This heightened public profile may be contributing to the shrinking numbers of religious believers. Churches in the US are losing up to 1 million members every year. In Europe, secularization has advanced even further. The number of non-religious people, those who do not believe in God or any higher power, has reached approximately 40 percent in France and about 27 percent in Germany.
Went to mass everyday when I was a kid, every Sunday as a young adult but by age 35...decided that I no longer needed the Mass itself...but I did NEED a lot more private time with God. I truly think I'm closer to God now.
Sorry...don't believe in those 40 percent number.
How novel. How new. How unexpected. [/s]
Non-believers in God do not know Him. They may know about God in small ways, but they do not rest their salvation upon Him. They do not trust in His sovereignty. The Scriptures say their nature suppresses the knowledge of God.
They do not know, from their hearts, love from God or that the greatest act of Love was by the Lord Jesus Christ on behalf of folks like them.
No, der Speigel is wrong when they say non-believers know more about God than believers. It is illogical.
Also, to say that non-believers are more ethical when they do not believe the 10 commandments?
What rubbish!
Just the other day, a study came out with the opposite conclusion... that one was actually researched and sourced rather than hopeful opinion. Let's see... who is more educated... Hitchens or Aquinas?... Michael Moore or St Augustine?
After all, progressives are SOOOOOO much smarter than the rest of us. Smart and ethical. Like the London rioters.
1 Corinthians 1:18 - For the word of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.
It is easy for secularists to be more “moral” given they have none. Christians have a much higher standard to meet.
Second, I don’t trust a humanist academic to produce any analysis on Christians and there is no lumping Amercia to Europe in this kind of study because the people of America and Europe are hugely different in culture. We have religious freedom and are not totally dominated by communists. Not so for Europe.
The Marxists did this in the sixties and many boomers and church leaders turned away from their faith to be cool. It did not last. Boomers returned to their faith and one another. I hope Christians don’t get lost during this latest effort. Socialists have created a huge amount of chaos in the churches today like they did in the sixties.
Secularists have their own gods such as liberalism and environmentalism, cheap morality plays that appeal to their need to feel superior to others.
No. It makes them selectively ethical and subjectively ethical. It causes them to pick a handful of areas--almost always areas that are the most open to public view--to focus their "righteousness" on so that they can claim moral superiority.
Just to pick on the article's own examples: "On average, they are more commonly opposed to the death penalty, war and discrimination. And they also have fewer objections to foreigners, homosexuals, oral sex and hashish."
Okay, so who the heck determined that any of this is a sign of higher ethics? (Especially fewer objections to hashish. Seriously, folks.) Discrimination, sure, but I've also found that quite a few secularists are incredibly bigoted against real Christians. I can't think of too many of us who are for "war" in any kind of general sense, though we may support specific wars as necessary. (How many of those "opposed to war" wish we had never entered WWII, for example?)
But sorry, I don't buy the idea that having fewer objections to homosexuality and drug use is somehow more ethical. Is it ethical to trap people in an addiction by telling them that there's nothing wrong with it or, worse yet, that they were simply born that way and they shouldn't even try to change? I don't think so.
Shalom
Gotta love the stupid studies that take what liberals believe to be more moral and then decide that liberals are more moral because they believe it.
1. Against the death penalty but probably pro-abortion.
2. Against discrimination but probably pro-affirmative action.
3. Fewer objections to hashish makes a person moral? What?
And, of course, they conclude that secular societies around the world are more moral that religious ones. Really ? Ask some of the people that live in China , North Korea, the old Soviet Union , etc. Oh, that's right you can't because their governments murdered them.
Knowing “about God” and knowing God are two completely separable statuses. And frankly, as a believer, I maintain that anyone who truly knows about God will come to know God eventually.
Colonel, USAFR
Sound like another huge load of BS from the Godless blowing their own horns.
The ONLY ethic that makes any logical sense for an atheist is Dawinian survival of the fittest. Everything else is illogical for someone who only considers themself to be a glorified animal.
Religious = Effort to be moral.
Anti-religious = Effort to be anti-moral.
Non-religious = No effort, but amoral in practice.
Good examples of these three things are first religious people who either try to follow their accepted code of ethics; as well as those who fail in this pursuit, in their opinion, but are aware of their failings and either seek to correct them or are at least bothered by their failings.
Anti-religious people are those often intensely hate religion, to the point of going out of their way to break its rules and be offensive to those who obeys those rules. Often this comes in the form of trying to be oppressive and destructive to that religion and its followers.
(From my own experience were the almost comic “jack Mormons”, who because Mormons refrain from smoking, drinking and caffeinated products, chain smoke, and consume too much liquor and coffee.)
Non-religious people (if they are not psychopaths, which of course could affect any of the groups), still have to develop *some* code of ethics for their behavior. For this, they cherry pick ethical situations for what they consider reasonable behavior. But this makes them very susceptible to ethical flights of fancy, including shallow “bumper sticker ethics”, mob behavior, knee jerk emotional investment, and prejudice.
Their default is not doing anything in either what they support ethically, or what they figure violates their ethics. They are beloved by psychologists as experimental subjects, precisely because they will choose the path of least effort.