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Atheists & Agnostics

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LiberalAndProud

(12,799 posts)
Sat May 2, 2015, 11:58 AM May 2015

Why the Future of Religion Is Bleak [View all]

Today one of the largest categories of religious affiliation in the world—with more than a billion people—is no religion at all, the “Nones.” One out of six Americans is already a None; by 2050, the figure will be one out of four, according to a new Pew Research Center study. Churches are being closed by the hundreds, deconsecrated and rehabilitated as housing, offices, restaurants and the like, or just abandoned.

If this trend continues, religion largely will evaporate, at least in the West. Pockets of intense religious activity may continue, made up of people who will be more sharply differentiated from most of society in attitudes and customs, a likely source of growing tension and conflict.

...

Hardly anybody today believes in—or would want to believe in—the wrathful, Old Testament Jehovah, for instance. A God who commands our love is a nasty piece of work by today’s perspectives, and has been replaced, over the centuries, by ever-less-anthropomorphic (but more “loving,” more “forgiving”) addressees of our prayers. (Isn’t it curious how the obsolete term “God-fearing” is still used in some quarters as a commendation?) God has no ears, but may “listen” to our prayers, and “works in mysterious ways,” which is a face-saving way of acknowledging that He doesn’t answer them at all.

Do you remember the impressive and rigorous Benson Study? It was conducted by a Harvard Medical School team that labored for years. It was finally published in 2006, and it concluded that intercessionary prayer for the recovery of heart-surgery patients not only didn’t work; in some conditions it showed a small but measurable increase in post-surgical complications.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/why-the-future-of-religion-is-bleak-1430104785


Personally, I think Dennett is overly optimistic about the future of religion. Still, his opinion piece sparked a kerfuffle in the religious community, and that's not a bad thing.
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Why the Future of Religion Is Bleak [View all] LiberalAndProud May 2015 OP
On a personal level salimbag May 2015 #1
My mom was raised Catholic, figured out it was complete b.s. when she was in college. Arugula Latte May 2015 #6
Can't happen soon enough.. mountain grammy May 2015 #2
I agree that Dennet is too optimistic. Binkie The Clown May 2015 #3
But, Bink, I think you ignore the power of the ChairmanAgnostic May 2015 #4
Bah! The Internet is a passing fad. Binkie The Clown May 2015 #5
That rock and roll jungle music won't last, either! Arugula Latte May 2015 #7
And doubleknit polyester bellbottoms are here to stay. Binkie The Clown May 2015 #8
I know, and you and I will both be deprived of telling the religious: Arugula Latte May 2015 #9
Wouldn't it be a kick if... Binkie The Clown May 2015 #10
Oh, man. That would be bizarre. And we'd be stuck with those people forever. Arugula Latte May 2015 #12
Without commenting on the future of the internet, LiberalAndProud May 2015 #11
I am a true believer... Binkie The Clown May 2015 #13
Interesting take. In my view, the internet will meet its demise LiberalAndProud May 2015 #15
I recall that the same week some weirdo named Addison? Edison? ChairmanAgnostic May 2015 #18
And every child will have a unicorn that farts butterflies. Binkie The Clown May 2015 #19
Looks like warp speed is here. ChairmanAgnostic May 2015 #21
Here's a whole book of that fun stuff... onager May 2015 #23
^This. deucemagnet May 2015 #14
Part of why I became an atheist in the early 1950's was: Public Libraries. Binkie The Clown May 2015 #17
"Hardly anybody today believes in the wrathful, Old Testament Jehovah, for instance" FiveGoodMen May 2015 #16
I think humans eill always find an organized dumbth olddots May 2015 #20
Well, and all the hate masquerading as "religious conscience" is old testament crap.... Novara May 2015 #22
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