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The Religious and Social Crises and Political Consequences By James Petras Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 26, 2012
Introduction
The opening long decade of the 21st century (2000-2012) has been
a period of repeated and profound economic and social crises, of serial and
prolonged wars and declining living standards for the vast majority of
Americans. How have people responded to this crisis? No large
scale, long term, socio-political movements have emerged to challenge the
bi-partisan dominant classes. For a brief moment the “
Questions arose whether in the midst of prolonged hardship people would turn
to religion for solace, escape into spiritual pietism. The question
this essay addresses is whether religion has become the ‘opium of the
people’ as Karl Marx suggested or whether religious beliefs and
institutions are themselves in crisis, losing their spiritual attraction in
the face of their inability to resolve the everyday material needs of a
growing army of impoverished, low paid, unemployed and contingent workers
and a downwardly mobile middle class. In other words are major
religions growing and prospering in our time of permanent
economic crise and perpetual wars or are they on the downslope part
and parcel of the decline of the US Empire?
According
to the latest data as of 2008 the biggest religious group is Christianity
with 173.402 million members representing 76% of adult population followed
by Judaism with 2.680 million representing 1.2% of the adult population;
followed by Eastern religions 1.961 million and representing .9% Muslims
1.349 million representing .6% of adults. The second most populous
group after the Christians are those adults who state they have ‘no
religion’ 34.169 million or 15%.
The dynamic trends over time show a declining percentage of adults who are Christians: between 1990-2008 they dropped from 86.2% to 76%; Jews have declined from 1.8% of adult population in 1990 to 1.2% in 2008 and Eastern religion is growing from .4% of adult population to .97% of population. Likewise, the percentage of Muslims in the adult population has grown from .3% in 1990 to .6% in 2008. The percentage of non-religious adult population has increased from 8.2% in 1990 to 15% in 2008.
While both practioners of Christianity and Judaism, as a percentage of the
adult population, have declined, there is a sharp divergence
in terms of numerical change; between 1990 and 2008 the number of
Christians has increased by 2,218 million while the number of Jews has
declined by 457 thousand. Judaism is the only one of the
major and minor religions to decline in absolute numbers.
The combined number of Eastern and Muslim religious affiliates now exceeds
Judaism by 630,000 believers about 30%. Jews today represent only 1.2%
of the adult
Analysis of Religious
Trends in Political-Economic Context
Contrary to most observers and pundits, the economic crisis has not led to
an upsurge in religious memberships or identification – the search for
‘spiritual consolation’ in a time of economic despair. The mainline
churches and synagogues do not attract or even keep membership because they
have little to offer in material solutions to their members in time of need
(mortgage foreclosure, bankruptcies, unemployment, losses of savings,
pensions or stocks). Contrary to some pundits even the more
otherworldly, apocalyptic, Pentecostal, Charismatic, Born Again Churches
while increasing their number have failed to attract a larger percentage of
the adult population over the past 20 years; in 1990 they had 3.5% of adults
and in 2008 4.4% an increase of .9%.
The crises decade has had several major impacts – it severely
weakened religious identity with any specific denomination, it
increased religious uncertainty and vastly increased the number and
percentage of adult Americans who are no longer religious. Between
1998 and 2008, the percentage of adults in both categories doubled from
10.5% to 20.2%; the numbers increased from 18.34 million to 46 million.
It would appear that most of the ‘non-religious’ are drawn from former
mainline Christians and Jews.
The rise of non-religious adults between 1990-2008 cannot be related to
greater education, urbanization and exposure to rationalist thought which
has more or less remained the same over the two decades. What has
changed is the rising discontent over declining income among wage and
salaried workers, the vast increases in inequality, the perpetual wars and
the public discredit of the principle political and economic institutions –
Congress is viewed as negatively by 78% of Americans, as are banks,
especially Wall Street. The religious institutions and religious faith
is increasingly seen as irrelevant at best and complicit in the decay of
American living standards and workplace standards. Despite the
dramatic increase in ‘non-religious’ Americans close to 75% still claim to
be believers of one or another version of Christianity.
The crisis in Judaism is far more severe than even the ‘mainline Christian’
churches. Over the past 20 years the number of adult Jews has declined
by about 15%, over 450,000 former Jews ceased to identify as such.
Some of the political economic causes for the flight from Judaism may be
similar to the Christians. Others may be more specific to Jews:
over 50% of Jews marry outside of the synagogue with non-Jews, cause and
consequence of ‘defection’. Others may convert to other religions –
Oriental or Christian. Some Jewish neo-conservative rabbis and
ideologies rant about the threat of ‘assimilation’ being the equivalent of
‘genocide’. Most likely most former Jews have become ‘non-religious’
or secular and some of the reasons may vary. For some, Old Testament
bloody tales and Talmudic rulings do not resonate with modern rational
thought. Political considerations may also contribute to the sharp
decline in self-identifying Jews: the ever tighter links and identity of
Israel with Jewish religious institutions, the Israeli flag waiving and
unconditional support of Israeli war crimes has repelled many former
parishioners, who quietly retire rather than engage in a personally costly
spiritual struggle against the formidable pro-Israel apparatus embedded in
the inter-locking religious-Zionist networks.
Conclusion
The religious crises, the decline in belief and institutional affiliation, is intimately related to the moral decay in US public institutions and the precipitous decline of living standards. Among Christians the decline is incremental but steady;among Jews it is deeper and more rapid. No ‘alternative religious’ revival is in the horizon. The more fundamentalist Christian groups have responded by becoming more politically involved in extremist movements like the Tea Party demonizing public spending to ameliorate social inequities or have joined Islamophobic pro Israeli movements – precisely as increasing number of ex-Jews depart!
The secular or non-religious adult population has yet to organize and
articulate a program in contrast to the fundamentalists, perhaps because
they are too disparate a social category – in terms of socio-economic and
class interests. ‘Not religious’ tells us little about what is the
alternative. The shrinking percentage of religious believers can have
several outcomes: in some cases it can lead to a hardening of doctrine
and organizational structures ‘to keep the faithful in line’. In
others it has led to increasing politicization, mostly on the extreme right.
Among Christians it means insisting on literal readings of the Bible and
anti- evolutionism; among Jews, the shrinking numbers are intensifying
tribal loyalties and more aggressive fundraising, lobbying, and
unconditional support for a “Jewish State”, purged of Palestinians, and more
punitive witch-hunts against critics of
What needs to be done is a movement that links the growing mass of rational
non-religious people with the vast majority of American wage and salaried
workers, experiencing declining living standards and the rising costs
(material and spiritual) of imperial wars. Some religious individuals
and even denominations will be attracted to such a movement others will
attack it for sectarian and political reasons. But as a non-religious
morality links individual and political crises to social action, so can the
political community create the bases for a new society built on secular
needs and public ethics. |
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