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Seven Reasons Why Young Adults Quit Church

Posted: 03/13/2012 10:13 am

From time to time I revisit the question: why are young adults walking away from religion? Although the answer(s) vary from person to person, there are some general trends that I think apply in most cases.

In the list below, when I refer to "we," "I" or "me," I'm referring to younger adults in general, and not necessarily myself.

We've Been Hurt: I can actually include myself in this one personally. Sometimes the hurtful act is specific, like when my youth leader threw a Bible at me for asking the wrong questions. Sometimes it's rhetorical, either from the pulpit, in a small group study or over a meal. Sometimes it's physical, taking the form of sexual abuse or the like. But millions claim a wound they can trace back to church that has never healed. Why? In part, because the church rarely seeks forgiveness.

Adult Life/College and Church Don't Seem to Mix: There are the obvious things, like scheduling activities on Sunday mornings (hint: young people tend to go out on Saturday nights), but there's more to it. In college, and before that by our parents, we're taught to explore the world, broaden our horizons, think critically, question everything and figure out who we are as individuals. Though there's value in this, it's hyper-individualistic. But Church is more about community. In many ways, it represents, fairly or not, sameness, conformity and a "check your brain at the door" ethos. This stands in opposition to what the world is telling us is important at this time in life.

Perhaps an emphasis on a year of community service after high school would be a natural bridge to ameliorate some of this narcissism we're building in to ourselves.

There's No Natural Bridge to Church: Most teenagers leave home, either for college, to travel, work or whatever after high school. With the bad economy, this number is fewer, but it's a general trend. But the existing model of church still depends on the assumption that communities are relatively static, and that the church is at the center of that community. Not so anymore. When I went to college, I was contacted by fraternities, campus activity groups and credit card companies, but not one church. The only connection I had with religion was the ridiculous guy who (literally) stood on a box with a bullhorn in the union garden and yelled at us about our sinful ways. I could have used support in how to deal with my own finances for the first time. I could have used a built-in network of friends. I would have loved a care package, an invitation for free pizza at the local restaurant or help with my laundry. What I got was the goof with the bullhorn.

We're Distracted: I shared a video by Diana Butler Bass in a recent post about a priest who took his Ash Wednesday service out onto the street. When people saw him, they reacted as if they had been shaken out of a deep sleep. "It's Ash Wednesday!" they said with surprise as they asked for the ashes. "Lent is starting!" It simply wasn't on their radar. It's not that we don't care; we have so many things competing for our limited time and attention that the passive things that don't offer an immediate "interrupt" get relegated to the "later" pile. And we rarely ever get to the "later" pile, which leads me to the next point.

We're Skeptical: We're exposed to more ad impressions in a month today than any other previous generation experienced in a lifetime. I'm sitting in a hotel room writing this, and in this room (which I paid for in part to have privacy), I see more than a dozen marketing messages. If I turn on the TV, they're there. Pick up my phone, they're there. Online...you get the point. So whereas generations before us expended energy seeking information out, now it comes at us in such overwhelming volumes that we spend at least the same amount of energy filtering things out. This leads to somewhat of a calcifying of the senses, always assuming that whoever is trying to get your attention wants something, just like everyone else.

We're Exhausted: I was lumped in as pat of the Generation X group, also known as the Slacker Generation. This implied, of course, that we were lazy and unmotivated. But consider how many of us go to college, compared to generations before us. And consider that the baseline standard for family economics requires a two-income revenue stream to live in any level of the middle class. Debt and credit are givens, and working full-time while also trying to maintain a marriage, raise kids, have friends and -- God forbid -- have some time left for ourselves leaves us with less than nothing. We're always running a deficit. So when you ask me to set aside more time and more money for church, you're trying to tap already empty reserves.

I Don't Get It: Young adults today are the most un-churched generation in a long time. In many cases, it's not that we're walking away from church; we never went in. From what I can tell from the outside, there's not much relevance to my life in there, and I'm not about to take the risk of walking through the door to find out otherwise.

I've tried to offer insight into what might be done about a few of these issues as I went, but I invite you also to sit with the tension of not having the answers. Better yet, seek some young adults out, ask them if they relate to these. And see if they have ideas about what you (maybe not even "church" but you) can do to help relieve some of the challenges.

I think the conversation that follows might pleasantly surprise you.

 
 
 

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02:40 PM on 04/07/2012
My apologies for "piling on," but you left out the most compelling reason: reason, itself. We are taught to think for ourselves, to base decisions in almost every aspect of our lives on sound evidence and fact. Many young people are coming to see that religion is the one area of life where fact and reason are discouraged, and why that is so - because every claim in religion is based on what some MEN wrote down and then proclaimed to be fact, or what contemporary MEN told them, with no evidence whatsoever to support it. Prove even one aspect of "supernatural" events and there might be cause to wonder if there were more aspects of the supernatural. But conveniently, no one can. There are no ghosts, there are no evil spirits (although there are plenty of evil people), and there is no evidence that the people who tell us "what God wants of us" have the slightest knowledge of such things at all. In short, as people get smarter they begin to see through the hoax that has been perpetrated on the human race by a minority who seek to gain power and privilege, since the beginning of human society. Prostitution is not "the oldest profession" - religion is.
05:37 PM on 03/20/2012
Here. Go watch/listen to an actual debate. It's worth your time. Be honest with yourselves as you listen and weigh what is said. Cheers.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KBx4vvlbZ8
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05:21 PM on 03/18/2012
Speaking from personal experience, I left the church as a young adult when I was told I could not become Pope -- I had the "misfortune" to be born female, which I was told carried alot of other "stimata" as well -- never been back, never intend to, and never regretted it!
01:11 PM on 03/16/2012
#8 The realization that faith is a suckers game.
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baseballmom
My microbio: as empty as Michelle Bachman's noggin
12:22 PM on 03/15/2012
How about reason #8: They start thinking for themselves and realize that most of what they've been told in church is a bunch of hooey.
08:58 AM on 03/15/2012
99% of the comments here show precisely why people need to go to church. So many people have such a poor understanding of God, heaven / hell, etc.

1. God doesn’t decide where you go (heaven or hell; community with God or separation from him) YOU decide where you go and no amount of sinning will change that.

2. God made man so that man may have joy. God sets out the guidelines but it is up to us to make ourselves happy, no one is going to do it for you.

3. Not all churches teach the same thing. A lot of the ideas that people are expressing aren’t apart of many religions. If you don’t like what one religion teaches, find one you do like.

Most of all, I hope you find peace and happiness in whatever you decide and wherever you end up.
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baseballmom
My microbio: as empty as Michelle Bachman's noggin
12:24 PM on 03/15/2012
When you're constantly told that X is the absolute truth and you'll burn in hell unless you believe it, and you come to realize that X could not possibly be true, why should you shop around?
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Tylerious
My mom thinks I'm awesome
12:49 PM on 03/15/2012
I think people understand God perfectly. The reason there are so many religions is because people like to think of God differently. Ultimately, God becomes who people want him to become. Anyone can pick and choose Bible verses that suit their views on the world. You can take certain passages literally if you want to, or you can reinterpret them so they say what you want them to say. You like to think that man has free will, despite the many instances of God changing people's minds in the Bible. Not to mention the significant evidence and reasoning that essentially proves that free will is merely an illusion (Read "Free Will" by Sam Harris). You also like to think that God made man to be happy. He made all of the beautiful things in this world so we could enjoy them. Yet, he also made the parasites that will bore holes into innocent children's eyes and make them blind for life. He created the geography that left some cultures to thrive and others to stagnate, suffer, and starve.
08:35 AM on 03/15/2012
It's mom and dad's fault. The bible clearly teaches us (parents) that we are to raise our children in the word. Overwhelmingly, most parents haven't read the word themselves, so how can they teach it? Most never get past John 3:16. Most never touch the Bible that sits on the table, perhaps by the front door, displayed for all who come into our home. It's not the media, it's not school, it's not MTV, it's not the science teacher at school, it's us (mom & dad). We will have to answer to Him and sit in judgement as to what we did and didn't do with the gifts he gave us (money, wife, husband, kids, neighbors, etc).
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08:22 AM on 03/15/2012
I see a lot of how about this and that here. I left the church at 18 because in the years I was at that chuch noone made me feel like a member. The only people I saw that seemed to treat others with the values that the church preached were the little old ladies. Every middle aged person and the kids my age judged my by my economic and social positions. If the church couldn't embrace me as a member of there community because I was poor then to me that negated all else they endorced. The research I have done sence then has convinced me gurther that the Pauline church is more lie and manipulation then truth.
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Cye
05:33 AM on 03/15/2012
I left the church at 18 because I was tried of censoring myself. I was tired restricting myself to certain books, tired restricting myself to thinking only certain thoughts, tired of being told I could only marry certain types of people, tired of not being allowed to go to certain places, or be friends with certain people.

It was stifling. I wanted explore and see the world on my own terms; make my own decisions, think my own thoughts, make up my own mind about things. When I got to 18, I just couldn't do it anymore. It was a relief to leave.

I miss the sense of belonging and community that being part of a church gives you. But I wouldn't go back. I value my independence too much. Especially my independence of mind.
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Soulmentor
"To thine own self be true...."
12:34 AM on 03/15/2012
Maybe it's more simple than any of that. They just don't trust "religion". Given the "christian" examples they see these days, why would they? Santorum ignorance, Gingrich hypocrisy, Bachman bat sheit craziness, anti-gay religious leaders falling like dominoes to "gay" situations while ignoring the real immoralities of political and business corruption, Christianity increasingly being less about Jesus' teachings and more about getting into the bedrooms and voting booths of others, and today this; http://shine.yahoo.com/parenting/rock-group-8220-junkyard-prophet-8221-delivers-controversial-202200759.html, sent to me by my Special Agent in Diplomatic Security son, coupled with this that has gone viral and every net savvy youth will see; http://www.huffingtonpost.com/katie-goodman/probably-gay-the-homophob_b_1344601.html..........HEY FOLKS, get a clue. They're way ahead of all this.
I boils down to the Emperor has no clothes and they know it.
11:09 PM on 03/14/2012
I am grateful to articles like this.
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eddy joe
welcome to the machine
09:11 PM on 03/14/2012
Lust, hollywood, the media, articles like this, permissisve parents, lack of religious education, atheism...and there are countless more.
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08:10 AM on 03/15/2012
Religous education = brainwashing to most nonchurch going people today/
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08:52 PM on 03/14/2012
Best of all, how about"

The golden rule covers my philosophy and it is NOT contradictory.
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08:50 PM on 03/14/2012
How about:

It's boring.
11:15 PM on 03/14/2012
You know, it's ok to compress all of your thoughts into one comment. We won't get mad or anything.
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11:03 PM on 03/20/2012
This tyranny of religion stuff makes me so irritated, I kept wanting to "hit" something so I kept hitting "post comment" and then thought of another reason.
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08:43 PM on 03/14/2012
How about:

You spanked me even though, "the devil made me do it".