The following article by Dr. Diana Butler Bass appeared originally on the Huffington Post website and touches on the content she shared with more than 50 engaged Christians who gathered at All Saints on Saturday, June 14 for a full-day workshop on the future of Christianity and faith. Her book, “Christianity After Religion: The End of Church and the Birth of a New Spiritual Awakening” is the basis of this article and of her talk.
All who attended left considering their own spiritual and religious lives and were immensely grateful for the opportunity to spend time with this internationally known author and theologian, whose own academic life began at Westmont College and continued at U. C. Santa Barbara.
We thank the Rev. Michelle Woodhouse as it’s due to her decades-long connection with Diana and her support that enabled this special day to take place!
To see photos from the workshop, please click here. To see Diana’s website and learn more about her various books, please click here.
Not long after I earned my doctorate in the history of Christianity, someone asked me, “What do you think will be the future of faith?”
I replied, echoing Dr. McCoy from the original Star Trek, “I don’t know. I’m a historian, not a soothsayer.”
Strangely enough, people think that historians know the future and believe that past holds some insight to where we might be heading.
Throughout, I explored past movements that remade religious life — the Franciscan revolution, the Protestant Reformation, the Wesleyan revival and the three Great Awakenings of North America — and concluded that the conflict, confusion and dismay around contemporary religion might not signal decline but a new awakening. Awakenings, however, do not arrive on chariots of fire from heaven. Indeed, for genuine reformation to occur, people of faith must work to make it so.
Over the last year, it has become increasingly clear that there are two significant cultural forces reshaping the religious future: 1) the rise of the “unaffiliateds,” including atheists, agnostics, humanists, “spiritual but not religious” and post-theists; and 2) the rise of religious pluralism and immigrant faith in everyday life throughout the West.
The first group, the unaffiliated, is largely uninterested in conventional religion, embracing humanism, non-specific forms of spirituality, or post-institutional forms of community. Their concern with old-fashioned religious questions is waning, as is their commitment to religious structures of the past. They are, by all reports, angry at the admixture of religion and politics that has roiled American life over the last three decades, and prefer more inclusive, less dogmatic but more pragmatic politics.The second, those from other world religions and immigrant faiths, are more — rather than less — convinced of the importance of religion in society. Minority religions are surging into the public square building new worship spaces, wearing distinctive dress and pressing for rights in public schools. As is often the case in American history, immigrants become more committed to God and the church upon arrival here as traditional faith provides avenues of comfort and security in a new world.
The American religious future will be made as Christians engage these emerging cultures in meaningful, life-giving ways. It would be possible to ignore humanists, atheists and the “spiritual-but-not-religious” and insult them as lazy, boring, individualistic or uncommitted; to call them a-moral. But what good would that do? Confirm the idea that Christians are narrow minded bigots, that’s what. And others might — as a person I recently encountered suggested — want to limit the constitutional protections of religious freedom to only Christians and Jews. And what would that accomplish? A new crusade? Of course, we could always hunker down and wait for our children to get married and have families and return to church. Not going to happen. If history tells us anything, it would be that these are not good choices. Act in these ways and it will guarantee that that people will have less patience for religion rather than more.
What if the path toward awakening is simple? Embracing faith as if we really mean it, not worrying about institutional power or rich congregations, living out the teachings of Moses and Jesus, sharing with others, seeking to be at peace with all, loving our neighbors as ourselves?
Sometimes we say, “whatever the future holds,” but perhaps we must believe, “the future is ours to make.” History cannot tell us what the future will be, but maybe it can surely empower us to act.