Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Gerson on Putnam on American Religion
I have not read any Harry Potter books, so I've never gotten to enjoy the midnight-bookstore-dress-up-as-Dumbledore scene, but I do get very excited for new Robert Putnam books, though I've never been able to inspire many followers to don bowling shoes and wait at Borders with me. Putnam's new book, "American Grace: How Religion is Reshaping Our Civic and Political Lives," sounds like a must-read for MoJ-types. Here's an excerpt from Michael Gerson's preview:
The politicization of religion by the religious right, argues Putnam, caused many young people in the 1990s to turn against religion itself, adopting the attitude: "If this is religion, I'm not interested." The social views of this younger cohort are not entirely predictable: Both the pro-life and the homosexual-rights movement have made gains. But Americans in their 20s are much more secular than the baby boomers were at the same stage of life. About 30 to 35 percent are religiously unaffiliated (designated "nones," as opposed to "nuns" -- I was initially confused). Putnam calls this "a stunning development." As many liberals suspected, the religious right was not good for religion.
The result of the shock and aftershocks is polarization. The general level of religiosity in America hasn't changed much over the years. But, as Putnam says, "more people are very religious and many are not at all." And these beliefs have become "correlated with partisan politics." "There are fewer liberals in the pews and fewer unchurched conservatives."
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2009/05/gerson-on-putnam-on-american-religion.html