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Make-Your-Own Religion? More And More Americans Are Doing It, According To New Book 'Futurecast'

First Posted: 09/15/2011 2:44 pm Updated: 11/15/2011 4:12 am

By Cathy Lynn Grossman
USA Today

(RNS) If World War II-era warbler Kate Smith sang today, her anthem could be "Gods Bless America."

That's one of the key findings in newly released research that reveals America's drift from clearly defined religious denominations to faiths cut to fit personal preferences.

The folks who make up God as they go are side by side with self-proclaimed believers who claim the Christian label but shed their ties to traditional beliefs and practices. Religion statistics expert George Barna says, with a wry hint of exaggeration, America is headed for "310 million people with 310 million religions."

"We are a designer society. We want everything customized to our personal needs -- our clothing, our food, our education," he said. Now it's our religion.

Barna's new book on U.S. Christians, "Futurecast," tracks changes from 1991 to 2011, in annual national surveys of 1,000 to 1,600 U.S. adults. All the major trend lines of religious belief and behavior he measured ran downward -- except two:

  • More people claim they have accepted Jesus as their savior and expect to go to heaven.

  • And more say they haven't been to church in the past six months except for special occasions such as weddings or funerals. In 1991, 24 percent were "unchurched." Today, it's 37 percent.

Barna blames pastors for those oddly contradictory findings. Everyone hears, "Jesus is the answer. Embrace him. Say this little
Sinner's Prayer and keep coming back. It doesn't work. People end up bored, burned out and empty," he said. "They look at church and wonder, 'Jesus died for this?"'

The consequence, Barna said, is that, for every subgroup of religion, race, gender, age and region of the country, the important
markers of religious connection are fracturing.

When he measures people by their belief in seven essential doctrines, defined by the National Association of Evangelicals'
statement of faith, only 7 percent of those surveyed qualified.

"People say, 'I believe in God. I believe the Bible is a good book. And then I believe whatever I want,"' he lamented.

Southern Baptist-affiliated LifeWay Research reinforces those findings: A new survey of 900 U.S. Protestant pastors finds 62 percent predict the importance of being identified with a denomination will diminish over the next 10 years.

Exactly, said Carol Christoffel of Zion, Ill. She drifted through a few mainline Protestant denominations in her youth, found a home in the peace and unity message of the Baha'i tradition for several years, and then was drawn deeply into Native American traditional healing practices.

Yet, she also still calls herself Christian.

"I'm a kind of bridge person between cultures. I agree with the teachings of Jesus and... I know many Christians like me who keep the Bible's social teachings and who care for the earth and for each other," Christoffel said. "I support people who do good wherever they are."

And it's not only Christians sampling hopscotch spirituality. The Jewish magazine Moment has an "Ask the Rabbis" feature that consults 14 variations of Judaism, "and there are many," said editor and publisher Nadine Epstein.

"The September edition of Moment asks 'Can there be Judaism without God?' And most say yes. It's incredibly exciting. We live in an era where you pick and choose the part of the religion that makes sense to you. And you can connect through culture and history in a meaningful way without necessarily religiously practicing," Epstein said.

Sociologist Robert Bellah first saw this phenomenon emerging in the 1980s.

He sees two sides to the one-person-one-religion trend. On the positive: It's harder to hold on to prejudices against groups -- by religion or race or gender or sexuality -- if everyone wants to be seen individually.

"The bad news is you lose the capacity to make connections. Everyone is pretty much on their own," he said. And all this rampant individualism also fosters "hostility toward organized groups -- government, industry, even organized religion."

Paul Morris, an Army medic at Fort Bragg in North Carolina and veteran of six tours in the Middle East, said he has seen Christianity, Judaism and Islam in action, for better and for worse, and, frankly, he'll pass.

Morris grew up "old-style Italian Catholic," but said he never felt like his spiritual questions were answered. So, "I just wiped the slate clean. I studied every major religion on the face of the planet. Every one had parts that made sense, but there was no one specific dogma or tenet I could really follow," Morris said.

"So now, I call myself an agnostic -- one who just doesn't know. What I believe is that if you can just do the right thing, it works
everywhere."

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wake Up Call
Poking your brain with a pointy stick.
01:52 PM on 11/07/2011
This is called SPIN. The reality is that more and more Americans are becoming Agnostics than ever before. Religion is declining worldwide if you look at statistics.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
guitarfitch
11:22 PM on 10/21/2011
This is great!How To Create Your Own Religion In 10 Easy Steps
http://www.apath.org/creating_religion.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aqueryan
Neo-gnostic, radical centrist
06:40 PM on 10/01/2011
In the minds and hearts of FAR too many - yet, paradoxically, not entirely without just cause - the word "Christianity" has become a caricatured cliche of what the term is ostensibly intended to represent.

Seriously, how many so-called "Christians" are deserving of having that pair of quotes removed from the term as it applies to them?

It seems to me that most so-called, self-professed "Christians" essentially amount to FANS OF [the figure of] Christ instead of being genuinely Christ-like.

There's as distinct a difference between the figure of Christ Jesus and most so-called "Christians" as exists between the actual members of the New York Yankees [i.e. those individuals who occupy the field of play] which consumes the interest of the OBSERVING/WITNESSING Yankee FANS.

However, unlike a Yankee fan attempting to take the field of play at Yankee Stadium who will be met with outright rejection and banishment from the House that Ruth built, the figure of Christ Jesus welcomes all Christ FANS who unwittingly sit in the stands, cheering away, living vicariously through HIM in a Platonic prisoner-in-the-cave, ignorant-of-being-stuck-in-the-Matrix sort of way, rather than actually taking the field and truly becoming [one with] HIM.

And I would suggest that the reason most Christfans don't recognize themselves AS mere FANS as opposed to embodiments of the real McCoy, relatively speaking, is due in large part to an UNactivated metaphorically-creative imagination.
04:26 PM on 09/26/2011
The problem is that each major Christian Religion teaches that it is the only "True Religion" and if you don't believe the way we say you must, you can't be Christian. Close observation shows few who claim to be "Christian", follow the teachings of Jesus or use his life as an example to emulate. It is too hard, too costly, too time consuming, and too problematic. Consequently we "cherry pick" the things that we can do that don't enterfere with our life style, goals, family, friends, and career. Thus Religious Individualism or designer Christian. We use the Bible to support our starting wars, cheating on taxes, accepting bribes, cheating on spouses, performing executions, denying food to the hungry, and not caring for the sick. A gun has one purpose and that is to kill and some Christians think everyone should carry a gun to protect (kill) if needed. Many politicians and Christians praise to God for creating the world and its beauty but find it inconvienient to stop pollution. We Christians exhault the modesty of our wives and daughters yet spend money to watch concerts, movies, and award shows to see as much skin as is legal. We condemn two people of the same sex wanting to get married and every year we see more and more divorces and multiple marriages. By cherry picking the Bible we can have a designer Christianity designed for the individual in what ever he/she believes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
guitarfitch
11:17 PM on 10/21/2011
sign me up!
03:43 AM on 09/25/2011
Or it can be an act of selfishness. Essentially it means my god is myself. And it all boils down to the handiwork of "dimming the lights". It is really a case of verbal engineering much like when people commit adultery and they call it loving their adulterous partners, or when they commit euthanasia in the name of "compassion", or abortion in the guise of "feminism" or cruelty and call it justice. All cases of dimming the light of Christ's truth. Usually what people mean by that is, they are spiritual because it gives them warm fuzzy feelings, but they are not religious because they don't believe in the necessity of organized religion to express their belief. It's more of a "me and Jesus" faith. However, when this falls apart what happens? What happens when someone is no longer satisfied with this "me" alone mentality? There is no one there to hold them to account for their beliefs, their morality etc. "I make my own rules and do whatever I want to do since I can decide what God likes for me and what he does not like for me." In the U.S. extreme expressions of "freedom"(debauchery, abortion, marijuana, promiscuous sex etc.) and no beholding to any ecclesiastical and now even civil authority has become the new religion of the age.
04:27 PM on 09/26/2011
Andrew, I think your description of spiritual but not religious may fit some in that category - but overall does not discribe and drastically sells short that audience. There are in fact, entire spiritual coommunities that are filled with SBNR folks. Check out this link for another view of SBNR: http://revdavida.blogspot.com/2011/09/news-flash-jesus-was-but-not-religious.html
05:06 PM on 09/26/2011
SBNR is supposedly a freedom theology but it is a thin veneer for self idolatry. There is no one to spiritually challenge you, it is kind of incomplete. Religion without spirituality is dry, ritualistic and void of meaning, but spirituality without religion is self-centered and is unstable.
01:41 PM on 09/24/2011
Maybe this means we are evolving spiritually - because we are seeking more meaning, maybe it also means that established religions have failed to provided adequate meaning to the natural human quest for meaning. Here is an interesting blog on the same topic..."All Religion is Self-Made". Very interesting take: http://revdavida.blogspot.com/2011/09/all-religions-are-self-made-some-just.html
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09:18 PM on 09/23/2011
This is NOT new, in a word....Nicolations.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tulka2
Solidarity. Courage. Humor.
05:55 PM on 09/22/2011
"God curse all priests" -the "pilot" in Irving's Shogun 

That's a Protestant sentiment this cradle Catholic can relate to.  Anyone who stands between you and your experience of the sacred, is one to be suspicious of.   The Buddha said, over and over, "Don't believe me.  Test everything I say against your own experience".  

Do not believe anything.  Know it or have the grace to say you don't know it.  Believe is as medieval a word as the antiquated concept of "up and down".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Larsami1
JUST SAYING
01:37 AM on 09/22/2011
I used to belong to several churches and have seen many people doing their own thing since the 80's. What I've seen here on HP is very relevant to this story in that everyone is tired of organized religions and are seeing it all the way they want to. Individuality is ok but I wonder after seeing some of the comments here on what should clearly be a compassionate response is anything but. Has the hate for religions dug too deep?
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
11:20 AM on 09/21/2011
Make-Your-Own Religion?

Why not............couldn't be any worse than the ones already out there.
10:23 PM on 09/21/2011
Oh, yes it could.
11:12 AM on 09/21/2011
So many of these new "designer" type religions are organized to appeal to the diverse emotions, bigotry and prejudice of the like minded. If you have ever watched any of the mega churches in action you will see organizers "work the crowds" and collect large amounts of tax free money. They convince the followers that they are especially blessed by God; that they are different and money is needed to "spread the word". What usually happens is the money is used to buy political influence and lavish life styles.
There are very few who truly try to seek and understand the spiritual part of their nature. And, those who claim to be Christian, largely ignore the teachings and open heart that Jesus presented to the world. The unspoken motto of "we are right and God is with us only" has become so strident that it has divided the country and greatly damaged the body politic.
We have the ability to reason and one can only hope that, someday, the light of reason will come on and they will become more centered.
wstrvlr
Trust nothing you hear & only part of what you see
09:51 AM on 09/21/2011
There is more to religion than just saying you are right & you are wrong. Belief is an inner personal conviction. Ones belief is something that the individual studys on, thinks about & lives those words they have studied.

There are good points to many religions throughout the world throughout time. Studying many things brings the pieces to this complex puzzle together over time. The Creator left clues for us to find in the many different beliefs that are & have been out there throughout time.

We are all one people that were created. To be human has nothing to do about what color of skin one has or what we believe. We all have feelings, we all laugh, cry, become happy, sad or angry. THAT is the connection we all share around this world throughout time.

Be blind to color, but see the kindness someone does & the selfless love they share. Be deaf to unkind words, but hear with your heart the caring someone does.

All that remains when we have left this existance is the kindness we shared, love we gave freely to others & the good things we did freely without want of anything in return. Those are the positive things. On the negative side. All the wicked & evil things we did & said will leave their marks as well on our legacy.
10:53 PM on 09/19/2011
A religion that refuses to change over time is a religion that refuses to learn from the world around it.
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CodyGirl
Truth is worth pursuing.
09:28 PM on 09/20/2011
Religions aren't capable of learning anything. Only people are.
10:16 PM on 09/20/2011
Well put
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
11:22 AM on 09/21/2011
Religions can't change......if they do then it means GOD was wrong in the first place.
10:24 PM on 09/21/2011
No, because many religions are fluid. Take a look at Hinduism. It CONSTANTLY changes and there is no breach of faith.
07:30 PM on 09/22/2011
"FANTASIES.­...religio­ns are all fantasies using fears of whatever (gods, demons, disasters, etc) to control peoples ..that's much.diffe­rent than philosophi­es."

An assertion, an interesting and perhaps plausible assertion, but an assertion nonetheless. Shall we review what the definition of a religion is? "Religion is a collection of cultural systems, belief systems, and worldviews that establishes symbols that relate humanity to spirituality and moral values." In no way does it specify the need for Dogma, in no way does it specify the need for a single God. Could be more, could be none.

What you said before, what I'm responding to now, was an erroneous remark. Bringing up that religions are fantasies designed to control people has nothing to do with the statement I had responded to.
07:23 PM on 09/19/2011
When I was really young, my parents dragged me to the Methodist church. But since I became an adult, I've been attending the Unitarian-Universalist Church and find it both stimulating and fulfilling. Not much God, but heavy into community and building your own theology. Unitarian as opposed to Trinitarian (Father, Son, and Holy Ghost) and Universalist as in Universal Salvation. If you haven't checked it out, you ought to. You'll find a home, too.
08:01 PM on 09/19/2011
Are they following any sort of doctrine or just telling people what they want to hear?
10:48 PM on 09/19/2011
I've participated in the Unitarian Universalist church off and on in the past and can maybe answer your question.

Theologically and metaphysically, there is no official UU doctrine. People in the church range from atheists to Christians to Buddhists. The shared doctrine mainly is based off liberal humanistic principles, such as compassion toward others, social justice, and respecting the environment. Here's a link:

http://www.uua.org/beliefs/principles/index.shtml
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alafonse
It's definitely a crap-shoot.
06:40 PM on 09/19/2011
God is God.
Religion is religion.
However, religions seem to always want money.
God, however, has never asked me for one cent.
He listens to me really well, however, free of charge.
;-)
08:04 PM on 09/19/2011
You don't have to give one penny to attain salvation.

And giving a billion dollars doesn't increase your chance of salvation one little bit.
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09:24 PM on 09/19/2011
God is God. NowShutTheFlockUp and PraiseMe NOWNOWNOW!!!
God Listens....yes..and...Watches..yes...but...hedontreallydewcrap!!)