Posted on 03/23/2018 8:02:05 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
A major analysis on the religious beliefs of young people across Europe has found that the proportion of those who report having no faith continues to rise, with some nations, such as the Czech Republic, having over 90 percent of young people who classify as "nones."
Academics from St Mary's University, Twickenham and the Institut Catholique de Paris released their report Wednesday that studies the levels of religious affiliation among 1629 year-olds across 22 European countries.
Among the key findings, it noted that nones make up 91 percent of young people in the Czech Republic, the least religious country on the list. Second came Estonia at 80 percent, followed by Sweden at 75 percent.
The Netherlands, U.K., Hungary, Belgium, France, Denmark, and Finland rounded up the top 10 when it comes to non-belief.
The data, which is intended to be used for the upcoming Synod of Bishops in Rome in October 2018, was taken from the major European Social Survey conducted between 20142016.
On the other side of the scale, only a handful of countries could say that more than half of their young adults identify as Christians.
Poland led the way in that regard, with 83 percent identifying as Christian, followed by Lithuania at 74 percent, Ireland and Slovenia both at 59 percent, Portugal at 57 percent, and Austria at 52 percent.
Analysis on attendance of religious services and frequency of prayer mostly showed similar results, with Poland, Portugal and Ireland having the most young adults observing religious practices, while the Czech Republic, Netherlands, Sweden being among those with the least.
Israel was also included in the study, with as much as 98 percent of its young adult population belonging to the Jewish faith.
Stephen Bullivant, professor of theology and the sociology of religion at St. Mary's University, who authored the study, said that differences among young people and their beliefs are "genuinely remarkable."
Bullivant, who also directs the Benedict XVI Center for Religion and Society, added in a press release: "For example, Ireland's young adults are contrary to recent reports still remarkably religious, at least by the standards of other highly developed European nations. Meanwhile, countries that had, until quite recently, traditionally strong religious cultures Lithuania, Belgium, Netherlands, Austria look to be in serious trouble, in terms of the coming generations."
The U.K. and France were two largely non-religious nations that were closely studied. Statistics showed that 80 percent of young people who now have no religion in both countries were brought up in non-religious households, suggesting a strong link between upbringing and religious identification.
Previous analysis from the Benedict XVI Center published in May 2017 found that for the first time ever, the U.K.'s nonreligious population, including adults, has surpassed its Christian population.
It noted that for every 26 believers who abandon the faith, only one atheist or agnostic decides to become a Christian.
The latest report explains that the purpose of the research is to present the Catholic Church with statistics behind the challenges it faces.
Quoting French theologian and cardinal Yves Congar, it stated, "The Church learns from contact with facts. ... Truth remains unaltered, but it is grasped in anew and undoubtedly more adequate way when men and the world are known as they are."
They have a religion alright. Just not one of the usual ones.
Godless nations fall.
Let's hear it for Poland!
The spirit of King John Sobieski lives!
At least a tiny bit of good news is always welcome.
If you don’t stand for something
You will fall to anything
I have a hard time believing this.
Exactly whom did they ask?
Religions can be as godless as the non-religious, as the Church is demonstrating so capably.
Yes, hedonism.
Even Poland is beginning to concern me a bit. They had a big Pro-Abortion march there today.
The data, which is intended to be used for the upcoming Synod of Bishops in Rome in October 2018...
The question is will the Church try to use this data to further liberalize.
What part of it do you not believe?
Given Czech history over the two centuries it seems entirely plausible. Those people have been trampled under foot since before the Hapsberg empire. Chamberlain didn’t exactly do them any favors either.
It is not clear how this survey was conducted. Apparently in Germany, When you pay your taxes, you can vote Catholic, Evangelical or none. If Catholic, the part of your taxes collected for church goes to the Catholics, if Evangelical, it goes to the Evangelicals. If you don’t want to support either, you vote none and any money you give to your church comes out of your pocket. It is not stated if other countries use similar approaches or if the nones are really none or people who don’t want their tax money supporting other churches.
They find nothing in their own culture worth passing on to future generations--they can find no reason even to have future generations--but Islam offers a solution to all this nihilism, and they are eager to be embraced by it, even though they would probably deny it, just as they are lost in denial about everything of value.
I've had that same thought.
It makes sense. Each of us has a shadow, part of the subconscious mind, in which we store that which we deny. In the shadow of each of us lurks the antithesis of everything that we hold in esteem. The energy that we devote to what we esteem is directly proportional to the energy required to keep its antithesis from becoming manifest.
Wise words from a wise man. The best way not to become evil is to be ruthlessly honest with yourself and understand that each of us has a potential to become evil and resolve never to let evil become manifest in you.
Mother Teresa said that she decided to go to Calcutta when she looked inside herself and found a Hitler lurking there.
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