The grim statistics indicate that in the US, there is something of a mass exodus of people abandoning Christianity, known as “nonverts.” Indeed, according to the Pew Research Center, Christians will be a minority of Americans by 2070 if current trends continue. This is initially shocking to Christian Americans like me, as we mechanically think of America as a Christian country. But, look at Australia. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, in 2021 43.9 percent of the population were Christians and no religion, 38.9 percent. There has been a steady decline in the number of people claiming to be Christians, falling from a high of 96 percent in 1911.
Thus, the trend of secularisation is widespread and deep seated. It is certainly one of the things the Left, inspired by the fierce atheism of communist Marx, has relentless pursued. But, unlike many issues we face, on this one I think that this needs to be left in God’s hand. Certainly, He is not going to see His Church destroyed. And at the end of the day, just looking around at out modern Sodom and Gomorrah: Genesis 19: 1-28, we can expect a Judgment.
“While the number of Americans who celebrate Christmas as a cultural holiday is going strong, there has been a shocking rise in the number of people ditching Christianity — what sociologists call “nonverts.”
Pew Research Center estimates that Christians will be a minority of Americans by 2070 if current trends continue.
And it likely will, with the largest percentage of those losing their religion being young adults who are about as old as that REM reference: people around 30 and under.
It’s a kind of “cultural whiplash” from religion to secularism that’s hit the United States much faster than it has other parts of the world, said theology and sociology professor Stephen Bullivant.
Bullivant, a practicing Catholic who teaches at St. Mary’s University in London and the University of Notre Dame in Sydney, spoke to Grid about why Americans are leaving Christianity in droves and the demographics that are seeing the (ahem) ungodliest declines. His new book, “Nonverts: The Making of Ex-Christian America,” came out in the U.S. on Dec. 1.
Young adults are leading the mass exodus
Bullivant made it clear that it’s important not to glom all young adult nonverts as having one big reason for leaving the church. “Each person has a complex story, and we need to recognize the personal journey,” he told Grid. That said, he added, there are larger trends we can examine.
For example, the largest demographic of nonverts, younger adults, will raise their children as “nones” — people from nonreligious families. And while a tiny percentage of nonverts return to religion, nones rarely embrace religion at any point in their lives.
Bullivant noted that it’s not shocking that young adults are the ones leaving at the highest rates. “When people do nonvert,” he said, “they tend to do in their early to mid-20s.”
And to those who dismiss the trend as just young people trying something different who will eventually come back to the church, that is not what the data shows. Not only have the percentages of adults under 30 claiming to have no religion increased dramatically over the past 50 years, other age groups saw rises as well, Bullivant said.”