The Deadly Consequences of the Loss of Religion in America

It's Worse Than it Sounds

Bible Doc
A recent article on FoxNews.com noted that there has been an increase in the number of people who say they have no religion at all, 15% compared with 14.2% in 2001 and 8.2 % in 1990. The figures confirm an increase in the people who did not have a religious wedding service and who do not desire a religious funeral.

To keep this in perspective, the latest survey shows that 76% consider themselves to be Christians. Rather than being a positive factor offsetting the increase in non-religious folks, the whole concept of what it means to a Christian has undergone a major revision over the past few decades. In the choice words of Mark Steyn in his book, America Alone (See reference information below), many Christian groups are "sinking beneath the bog of their own relativist mush." (Page 96) He continues by criticizing the absence of a strong Christian voice, noting that "most mainline Protestant churches are as wedded to the platitudes du jour as the laziest politicians. (Page 98). I remember reading years ago that "Instead of the church discipling the world [to the Christian faith], the world has discipled the church

Despite our current live-and-let-live attitude toward almost everything in our nation, there are some deadly consequences to the loss of religion. Here are some of them.

First, with the loss of religion comes the loss of a solid moral compass. There are those who say that they are able to be their own moral compass. I know myself. I know that if I am left to myself to determine right and wrong, my decisions will be very self-centered.

Second, with the loss of a moral compass comes a decline in moral standards. It is incredible to watch TV or movies and see the actions and hear the words that are considered commonplace in today's society. The old saying goes, "People who believe in nothing will fall for anything." You can update that by saying that "People who believe in nothing will justify anything they want to do."

Third, with the decline in moral standards will come a willingness to shirk responsibility for our actions and their consequences. If something bad happens to me, it's not my fault. I am a victim and I need to find someone besides myself to blame. Years ago, I saw a magazine cover illustrating our victimology tendencies. It showed an open manhole surrounded by a fence and several warning signs. Despite that, a man was making every effort to step into the open hole and, presumably, sue someone for the injuries he would no doubt suffer.

Fourth, with the shirking of responsibility comes the demand for someone else to take care of me. Generally, that someone is big government which means, of course, the rest of us. Steyn, in his book, discusses the desire of many citizens to get as many benefits (entitlements) from the government as they can, knowing that they will not be alive when the big tax bills come due for the next generation or so. (Pages 41-47)

What is bothersome about all of this is that, at the time when the future of religion seems to be heading downward, the future of big government seems to be heading upward. With the government looking at universal health insurance and other expensive projects, we are moving closer to the point that many European countries have already reached-the point of the so-called "Nanny State" where we shift our responsibilities to the government in exchange for high taxes and limits on our freedoms.

The sobering fact is that Europe has long since gone through its decline in religion. If we in the United States want a picture of our future, we need look no further than our friends across the sea.

Sources:

www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,506849,00.html

Mark Steyn, America Alone (Washington D. C.: Regnery Publishing, 2006)

Published by Bible Doc

I am a (mostly) retired minister. I spent a few years teaching Bible courses in a Christian school. One of my goals is to write. I see Associated Content as a step toward fulfilling that goal.  View profile

4 Comments

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  • Mike in NV1/20/2010

    This article is almost entirely spot on. A loss of religion leads to a loss of morality since the logic goes as follows: If there is no God then how can there be a right or a wrong. If there is not right or wrong then all things are morally neutral. If all things are morally neutral then people can do whatever they want.

    I wish that atheists would realize the dangers that they invoke. I know that they claim that a person can be moral without religion but they need to face it, the morals that they espouse (caring for others, being honest, etc) are of no value if there is no right or wrong. Indeed, the fact that there is a right and a wrong is evidence of God and Divine truth.

  • Lacey1/12/2010

    Actually, I find my morals are better than most Christians and I'm an atheist. I don't need a god to tell me what's right and what's wrong. My reason, logic and basic compassion for human beings does that for me. It's why I volunteer my time with the public schools, live as enviromentally friendly as possible and donate money towards cancer research. Not because some huge guy in the sky might smite me, but because I give a crap about people. To say that everyone is selfish simply because you are is quite a fallacy. It must mean everyone's favorite color is purple... Since mine is. Perhaps you should try to research your points a little better before making blanket statements to cover a whole group of people.

  • moo1/7/2010

    So lack of religion leads to government assistance???? Sounds far fetched. Not to mention the final three arguments are based on a pretty big and poorly researched assumption in your first argument. Just because you don't think you can be your own moral compass doesn't mean everyone else has the same character flaw.

  • Pete9/26/2009

    The golden rule (universal) states: Do unto others as you would have done unto yourself. - Morals sorted.

    Religion started long ago, since people have had time to wonder about things they didn't understand.

    "Religion is the impotence of the human mind to deal with occurrences it cannot understand"

    Religion is being discredited by science piece by piece. People now understand things more clearly than ever before, less and less is left to speculate over. Extrapolate the trend for yourself and realize you are probably part of the mediocre majority who choose to find pride in their ignorance of the world and universe.

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