, it is the most conservative congregations that thrive, and the liberal ones that do not. I think that means conservative in theology as well as social ideas. That would suggest that if there is this loosening up of faith commitments, those congregations are in trouble.

A: Well, I don’t think so. I have a pretty strong disagreement with that line of thought, which really can be traced back to a book written by Dean Kelly in the 1970s, WHY CONSERVATIVE CHURCHES ARE GROWING. The idea was that, especially in a secular environment, if you offer a strong message, a strict church, you’ll grow. People will really flock to you. That has definitely been true. But it’s not true forever. There is a cyclical course to these things. Some of our strongest churches, as they become stronger, modify themselves. They want to grow even more. The biggest growing churches in America — megachurches — are anything but strict in this conventional way. They call themselves evangelical, but they’re not strict, not demanding, and they’re growing very, very rapidly. Willow Creek, the most famous of our megachurches, doesn’t even have a cross outside the building. It wouldn’t identify itself with any specific tradition. It wants to grow. And the way you grow is by trying to be all things to all people. The strict church idea is a way to get a niche and start growing, but you can’t keep growing that way. If you stay that strict, the growth that you’ve experienced will actually decline, which is perfectly fine for some believers. Some believers would rather not grow. I actually admire them greatly for not wanting to grow. They say, “This is what we want, and we want to be faithful to it.” But past a certain point, if you want to grow, you’re not going to be that strict.

Q: If we are as religious as we say we are, we really are remarkably religious, and we believe in very traditional things. Then why do our attitudes about certain social issues and why do our politics indicate something very different?

A: A great deal, of course, depends on what we mean by “religious.” When people talk about surveys that show 95 percent of people believe in God and equally high numbers go to church regularly and so on, we know those figures are not completely to be trusted. When you actually look at church attendance, it’s considerably lower than what the surveys tell you about people who say they go to church. What the surveys are measuring is whether people think they ought to be going to church more than whether they actually do. But I won’t deny that there is a substantial element of truth to the idea that we’re certainly a much more religious country than Holland, Great Britain, and others. I personally think, and a lot of social scientists I respect would agree with me, that in an odd way it’s precisely the fact that we don’t command religion that enables it to flourish. We’ve never had a state church. We’ve never made religion a monopoly. Therefore, religions really compete with each other in the market. And that actually keeps our religions flourishing.

Q: The religions are flourishing, but why don’t they seem to have more of an influence on the larger society?

A: There’s a cost for that flourishing. This is the market model, which says that when you have a government monopoly on religion — an established church — religion becomes very lazy (say, Sweden or Scandinavia) and people drop off. It doesn’t do anything for them. We have competitive religions that have to compete for customers. Therefore, our religions really grow and flourish. But the down side of that is that they then have to appeal to people. They lose the power of their message to some degree, because they’re putting themselves behind the cart of public opinion, rather than leading public opinion. That’s why I don’t think that religion translates into public policies. We have a number of follower religions. I don’t see that much leadership in our religions. On an issue like capital punishment, for example, which is certainly an important idea in many religious traditions, I don’t see political leaders talking about raising questions from their faith traditions, whatever they may be. Not that I think people should be against it, although I personally am, but where’s the leadership raising what the questions are, raising that there are religious issues here? It’s not just a question of justice. It’s not just a question of retribution. It’s a question of life, and that does involve faith. There ought to be something there that leadership can respond to.

Q: In this global society, does what’s going on here religiously have an influence on religions abroad?

A: I think it’s not as likely as in the other direction — that when religions come here, America influences them so much. The U.S. has just been an anomaly. When it comes to religion, [Western European countries] don’t want to learn anything from us. They think we are so committed to a particular kind of religiosity they feel they’ve outgrown, that they don’t see much to learn from us at all. Some of that represents a certain kind of arrogance on their part. And a lot of it represents a real misunderstanding of what American religious life is. One of the things that I do is to try to explain to Europeans about American religion. Every time I do this, they’re absolutely fascinated. These are things they haven’t heard before. But they’re completely mystified. They just don’t understand it. I wish we had an influence there, because I think they could learn a lot, especially from our more competitive approach to religion, which makes a certain amount of sense in their context.

Q: Are there other things about what’s going on here that you find Europeans and others so wide-eyed about?

A: Capital punishment is certainly one of the big issues where the Europeans look down on us. But it’s not the only one. Whenever I go to Europe, I get the sense that they think the President of the United States is named Pat Robertson and the Vice President is named Jerry Falwell. And when I try to explain to them that Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell are actually fairly marginalized people in America, that their influence has long peaked, and they can’t pull out troops the way they once did, this is news to them. They hadn’t heard this. They don’t really understand the elements of moral freedom that go into American religion. They think conservative Christians must be censorious and puritanical and so on, and they just can’t get at the way this phenomenon of being born again influences rebirth in so many different areas. [It’s a] constant, constant source of misunderstanding. [It’s the same for] the influence of American Catholicism abroad and the influence of American Judaism. Jews in Israel really don’t want to hear from Jews in America about what it means to be Jewish. From their point of view, Jews in America haven’t paid the price of sacrifice, of going to live in a war-torn country and risk[ing] losing their life. Since they haven’t done that and they’re comfortably over here in America, [Israeli Jews] don’t want to hear anything from them [about] being Jewish. They want to hear other things, but they don’t want American Jews telling them — Israeli Jews — what it means to be Jewish. I think very much the same is true of Catholics in Poland and Italy about Polish-American Catholics and Italian-American Catholics. I don’t expect that American religion will have a big impact in the rest of the world. The one exception is Mormonism, which has had a strong missionary success abroad for reasons that I’m not sure I fully understand. And to some degree, there’s also been a strong influence of American evangelical Protestantism in Latin America.

Q: Then there’s the question of the relationship between religion and morality and the claim of many people that, in order to be truly moral, you need to be religious — that morality is based on religion. Many other people claim that they’re not necessarily dependent on each other, and that you can be perfectly ethical — maybe supremely so — and not be religious at all.

A: Until relatively recently, there was a strong bias registered in public opinion polls against atheism. Atheism was the one taboo. I remember President Eisenhower expressed it very, very well when he said that it didn’t matter what religion you were, so long as you were religious. That defined the general American attitude toward religion for many, many years. It was a very capacious formula, because it didn’t set off Protestant against Catholic against Jew. But it did exclude atheists. It treated atheists as the ultimate pariah. I think that’s lingered fairly long. But it is disappearing, in part because people meet other people. They come into experiences with other people. They learn about other people. It’s not that atheists are some kind of exotic tribe that lives only on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. You’ll find more and more nonbelievers spread throughout the country, and believers and nonbelievers will come to meet each other, and they’ll learn to some degree to take the fangs out. We had almost a national seminar on this issue when Joe Lieberman was nominated for vice president. He made a speech at a black Baptist church in Detroit in which he essentially equated morality and religion. And there was a considerable dressing down. The Anti-Defamation League chastised him for it. Other people said, “This is going too far.” And he immediately backtracked and said, “Oh, I didn’t mean that.” It’s much harder to get up and say that to be a moral person you have to be a religious person. You’re not likely to hear that as much anymore. You’re much more likely to hear that the country requires religion for its framework, but that it ought to make a place for everyone — even those who don’t believe.

Exploring Religious America

EXPLORING RELIGIOUS AMERICA
A Poll Conducted for RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY and U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT
by Mitofsky International and Edison Media Research
March 26 – April 4, 2002

INTRODUCTION
Americans are tolerant when it comes to other religions; they are not threatened by other religions; and yet they don’t know much about them. These are the main findings of our national telephone survey of 2,002 adults in the United States. Mitofsky International and Edison Media Research conducted this survey, “Exploring Religious America,” for the weekly Public Broadcasting Service television program RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY and U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT.

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This report details the main findings of the survey:

  • Most Christians feel they are tolerant of other religions.
  • Americans see religious diversity as a strength and not as a threat.
  • Many of these very religious and very tolerant Americans know neither people of other religions nor much about religions other than their own.
  • Many Americans turned to their religion to deal with the aftermath of the events of September 11th
  • While Americans are evenly split on their overall view of Islam as a religion, most Americans expect a bigger armed conflict soon between Christian and Islamic countries.
  • About one half of Americans say they attend religious services at least once per week, and large numbers say they attend prayer group meetings and Bible study.
  • By nearly three to one, Catholics believe that Catholic priests should be allowed to marry.

RELIGIOUS TOLERANCE — RELIGIOUS THREATS
For the most part, Americans are accepting and tolerant of people who have religious beliefs that are different than theirs. They think all religions have elements of truth, and a large majority does not think of their own religion as the only true religion. They have this spirit of acceptance and openness to religious differences even though most do not personally know people who practice religions different than theirs or know much about the religious beliefs of others.

Christians see themselves as very tolerant of people of other faiths, with 81% of Christians saying that Christians in the United States are “very” or “somewhat” tolerant of people of other faiths. People who are not Christians agree with this view for the most part, but not nearly as many of them are fully convinced of Christian tolerance. Only 54% of non-Christians see Christians as being tolerant of people of other faiths.

Most people in the United States know someone who is Christian (94%) and are familiar with the basic teachings of Christianity (95%). But only half (51%) know a Jew or are familiar with the basic teachings of Judaism (50%). Very few people know a Muslim (28%), a Hindu (17%), or a Buddhist (17%), nor are there very many familiar with the teachings of these religions.

A majority (62%) thinks the religious diversity in the United States does not make it harder to keep the country together. Only about 1 in 4 finds diversity a problem. Religious diversity is not seen as a threat to their individual religious beliefs. Only 13% feel threatened in this way. Rather, they see this diversity as a source of strength for their beliefs (76%).

When asked what DOES threaten religious faith, they pick out “evil in the world” (61%) as the leading cause, followed by “materialism” (57%). They are somewhat divided about the role of “movies, TV, and popular music,” where as many see it as a threat (48%) as do not see it that way (49%). Less threatening are “nonreligious views of the world” (42%), and only one fourth (27%) see religion threatened by “science.”

RELIGION SINCE 9/11
About two thirds of Americans (64%) report that religion is a “very important part” of their lives. This is especially true among women (74%) and African Americans (89%). While Americans were focused on the events of the September 11th terrorist attack on the New York World Trade Center and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., most of them — nearly 80% — said religion was important in helping them deal with what happened. Almost all of those who regularly attend church (93%) said religion was important in helping them. Even those who rarely or never attend religious services were significantly sustained by their religious faith.

The events of 9/11 did little to change an already strong commitment to religion or faith in God. More than 4 in 5 said that religion is as important in their lives as it was before the terrorist attacks (81%). And almost everyone said the attacks either strengthened their faith in God (27%) or did not change it (69%). Overall, about 1 in 5 said religion was more important since 9/11.

Americans overwhelmingly expect war with Islamic countries. Almost 3 in 4 Christians feel this way (74%), as do 3 in 5 non-Christians (61%). Even so, they are evenly divided on their views about the Islamic religion. As many view Islam favorably (36%) as unfavorably (37%). However, ten times as many think Islam harbors a larger number of violent extremists (39%) rather than a smaller number (4%) when compared to other religions. These views appear to be based mostly on the events of 9/11, as only a minority is personally acquainted with someone who is Muslim (28%) or say they are familiar with the Islamic religion (35%).

RELIGIOUS BELIEFS AND OBSERVANCE
The United States, for the most part, is a country made up of very religious people. Religious worship and other religious activities play an important role in the lives of 88% of its people. Almost half (47%) say they attend religious services at least once a week, sometimes more often. Two fifths (40%) say they attend prayer group meetings or Bible or Scripture study groups. And almost half (48%) say they are involved in the activities of their place of worship in addition to their attendance at religious services.

In order to get an idea of people’s views of their relationship to God or some other spiritual force, they were asked how often they experienced the presence of a supreme being close to them. Almost half (49%) of the Christians in the sample said that many times they have experienced “God’s presence or a spiritual force that felt very close to you,” while only 1 in 10 said this had never happened. Non-Christians, on the other hand, were evenly split. About one third (34%) said it happened many times to them and a like number (36%) said it never happened.

America is mostly a Christian country. Five out of six say they are Christians. Catholics and Protestants, in equal numbers, comprise half the adult population, 25% and 26% respectively. However, another 32% call themselves Christians but say they are not Catholics or Protestants. Almost half of Christians say they are “born again,” and one fourth describe themselves as “Evangelical Christians.” The born again and the Evangelicals come from all the Christian denominations, including Catholics. They come mostly from the group of Christians who describe themselves as neither Catholic nor Protestant. The Evangelicals, on the other hand, come mostly from among those who call themselves Protestants.

Percentage of Christians claiming to be:
Born Again Christians 46%
Catholics 21%
Protestants 52%
Other Christians 63%
Evangelical Christians 24%
Catholics 10%
Protestants 39%
Other Christians 26%

Jews and Mormons are each another 2% of the total. Muslims, Hindus, and Buddhists are each less than 1% of the population. About 3% claim some other religion. Nonbelievers make up 8% of all adults — 3% are agnostic, 2% are atheist, and 3% have no religious preference.

Those who attend religious services were asked to choose three reasons from among seven choices about what was most important when it came to choosing a church, synagogue, mosque, or temple to attend. More than half (55%) of Christians said “beliefs, doctrines, and creeds” were important in their choice of a place of worship. Next were “a sense of community” and the “minister, priest, or rabbi,” each selected by 51%.

However, when people were asked a separate question, a stronger reason emerged. By a margin of almost 3 to 1, respondents chose “an individual’s spiritual experience” (69%) over “doctrines and beliefs” (24%) as the most important part of religion. “Spiritual experiences” were chosen over “doctrines and beliefs” by both non-Christians (73%-15%) and Christians (69%-26%).

The poll compared several items in their importance in helping people make decisions about their lives. This was the first sign of religion being less important than other alternatives. More than three quarters (77%) would rely upon their own personal judgments ahead of anything else. Of the four alternatives offered them, the teachings of their church or synagogue ranked last (51%). Family and friends ranked second (64%), followed by the Bible (60%).

CHANGE IN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH?
Catholics were asked about two issues that have been in the news recently as possible reforms in the Church. When it comes to priestly celibacy, most Catholics (70%) favor allowing priests to marry. This finding holds true for both men and women in just about every age group of Catholics. Only among two groups of Catholics does support for allowing priests to marry drop below 50%: those who are 65 years old and older and those who attend church more than once per week.

Catholics are more evenly divided about whether Catholic laity should have more of a say in the selection of bishops. As many would welcome this reform (48%) as want to continue to leave it to Church officials (44%). Again, support for this reform drops among older Catholics and those who frequently attend religious services.

NEWS COVERAGE OF RELIGION
Even though most people take the practice of their religion very seriously in this country, respondents see little religious news on television. By a 2-to-1 margin, more people believe there is too little news about religion on television (36%) than believe there is too much (17%). A plurality (39%) thinks that there is just the right amount of news about religion on television currently. Non-Christians are more evenly divided between too little (28%) and too much (23%).

HOW THE SURVEY WAS CONDUCTED
This report summarizes the results of a national telephone survey conducted by Mitofsky International and Edison Media Research regarding religious beliefs and practices in the United States. This national survey interviewed 2,002 adults 18 years of age and older. It was conducted by telephone between March 26 and April 4, 2002. The sample households were selected using random digit dialing. One individual in each household was randomly selected to be interviewed. The final results were weighted to take account of the probabilities of selecting one individual per household and the varying number of telephone lines in a household. Weighting also was done to reflect the national age, sex, and racial demographic breakdown as estimated by the United States Census Bureau. The sampling error at a 95% confidence level depends on the sample size for the reference groups. The sampling error for different groups follows.

Results based on:
Total sample ±2%
All Christians ±2%
Catholics ±4%
Protestants ±4%
Other Christians ±4%
Non-Christians ±6%

Interview with Peter Steinfels

 

BOB ABERNETHY: This week in COMMONWEAL Magazine, an independent Catholic journal, writer and scholar Peter Steinfels, a Catholic, takes a thoughtful look at the crisis in the Church and calls for changes to overcome it. Peter Steinfels writes the “Belief” column for THE NEW YORK TIMES. He joins us now from New York. Peter, welcome.

You don’t excuse any of the abuses, but you do point out that almost all of them happened 15 or 20 years ago or more. Why is that significant?

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PETER STEINFELS (THE NEW YORK TIMES columnist): I think it’s significant because it shows that the actions the bishops took in, say, the years 1992, ’93, both to prevent further sex abuse cases and to root out from their own diocese people who were likely to be repeat offenders, had some effect. But I think that that raises the further question: If they did take that kind of effective action, why has today’s crisis, today’s scandal, accelerated to a level and a dimension even greater than any of the concerns that were widely made public during that earlier period?

ABERNETHY: And what’s your answer to that?

STEINFELS: Well, my answer is twofold: the one has to do with the concern about how much of that was done behind closed doors. The fact is that the bishops, even when they took those actions, very few of them gave full and complete explanations of what had been going on to their people in their diocese.

But the second is, not only has the scandal eroded trust, but there was a previous erosion of trust — a kind of tinder ready to be ignited — that had occurred because of a lot of other questions, and has made Catholics all the more distrustful in the current situation.

ABERNETHY: So quickly, what has to be done?

STEINFELS: I think that there has to be a full-scale clearing of the air. Some setting up of a kind of commission like the Kerner Commission or the others that reviewed national crisis in the ’60s in the United States, with bishops, with other credible Catholic figures, maybe even some non-Catholics on it, to give a full explanation of what happened in the earlier years, what has been disclosed since the beginning of this year, and what proposals could be put in the works to prevent this kind of thing in the future.

ABERNETHY: Peter Steinfels in New York, many thanks.

Celibacy in the Priesthood

 

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: As American Catholics have reeled from the disclosures of past sexual abuses by priests, and evidence they were covered up, one of the questions raised has concerned priestly celibacy — abstinence from sex. Was that requirement a cause of the abuses? Is it necessary for dedicated ministry? Should it be made optional? Lucky Severson talked about celibacy with priests… and former priests.

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LUCKY SEVERSON: Tim Higgins is a chaplain at a correctional institution for juveniles in Portland, Maine. Eight years ago he was a Catholic priest — Father Tim Higgins — until, after a lot of prayer, he reached the conclusion that he could no longer live a celibate life.

Pastor TIM HIGGINS (Former Priest): I love priesthood, love ministry, love the work of the priest. That’s why I am doing a variety of ministerial things now. That calling burns in my heart. But the desire to come home to a partner was just as big as time went on.

SEVERSON: So he is no longer a priest, but he is a father of a little boy and girl, doing what many fathers do, picking his kids up from day care. He is also a symbol of what some Catholics think contributed to the growing pedophilia scandal — the policy of celibacy. This is Father Richard McBrien, a theologian at the University of Notre Dame.

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Father RICHARD MCBRIEN (University of Notre Dame): Celibacy doesn’t cause pedophilia, but the fact that we have obligatory celibacy in the Roman Catholic Church means that the priesthood is an attraction to a certain type of candidate who otherwise might not be attracted, or as much attracted, to the priesthood.

SEVERSON: According to a recent poll by NEWSWEEK Newsweek, 69 percent of Catholics favor allowing priests to be married. But for many Catholics, like Father John McLoskey, director of the Catholic Information Center, the tradition of celibacy should never be changed.

Father JOHN MCLOSKEY (Catholic Information Center): The Catholic Church will not and cannot change its traditional teachings and disciplines simply because of a particular moment and a particular time in a particular country. That is not how the Church has had a 2,000-year history, by going according to opinion polls.

SEVERSON: Father Jim Stack is a priest at the St. Jermone Catholic Church in Hyattsville, Maryland. He says times are difficult, which is perhaps an understatement, but the scandal has not altered his view of celibacy.

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Father JAMES STACK (St. Jermone Catholic Church): I love celibacy. I enjoy it. It’s a gift from God, where your love can be given to all. And that is consequently one of the neatest things about my life. I like loving people that the world blows off and thinks that they are not important.

SEVERSON: He became a priest 15 years ago, but not before anguishing over whether he could stay true to the vow of celibacy.

Father STACK: Boy, I really thought about it hard, too. I had, you know, times where I dated and really had to really say, “Can I do this?” And ultimately it wasn’t me being able to do it. It was Christ who said to me, “You can do it because I am with you. And I will always be with you.”

Pastor HIGGINS: I truly believe that it is a gift for some and for others like myself, it was a discipline and I finally confronted it. I said, “This is not a healthy life style for me. I need to do something.”

Father STACK: Shouldn’t they have made that choice before they got involved in this thing? I mean, you make a promise. You make a commitment.

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SEVERSON: In his new life, Pastor Tim Higgins counsels a young couple about their upcoming wedding, [at] which he will officiate. He says his bishop questioned his sanity when he said he was leaving the Church, but that he was not going to lead what he calls a double life.

Pastor HIGGINS: I knew of priests who had a girlfriend in the parish and hadn’t told anyone. A number of others who went on vacation and had a girlfriend or a boyfriend while away on vacation and wanted to kind of experience that intimacy, physical emotion, etc., and then come back to the parish. That’s a double life that I was not able to confront for myself.

SEVERSON: It was not, he says, about sex.

Pastor HIGGINS: Sex is probably 10 percent.

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SEVERSON (to Pastor Higgins): So it is overrated?

Pastor HIGGINS: Far overrated. Absolutely. It is about the need for a partner and the intimacy of a relationship.

SEVERSON: Although Church rituals have changed little over the centuries, some traditions have. Celibacy, for instance, has been practiced continuously only since the 12th century, and then it was instituted more for practical than spiritual reasons.

Father MCBRIEN: The pragmatic or practical reason emerged more in the beginning of the second millennium, when there were abuses and married priests who were leaving Church property to their families, and married bishops were appointing their sons to lucrative Church offices — income-producing benefices, they would call them. So it was to break the back of that kind of corruption.

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SEVERSON: Even Father John McLoskey, who believes the concept of celibacy dates back to the time of the apostles, agrees that there were times in the Church when it was not universally practiced.

Father MCLOSKEY: There were popes who had illegitimate sons. And there might have been popes who had sons before they became priests.

Father MCBRIEN: The Catholic Church has a married clergy. We have thousands of priests who are in the Eastern Rite churches. We also have former Episcopal priests who came over to the Roman Catholic Church out of a sense of disappointment, to put it mildly, that their church was now ordaining women.

SEVERSON: Most everyone agrees that the Church will weather the current scandal as it has others. Georgetown University Professor of Theology Chester Gillis.

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Dr. CHESTER GILLIS (Theology Professor, Georgetown University): There have been several scandals, yes, in the Church’s history. One of the most embarrassing things about the Church is its history. And if you know that history well, you understand that there have been foibles in the Church and that the Church has survived them.

SEVERSON: Father McLoskey believes the latest scandals will actually strengthen the Church.

Father MCCLOSKEY: I see the future of celibacy as quite positive. I think this crisis, it is a watershed at the moment for the Church in the United States. I think from here on there is a clear opportunity for people who are looking at the Catholic Church to see it in all its beauty and all its authenticity, and also for those people who are nominally Catholics to decide whether they really want to live the Catholic faith fully as the Catholic faith is proposed to them, or go elsewhere.

SEVERSON: Tim Higgins is just one of thousands of Catholic priests who have left the Church to get married — one factor creating a severe shortage. In fact, the number of priests leaving the priesthood has actually been accelerating. In 1980, there were almost 59,000 priests in the U.S. Last year, the number had dropped to 46,000. And fewer are applying for the ministry.

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Father MCBRIEN: There has been a precipitous decline in the number of people who are attracted to the priesthood. Celibacy is the principal obstacle. We ought to set it aside. It is a man — literally — man-made rule. It has nothing to do with God. It has nothing to do with Jesus Christ.

SEVERSON: Tim Higgins believes that allowing priests to marry will make them more in tune with the needs of their parishioners.

Pastor HIGGINS: As a married person, I know what the people in the pew are living on a daily basis. Because I have a mortgage, I have two kids and another on the way. I am up in the middle of the night with a sick child. That’s what people in the parish are doing. “Father So and So” in the parish doesn’t have that experience.

SEVERSON: But from Father Stack’s point of view, the responsibility of marriage can actually be a distraction from his ministry.

Father STACK: My celibate commitment tells people, “You know what, everybody? The most important thing in this world is God.” And for someone to give themselves totally to God, that says something.

SEVERSON: Father Stack says he would remain celibate even if the Church made celibacy an option. Tim Higgins loves the calling so much he is now attending an Episcopalian church with the hopes of becoming one of its priests.

For RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY, I’m Lucky Severson in Portland, Maine.

Teen Girls and Sex

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: Now, a special report on the sexual pressures on pre-teenage girls. Parents, social critics, and many young girls themselves deplore it, but sex sells, so advertisers and entertainers use it to attract audiences. They use it without the regulation or social pressures that once were restraining forces. And they use it without censorship, which hardly anyone favors. Mary Alice Williams reports on the media and the children who are its targets.

MARY ALICE WILLIAMS: They’re sweet. The sexually debasing lyrics they’re mimicking aren’t. Ever since Elvis shimmied his pelvis, parents have worried about protecting their teens from the obscene. This is different. These aren’t 17-year-olds. They’re 11. And these self-confident sixth graders and even their younger siblings are increasingly exposed to torrents of overtly sexual messages by people selling things to preteens.

ALICE (Teenage Girl): It makes me feel like an object and feel really, really weird. And it is not like girls should be like that.

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WILLIAMS: The culture tells them something different. They listen to music. Britney Spears made it big wearing a Catholic schoolgirl uniform. Look at her now. Most of BILLBOARD’s top 20 CDs are slapped with “Parental Guidance” stickers. They [kids] do homework on the Internet where there are lots of porn sites. They watch TV. The teen hit DAWSON’S CREEK on the WB alludes to oral sex and masturbation. In prime time, the Kaiser Family Foundation has catalogued an average of five sexual references per hour.

KERRY (Teenage Girl): This sexual stuff you don’t just see on TV. You see it day to day. It happens in middle school. It will happen in high school. You just see it around.

WILLIAMS: Professor Jean Bethke Elshtain is an ethicist with University of Chicago Divinity School.

Dr. JEAN BETHKE ELSHTAIN (University of Chicago Divinity School): There’s certainly a relationship between the culture and the increase of sex because of the many cultural messages that bombard young people daily.

WILLIAMS: According to studies, more girls than ever before are sexually active before their 15th birthday. One in 12 children has lost his or her virginity by the eighth grade. Almost a fourth of ninth graders have slept with four or more partners.

Dr. Michael Rich, a pediatrician who treats adolescents only, talks with his teenage patients daily about sexual issues. He says he is seeing more sexually transmitted diseases in younger and younger children and that expectations of sex have changed drastically.

Dr. MICHAEL RICH: What we are seeing now that is different from previous years, I think, is that sex is expected. Sex is part of the normal interaction, day-to-day interaction between boys and girls.

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Jerry Della Femina

JERRY DELLA FEMINA (Advertising Executive): This is about as sexy as we get.

WILLIAMS: Advertising agent Jerry Della Femina doesn’t use sex to sell his clients’ products. But he knows why people do.

Mr. DELLA FEMINA: It’s easier to be lewd than to be creative, and people try to get attention, and the one thing that gets attention is sex. Sex sells. People turn around. They look at it.

WILLIAMS: Like many in the industry, he thinks it is up to the parents to monitor what their children see and hear.

Mr. DELLA FEMINA: I believe that it is the parents’ job to provide them with a sense of values so that if they do see something that is off, they are not affected by it.

WILLIAMS: Diane Levin, with the Coalition to Stop Commercial Exploitation of Children, studies the effect of culture on kids’ behavior.

DIANE LEVIN (Coalition to Stop Commercial Exploitation of Children): I have interviewed thousands of parents, and they agree it is their job and they try very hard to do it, but they can’t keep it out of their children’s lives. I resent that I have to struggle with this issue. I think that in the best of all possible worlds we would have a society that is trying to create an environment that helps parents in their job instead of making it harder.

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Dr. Jean Bethke Elshtain

Dr. ELSHTAIN: At one point in time in this culture, the assumption was that families and churches and schools, and even the wider culture, reinforced one another in helping to sustain children through a period of growing up. And I think that coherence has broken down.

STEPHANIE (Teenage Girl): The sixth graders learned how to do something they are not supposed to do. And it is called “giving booty.”

RACHAEL (Teenage Girl): The girl like gets in front of the guy and the guy is behind her.

CASEY (Teenage Girl): It’s like — I just don’t really want to tell you.

WILLIAMS: Like them, the majority of preteens don’t engage in sexual behavior, but they are aware of what they see around them. Sixth graders know about a concept many of their parents hadn’t heard of till college: oral sex. SEVENTEEN Magazine says 55 percent of teens have engaged in oral sex.

ALICE: According to a lot of people, it keeps you a virgin.

LEA (Teenage Girl): Because it is kind of like having sex, but you are not really doing anything and you can’t have a baby, and they don’t think there is any consequences.

Ms. LEVIN (referring to an ad): Her breasts look like they are about 50 percent of her weight.

WILLIAMS: Using sex to sell products starts early.

Ms. LEVIN: What they are seeing right now is a sexual relationship between males and females that is totally objectified — the sexuality that you see is not in the context of relationships. It is not in the context of caring and feeling. I am very worried about where this is going to lead. There is a whole set of problems that has to do with the relationships males and females are going to develop with each other.

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Diane Levin

WILLIAMS: What messages are you getting about who you are supposed to be?

CASEY: Perfect — big boobs, hips, a strong stomach, you know, pretty face, no zits.

SARAH (Teenage Girl): So basically stuff that is on the outside. Not on the inside.

WILLIAMS: It’s how these children should be developing on the inside that concerns ethicist Jean Bethke Elshtain.

Dr. ELSHTAIN: To the extent that your time is devoted to engaging in these kinds of activities, it’s taken away from other sorts of possibilities at very crucial ages for young people, when they’re learning how to be to the kinds of adults that they’re going to become.

WILLIAMS: How did it get this far? Television producers, advertisers, movie producers, magazine editors outdoing each other for the big sell — with almost no limits imposed on them.

Ms. LEVIN: The entertainment industry is unethical in its practice of marketing sex and violence to children. They will use whatever techniques they can to capture the attention of an audience so they will be interested and engaged and hopefully buy what is being marketed.

RACHAEL: Everyone has something, you know, that is not perfect about them. So I think that magazines, TV shows should stop putting that message out to everybody.

WILLIAMS: Can you legislate the images coming at our children? Jerry Della Femina doesn’t think so.

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Mr. DELLA FEMINA: I don’t like that this is the way we are going as a nation. It is time to censor these people. I don’t want to be part of that.

Dr. ELSHTAIN: People have to get licenses to broadcast. So it seems to me that there’s some way, without in any way moving into real censorship, there are ways that you could set up certain guidelines.

Ms. LEVIN: One of the reasons it is so important that government play some role in regulating and setting standards is that once it becomes a level playing field for the whole industry, then it will help the whole industry become more ethical.

Dr. ELSHTAIN: We have the responsibility to affirm that which is worthy and good about our culture. And there’s so much to affirm. We also have the responsibility to say no, and I think we have to do both in equal measure and find some balance between them.

CASEY: It does rub off on you a lot of times, and it makes you feel that this is the way that you are supposed to be and that guys will like you because you have big boobs, and then after a while you think that it is normal.

WILLIAMS: Perhaps normal to adults too, to the extent that they are increasingly desensitized to the saturation of sexual messages and squeamish about talking with their children. Sex education is left to the schools, which are restricted from teaching the realities of oral sex and doing “booty.” But our children are still learning and absorbing values from what they see around them. I’m Mary Alice Williams for RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY in New York.

ABERNETHY: We tried to get comments from people in the TV, magazine, and record businesses who are using sex to sell, but their spokespeople all declined.

Diana Eck

 

BOB ABERNETHY: Now, a new look at America’s religious diversity. In 1965, a change in the law opened up this country to millions of new immigrants from Asia, Africa, and the Middle East, and they brought their religions with them. Traditions other than Christianity and Judaism comprise only a small percentage of the overall religious population. Still, in the words of Diana Eck of Harvard University, “We are now religious in so many different ways than we ever imagined before that it takes our breath away.”

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Professor Eck has a new book out called A NEW RELIGIOUS AMERICA, and when she was in Washington recently, I talked with her about diversity and its implications.

DR. DIANA ECK (Professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Studies, Harvard University): Well, in simple terms, we have become the most religiously diverse nation on earth.

We have extensive Buddhist traditions, places like Los Angeles [are] now really the most complex Buddhist city in the entire world. We have Hindus who have come not just from India, but from Trinidad and the Caribbean. We have Muslims who have come from the Middle East and from India and Pakistan and Africa and Indonesia.

We have this challenge in the United States to do something that has really never been done before, which is to create a multireligious and democratic state.

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ABERNETHY: Professor Eck thinks America’s commitment to religious freedom will help accomplish this. But I wondered, what does diversity imply for Christians who feel an obligation to try to convert others?

DR. ECK: I think that the thing many people who are not Christians feel about Christian evangelism and missions is that it’s so one way. It’s so one-sided. And it has — it has all mouth, you might say, and no ears. And as a Christian, I would say that is a wrong understanding of what kind of relationship we should have with people of other faiths.

ABERNETHY: So, how should a Christian relate to, for instance, Buddhists, who may not believe in a transcendent God?

DR. ECK: Part of the problem is that Christians in the United States are pretty abysmally ignorant about the religious traditions of the rest of the world. And so the first thing that Christians need to do is to get out there and understand what it means for a vibrant, religious tradition that has transformed the whole of Asia and now is beginning to transform America — what it means for a vibrant religious tradition not to use the symbol “God” in the way we do.

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ABERNETHY: What about Hindus, with, what do they say, 330 million deities? That rubs a lot of people the wrong way, people who believe in one God. How do they interpret that?

DR. ECK: Well, they need to ask Hindus how they interpret it, because there is a way in which the Hindu tradition was sort of made for the American project. “E Pluribus Unum” is our national motto. And in a way, out of many, one is also the theological motto, you might say, of the Hindu tradition.

Almost any Hindu will say, in name and form there are many, but we also believe in one God. We have many names, many attributes, many ways of seeing the divine. In fact, the ways of seeing the divine are limited not by God’s capacity to be present, but by our human capacity to see.

So open your eyes. Let’s try to understand what it means to speak of the many-ness of God. And Hindus can really help us with that.

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ABERNETHY: Professor Eck teaches Indian religions and comparative religions at Harvard. She has published a CD-ROM that identifies, for instance, just where to find a Hindu temple in, say, Dallas. I asked her how her own knowledge of others has helped her faith.

DR. ECK: It’s made me much clearer about the great mystery that is the divine truth and the humility that all of us need to, to comport ourselves with if we are to understand that. We are not in the position of being the judges of others, nor in the position of being able to fully understand what, as we would put it, God is up to in the world.

ABERNETHY: As she speaks at book signings and other events, Professor Eck is sometimes asked what she would say to her fellow-Christians who might think other religions challenge their truths?

DR. ECK: Well, I would say they need to be able to open their minds to the truth of Christianity, then. One of the most startling things about the entire experience of Easter and the Pentecost was that most of the people who came to call themselves Christians did not recognize what Christ was doing, did not recognize him when he was walking along the road side by side with them, did not recognize the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. I mean these mysteries are things that the Christian church does not have locked up in, in its own treasure chest, but are mysteries that we need to be alert to.

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The Christian church does not have a corner on compassion and love. These are things that are widely shared, and we need to keep our eyes open for them, wherever we find them.

ABERNETHY: Professor Eck told the story of a Vietnamese Buddhist temple near Boston that was vandalized by boys in the neighborhood. They trashed the altar and the Buddhist image of compassion.

DR. ECK: The police caught the vandals, and the Vietnamese, after some deliberation, decided not to prosecute, not to take them to court, but to invite them to a picnic and hold a neighborhood festival of forgiveness, so to speak — a cleanup morning at the temple, to clean up the whole neighborhood.

And the boys went in and saw what happened in the temple, saw people at prayer. And I remember talking with one of them. His name was Angelo. And the president of the temple that very morning, when he welcomed Angelo and embraced him, had said, “Your name means angel, a guardian angel. We are going to make you the guardian angel of this Vietnamese Buddhist temple.” And when I talked to Angelo a little later, he said, “You know, if I had known anything about what went on inside this temple and about these people I would never have done this.” And that’s a lesson for all of us.

ABERNETHY: Diana Eck on what she calls “A New Religious America.”

Exploring Religious America, Part Two: American Protestants

 

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: This is Part Two of our new RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY series, “Exploring Religious America.”

Today: American Protestants, in all their variety, influence, contradictions, and even surprises.

Martin Luther’s protests against the Catholic Church produced the ideas the Pilgrims brought to America: freedom of conscience, the authority of the Bible, salvation only by faith and God’s grace.

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Martin Marty is emeritus professor of the history of religion at the University of Chicago.

Dr. MARTIN MARTY (Emeritus Professor, University of Chicago): The other Protestant idea is equal standing before God. All members. There is no pope or hierarchy closer to God than all members.

ABERNETHY: Protestantism’s ideas of self-governance, equality, and freedom became fused with America itself, and religious freedom permitted Protestantism to spread fast.

Sociologist Nancy Ammerman, at Hartford Seminary.

Dr. NANCY AMMERMAN (Sociologist, Hartford Seminary): When a new group of people comes along and doesn’t exactly fit with the old group that was there, they can go off and start their own congregation. They can start their own denomination. And what we have seen over the course of U.S. history is an incredible proliferation of religious groups, particularly Protestant groups.

ABERNETHY: Today, just over half of all Americans are Protestants, worshipping in 300,000 congregations, in many hundreds of denominations — and, often, apart from any denomination.

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The old Protestant main line used to be the bastion of America’s business and political establishment. The main line lost members until about 10 years ago, when its decline leveled off. Now, our best estimate is that mainline Protestants are nearly 15 percent of all adult Christians.

The historically black churches probably have another 10 percent. The big change — and the news, for many people — is that evangelicals are now the largest Protestant group, by far.

We estimate the total number of evangelicals, including Pentecostals, at more than a third of all Christians — twice the size of the main line. Southern Baptists are the largest evangelical denomination and the largest of all Protestant denominations, with 16 million members.

Very generally, the evangelicals and the black churches are more conservative theologically than the main line, and more contemporary and enthusiastic in styles of worship. Evangelicals emphasize the experience of being born again, and the authority of the Bible. Pentecostals emphasize the power of the Holy Spirit, especially through speaking in tongues.

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Robert Wuthnow is a sociologist of religion at Princeton University.

Dr. ROBERT WUTHNOW (Sociologist, Princeton University): Evangelicals look at an issue, particularly a theological issue, a religious issue, and they’ll say, “It’s really simpler than you thought — Jesus is the answer,” or, “It’s right here in the Bible.” A mainline Protestant will look at it and say, “It’s really much more complex than you thought. You’ve got this and you’ve got that, this side and that side.”

ABERNETHY: For this series, RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY commissioned a national poll in cooperation withU.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT. It was conducted a month ago.

We asked whether doctrines and beliefs are the most important part of religion, or whether it is individual spiritual experience. Among all Protestants, 25 percent said beliefs, 69 percent said spiritual experience.


BOB ABERNETHY: A special report now on the experiences of being a mainline Protestant, an evangelical, and part of the black Church. Kim Lawton has those stories.

KIM LAWTON: It’s Sunday morning in Alexandria, Virginia, and at George Washington’s old church, people have gathered for worship. Christ Church was founded in 1773.

Over the years, its parishioners included prominent Americans such as Washington and Robert E. Lee. Today, Victor and Amanda Van Beuren are part of the congregation carrying on the tradition of this historic Episcopal church.

VICTOR VAN BEUREN: It’s just nice to have that continuity with the past, but it’s really a living congregation.

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LAWTON: Victor, Amanda, and their three sons have been coming to Christ Church for just about two years, after taking what Amanda calls a long spiritual hiatus. As their kids were reaching school age, they decided to reconnect with church, and they started church shopping in the Episcopal denomination, where Victor grew up.

The Van Beurens say they love the traditional Episcopal liturgy, which includes hymns, readings from the Book of Common Prayer, and Holy Communion. For Amanda, who didn’t grow up with a church background, the services often evoke a sense of spiritual awe.

AMANDA VAN BEUREN: You might sort of say, well, the pomp and circumstance of the Episcopal service, you know, it’s all pomp and circumstance. But for me, and I think probably for a lot of people, there’s something about that high church that is, it’s a tradition. Maybe it’s the tradition of it, maybe it’s just the beauty of it all.

LAWTON: During the service every week, they recite the Nicene Creed, the centuries-old compilation of basic Christian beliefs.

Mr. VAN BEUREN: Saying the creed I think is important because it reminds us of the different elements of Christianity. But it can be tough, it can be tough because sometimes you might say, “Oh yeah, no problem, I believe in that.” And some of the other vows you look at and you go, “I don’t know if I think that way today.” So it’s a constant challenge. But it always is a challenge.

Ms. VAN BEUREN: I don’t fully understand it, no. The mystery of it all. But I think a lot of life is like that. You know, if, if we understood it all, we’d have no need of community, would we?

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LAWTON: The entire family has gotten very involved. The kids attend youth program[s] and sing in children’s choirs. Victor oversees the acolytes, the young people who assist in the service. And Amanda can often be found in the kitchen, helping prepare church meals.

Every Wednesday night, the family also gets together with a small group of congregation members. They eat together, pray, take communion, and study issues about their faith.

Ms. VAN BEUREN: Wednesday nights are really important for me and are really where I get probably most of my spiritual sustenance. And I think it’s because of the intimacy of it.

LAWTON: It’s also an opportunity to wrestle with others over some of the complexities of faith.

Mr. VAN BEUREN: I can say it’s been easier for me to have a relationship with God than it has to have a relationship with Jesus.

Ms. VAN BEUREN: Well, you can’t very well travel on a journey by yourself like that.

Mr. VAN BEUREN: I can’t imagine being close to God without being in a community.

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LAWTON: In Smyrna, Georgia, Sunday worship seems anything but traditional at the Cumberland Community Church, which looks more like a warehouse or a theater than a stereotypical church. Cumberland is a nondenominational congregation. It’s firmly evangelical, theologically conservative — traditional beliefs mixed with a highly nontraditional worship style.

That’s just what appeals to Doug and Dani Bentle. Doug grew up Catholic and Dani, United Methodist. They believe God was leading their own family in a different spiritual path.

DOUG BENTLE: To me, it was wanting to get away from tradition — not that there’s anything wrong with that, but I felt like getting away from something that was very traditional would perhaps help me in my walk.

LAWTON: The dress here is casual. There are dramas and contemporary music.

Mr. BENTLE: Music that was very relevant to today, you know, typical of what we might listen to if we were all just sitting around listening to music, you know, helped us feel comfortable, but also helped us feel like, hey, we could invite other people here.

LAWTON: Dani helps lead the music. She finds it a deeply spiritual experience.

DANI BENTLE: I really feel close to God when I sing, and when I worship him. And when I sing, this love just wells up. I mean, I can’t even explain how much love that I have for God when I’m singing.

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LAWTON: The Bentles are born-again Christians who say they have a personal relationship with Jesus. They believe the Bible offers specific guidance on how to live their lives and how to raise their three kids.

Ms. BENTLE: It’s daily things, daily situations where we bring God into it, we bring Christ into it, and what his word says, and that’s how we live. I mean, every day.

LAWTON: The Bentles also believe they have a duty to tell others about their beliefs. And they take classes to learn how to do that more effectively.

Mr. BENTLE: Somewhere along the line you have to share your faith. And there’s a lot of different ways to do that. And I think what Dani and I have tried to do is just live in such a way that, you know, people would be interested in understanding, “Okay, well, what have they got?”

LAWTON (to Mr. Bentle): Do you think Christianity is the only way to salvation?

Mr. BENTLE: Uh-huh.

Ms. BENTLE: Uh-huh.

Mr. BENTLE: Yeah, we do.

LAWTON: Tonight, Dani is getting ready to head off on a two-week-long missionary trip to Scotland. Members from their church small group have come to offer support and to pray for the missionary team. Dani has prepared a list of her prayer requests. They believe God hears each and every prayer and promises to answer.

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In Indianapolis, members of the Coppin Chapel also believe in a God who answers prayers. Coppin is part of the historic black denomination, the African Methodist Episcopal or AME Church, which began in the early 1800s. The chapel has been in the neighborhood since 1915, and Eric and Daphne Rolle say the Holy Spirit is still moving here.

DAPHNE ROLLE: When the Spirit moves, for me, is when everything seems to be happening exactly as it’s supposed to happen. When everything seems to be in tandem. I mean that’s when I know I’m in His house, and I’m coming there to visit with Him on His turf.

LAWTON: Eric, who emigrated to the U.S. from the West Indies in 1989, says they also feel the Spirit move through the preaching of Reverend Brigitte Black.

ERIC ROLLE: I always wanted to be in an environment or to worship in a place where the Word is being preached and that the Spirit of God is being felt.

Ms. ROLLE: The truth is the truth, you know. And if God is the truth, then when He speaks, He’s speaking as one to everyone. Those are the Sundays when I feel that Reverend Black is talking to me.

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LAWTON: Like many historic urban black churches, Coppin is struggling to redefine its role in the community. Daphne and Eric and their two kids commute in from the suburbs, but they’re actively involved in helping the church shape new programs for the neighborhood.

Ms. ROLLE: At one time, the black church was the heart of the community. And I think that we got away from that. We have to get involved in the communities. The communities are dying. If it’s the church’s mission to spread God’s love and they don’t do it, nobody else is going to.

Mr. ROLLE: The drug dealers are there 24/7. So who has a greater presence in the neighborhood? Not the church.

LAWTON: They are developing after-school programs. And Eric has become a mentor to young men.

Mr. ROLLE: I felt that the Lord placed it upon my heart to mentor, to teach the young men how to be men. The young men need positive male, black male, models. I try my best to be a role model.

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LAWTON: Daphne and Eric say they are trying to pass on some of the spiritual wisdom and support that they receive from Coppin’s older members, who have become their extended family — family members who feel free to offer guidance on many topics.

Ms. ROLLE: Oh yeah. Everything from child rearing to fashion advice — they’ll let you know. I experimented with a different hair color a few weeks ago. “Baby, that’s not the right one!” They’re a resource of information and encouragement, especially those older women. I mean they’re some prayer warriors.

LAWTON: They believe supporting the church, and being supported by it, is all part of God’s plan for the church.

Ms. ROLLE: It’s God’s kingdom here on Earth.

Mr. ROLLE: Right now, if I were to miss church, I’d feel I’m missing a blessing.

LAWTON: The Bentles, the Van Beurens, and the Rolles are all working out their spirituality in the context of the local church. Their identities are not wrapped up in denomination or in being Protestant. Their worship styles and their beliefs may vary, but they share a commitment to the particular congregations they’ve chosen — one of the hallmarks, experts say, of being Protestant in the U.S.A.

I’m Kim Lawton reporting.


BOB ABERNETHY: Many of the people who study American religion say they see signs of a softening, in recent years, of commitment to traditional doctrines and beliefs, at least among the main line. Robert Wuthnow.

Dr. WUTHNOW: It looks like religious beliefs just aren’t as important as they used to be. We’re more convinced that it’s practice, it’s experience, it’s having some kind of relationship with God that matters.

Dr. MARTY: People are suspicious of dogma, doctrine, stipulated rules. It doesn’t mean they disagree with them. It’s just that they aren’t so moved by them.

ABERNETHY: We tried to test the softening-of-beliefs theory in our poll, asking people to choose from a list their most important reasons for going to the church they attend.

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Dr. John Green

To our surprise, solid majorities of all streams of Protestantism — evangelical, the black churches, and the main line — said beliefs, doctrines, and creeds are most important.

But for mainline Protestants, community was equally important.

John Green of the University of Akron does not think theology is a top concern.

Dr. JOHN GREEN (University of Akron): Most of us end up picking our religious communities really for other reasons. Probably the dominant reason is how we were raised, you know, the particular community that we inherited from our parents.

ABERNETHY: At the same time, there is a lot of seeking and experimenting. Nancy Ammerman.

Dr. AMMERMAN: The average Protestant church finds within its pews that at least half of the people there did not grow up within the denomination of that church.

ABERNETHY: Robert Franklin, President of the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta, sees many worshippers as shoppers.

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Dr. Robert Franklin

Dr. ROBERT FRANKLIN (President, Interdenominational Theological Center): We are becoming a consumer church culture. People search for in a congregation an ensemble of ingredients or factors that are user friendly. So being Lutheran or Baptist of Episcopalian may be less important to that church consumer than having a terrific youth program or a great preacher or good music.

ABERNETHY: The weakening of loyalty to old denominations may help explain the dramatic rise of nondenominational churches, which now make up 19 percent of all congregations. If all the nondenominational churches were one denomination it would rank number three in the country, after Catholics and Southern Baptists.

The growth of the Church of God in Christ is another sign of the importance of religious experience. COGIC, as it is known, grew out of a revival in Los Angeles in 1907. Today it has five and a half million members and is the fifth largest among all Protestant denominations. Pentecostals in general have been called “the fastest growing Christian movement in the world.” Many Americans also like to attend big worship services. About half the churchgoers worship in the biggest 10 percent of congregations. But that leaves the majority of all Protestant congregations with fewer than 100 worshippers, and the median is 75.

Meanwhile, about half of all churchgoers are involved in small groups for Bible study, prayer, meditation, or self-help. In our poll, half of all Protestants say they attend religious services at least once a week, and even more say they are involved in their church beyond Sunday worship.

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Dr. Robert Wuthnow

But scholars say when it comes to figures on church attendance, beware. Robert Wuthnow.

Dr. WUTHNOW: I think the poll data are probably exaggerated, maybe by a third, something like that. And I think it’s partly because people want to appear religious, maybe even more religious than they really are.

ABERNETHY: But even if church attendance numbers are exaggerated, that still leaves about five million Americans going to church in any week. So as more and more Americans seek direct, personal spiritual experience, there has been strong growth among evangelicals and Pentecostals, and in new nondenominational churches.

Many individual mainline churches are vibrant and strong, but the main line as a whole is no longer the national power it once was. But what an influence it and Protestant ideas have been.

Protestants stood for religious freedom and democracy, the famous Protestant work ethic, and great movements for social reform. Martin Marty says they shaped America.

Dr. MARTY: They helped pass its laws, they helped found it in the constitutional era, they helped give impulse to its business. You just cannot tear the two apart.

ABERNETHY: On Protestant influence on the country and on all its people, of whatever religion, one observer has noted, “We are all Protestants now.” Next time, the Catholic Church in America, the experience of being Roman Catholic, and the Church’s current crisis.