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National Study of Youth and Religion National Study of Youth and Religion

National Study of Youth and Religion - PowerPoint Presentation

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National Study of Youth and Religion - PPT Presentation

The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers httpwwwyouthandreligionorg Soul Searching Christian Smith amp Melinda Lundquist Denton 2005 Souls in Transition Christian Smith amp Patricia Snell 2009 ID: 259350

christian religion religious faith religion christian faith religious teenagers therapeutic life god deism moralistic christianity people states united american

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Slide1

National Study of Youth and Religion

The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American TeenagersSlide2

http://www.youthandreligion.org

Soul Searching (Christian Smith & Melinda Lundquist Denton, 2005)

Souls in Transition (Christian Smith & Patricia Snell, 2009)

Lost in Transition (Christian Smith, et al, 2011)

After the Baby Boomers: How Twenty- and Thirty-

Somethings

Are Shaping the Future of American Religion (

Robery

Wuthnow

, 2010)Slide3

NSYR Exposes “MTD”

Alternative faith exposed in American Christianity: Moralistic Therapeutic Deism

Soul Searching, conclusion to chapter 4 (p. 175): “God, Religion, Whatever”

Let’s read and exegete this text.Slide4

Moralistic Therapeutic Deism

Adults in the United States over the past many decades have recurrently emphasized what separates teenagers from grown-ups, highlighting things that make each of them different and seemingly unable to relate to each other.  But our conversations with ordinary teenagers around the country made clear to us, to the contrary, that in most cases teenage religion and spirituality in the United States are much better understood as largely reflecting the work of adult religion, especially parental religion, and are in strong continuity with it.  Few teenagers today are rejecting or reacting against the adult religion into which they are being socialized.  Rather, most are living out their religious lives in very conventional and accommodating ways. The religion and spirituality of most teenagers actually strike us as very powerfully reflecting the contours, priorities, expectations, and structures of the larger adult work into which adolescents are being socialized.  In many ways, religion is simply happily absorbed by youth, largely, one might say, by osmosis, as one 16-year-old white Catholic boy from Pennsylvania stated so well:  “Yeah, religion affects my life a lot, but you just really don’t think about it as much.  It just comes natural I guess after a while.”Slide5

Moralistic Therapeutic Deism (cont.)

However, it appears that only a minority of U.S. teenagers are naturally absorbing by osmosis the traditional substantive content and character of the religious traditions to which they claim to belong.  For, it appears to us, another popular religious faith, Moralistic Therapeutic Deism, is colonizing many historical religious traditions and, almost without anyone noticing, converting believers in the old faiths to its alternative religious vision of divinely underwritten personal happiness and interpersonal niceness.  Exactly how this process is affecting American Judaism and Mormonism we refrain here from further commenting on, as these faiths and cultures are not our primary fields of expertise.  Other, more accomplished scholars in those areas will have to examine and evaluate these possibilities in greater depth.  But we can say here that we have come with some confidence to believe that a significant part of Christianity in the United States is actually only tenuously Christian in any sense that is seriously connected to the actual historical Christian tradition, but has rather substantially morphed into

Christianity’s

misbegotten step-cousin, Christian Moralistic Therapeutic Deism.  This has happened in the minds and hearts of many individual believers and, it also appears, within the structures of at least some Christian organizations and institutions.  The language, and therefore experience, of Trinity, holiness, sin, grace, justification, sanctification, church, Eucharist, and heaven and hell appear, among most Christian teenagers in the United States at the very least, to be supplanted by the language of happiness, niceness, and an earned heavenly reward.  It is not so much that the U.S. Christianity is being secularized.  Rather more subtly, Christianity is either degenerating into a pathetic version of itself, or more significantly, Christianity is actively being colonized and displaced by a quite different religious faith.Slide6

The “Creed” of Moralistic Therapeutic Deism

A god exists who created and orders the world and watches over life on earth.

God wants people to be good, nice and fair to each other, as taught in the Bible and by most world religions.

The central goal of life is to be happy and feel good about yourself.

God is not involved in my life except when I need God to solve a problem.

Good people go to heaven when they die.Slide7

A Consequential Faith: Exemplary Youth Ministry Study (2003)

Portray God as living, present and active

Place a high value on Scripture

Explain their church’s mission, practices and relationships as inspired by “the life and mission of Jesus Christ”

Emphasize spiritual growth, discipleship and vocation

Promote outreach and mission

Help teens develop “a positive, hopeful spirit,” “live out a life of service” and “live a Christian moral life”Slide8

Young People & Consequential Faith

It is possible—in fact it exits! People colonize churches, not MTD

Faith formation is not accidental

That which forms consequential faith in young people is available in every faith community

Consequential faith is risky business

We are called to participate in the

missio

Dei