CHURCH/STATE Atheist
awakening: the appeal of unbelief
In a nation in
which upward of nine in 10 people regularly tell pollsters they believe in God
or a divine power, unbelief is making an unexpectedly strong showing. While
there are varying indications about whether or by how much the number of Americans
who claim no belief is growing, the cultural profile of atheists — or secularists,
humanists, rationalists, freethinkers or any of the labels that come under the
heading of “nontheism” — is looming larger than ever.
In bestselling
books, headline-making court cases, and even in an Off Broadway play, atheists
are becoming more vocal and visible, experts say, moreso than any time since
1963, when the late atheist leader Madalyn Murray O’Hair won a landmark Supreme
Court ruling barring prayer from the public schools.
Some atheists have
adopted a new branding strategy by joining the "Brights,"
a group that promotes a naturalistic worldview, in an effort to lighten their
image. And atheist groups in 2001 founded a holiday in late December — HumanLight
Day — to rival the dominant festivals of light in Christmas and Hanukkah.
They have also begun observing a “National
Day of Reason” on the first Thursday in May to counter the long-standing
national observance of a National Day of Prayer.
This edition of
ReligionLink explores the unusual phenomenon of unbelief in what has been called
a “religion-mad” country.
Why it matters
Belief in God has
been seen as an integral part of the American DNA, perhaps more so today than
ever before. So if atheism and related forms of unbelief are multiplying, that
represents a landmark step in the evolution of America’s religious history.
Whatever the number of unbelievers, experts say that the increasing visibility
and assertiveness of atheists in the public square and the judicial arena provide
this group a potential for influence out of proportion to their actual numbers.
Legal challenges to the use of the phrase “under God” in the Pledge of Allegiance
or the motto “In God We Trust” on U.S. currency are two well-known examples.
Atheists’ growing activism is also a red flag to religious conservatives, and
to many believers across the spectrum, who often see in this secularist trend
a new reason to mobilize. That counterreaction gives the emergence of public
atheism that much more prominence.
What's new
In May 2007,
the popular writer and polemicist Christopher Hitchens will publish God Is
Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, a volume that is expected to
join Sam Harris’ The End of Faith: Religion, Terror and the Future of Reason
and Richard Dawkins’ The God Delusion as widely cited arguments against
religion and religious faith. In July 2007 InterVarsity Press will publish The
Dawkins Delusion? Atheist Fundamentalism and the Denial of the Divine by
Oxford theologian and former atheist-turned-evangelical-Christian Alister McGrath
and his wife, Joanna Collicutt McGrath. Thursday, May 3, marked the National
Day of Reason, an observance started by nonbelievers to counter the well-established
National Day of Prayer, in which thousands of Americans gather in public spaces
to pray. The organizations Web site features list
of groups and individuals that support the observance, as well as a list
of events in each state. This year, many atheist groups organized blood
drives to highlight what they say is a rational response to illness rather than
prayer, which they say has been proven to be ineffective. The New York-based
Center for Atheism
led the effort.
Contact Jane Everhart, 212-879-2687, Jane9ev@aol.com. By June, the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule in Hein v.
Freedom From Religion Foundation, a prominent secularist group that is challenging
the government’s faith-based funding programs. The Roundtable on Religion &
Social Welfare Policy has a primer
on the case that was published shortly before the Feb. 28, 2007, oral arguments.
Hein v. FFRF is the latest in a series of major legal challenges by secularist
groups. In March 2007, California Rep. Pete Stark, an 18-term Democrat, became
the first congressman in memory to publicly identify himself as an atheist.
A March
14, 2007, San Francisco Chronicle story describes Stark’s declaration,
which came in response to a survey he answered for the Secular Coalition for
America. The Secular Coalition
for America was founded in 2005 as the “only organization in the nation
whose primary purpose is lobbying Congress on behalf of atheists, humanists,
freethinkers, and other nontheistic Americans.” The SCA is endorsed and supported
by eight secularist groups.
Organizations
ATHEIST/SECULARIST/HUMANIST
ORGANIZATIONS Nontheists
tend to be highly individualistic, and perhaps because of their mistrust of
institutional religion, they have rarely coalesced into organized movements.
The secularist movement was especially fractured during the heyday of Madalyn
Murray O’Hair, who founded American
Atheists in the 1960s and led it until her death in 1995. American Atheists
was one of the most prominent atheist groups, but O’Hair’s management alienated
many supporters. Some of them broke off to found other groups. Since O’Hair’s
death, American Atheists has recovered its footing. But there are many other
similar organizations today. The Freedom
From Religion Foundation, based in Madison, Wis., has become one of the
leading activist groups on the nontheist scene. The Council
for Secular Humanism remains one of the oldest and most established free-thought
groups.
Below is a list
of some of the prominent groups, most of which have state and local chapters. American Atheists
is based in New Jersey and has chapters
and affiliated
organizations around the country. The Council
for Secular Humanism is considered one of the leading free-thought groups.
Based in Amherst, N.Y., and headed by its founder, Paul Kurtz, the CSH is an
umbrella for a range of other organizations. They include the Committee
for Skeptical Inquiry, which includes The Skeptical Inquirer magazine,
and a publishing house, Prometheus books. “Camp Inquiry” is a summer camp sponsored
by the Center for
Inquiry and the Commission
for Scientific Medicine and Mental Health, which is “devoted to the scientific
examination of unproven alternative medicine and mental health therapies.” The
Center for Inquiry has a list of affiliated
programs, which are active in most states. The Secular
Islam Summit is a relatively new Web-based group that aims to promote an
“Islamic Enlightenment.” The Secular Coalition
for America was founded in 2005 as the “only organization in the nation
whose primary purpose is lobbying Congress on behalf of atheists, humanists,
freethinkers, and other nontheistic Americans.” The SCA is endorsed and supported
by eight
secularist groups. Those groups are:
The American
Humanist Association is based in Washington and includes state
chapters.
The Atheist
Alliance International is based in California and has a list
of affiliates.
The Freedom
From Religion Foundation is based in Madison, Wis., and has become one
of the leading activist groups on the nontheist scene. The FFRF publishes
Freethought Today
magazine.
The Institute
for Humanist Studies is based in Albany, N.Y., and aims to promote “humanism,
a nonreligious philosophy based on reason and compassion. IHS advances human
rights, secular ethics and the separation of religion and government through
advocacy, innovation and collaboration.”
The Military
Association of Atheists and Freethinkers is a support organization for
nontheists in the armed forces.
The Secular
Student Alliance is based in Minneapolis and describes itself as “an
umbrella organization uniting atheist, agnostic, humanist, rationalist,
skeptic, and freethought students and groups on high school and campuses
across the world.” The SSA has a list
of affiliates around the country and the world.
The Secular
Web is operated by Internet Infidels Inc. and is dedicated to “defending
and promoting a naturalistic worldview on the Internet.” It is based in
Colorado Springs, Colo.
The Society for Humanistic
Judaism says it “offers a nontheistic alternative in contemporary Jewish
life.” It was organized in Detroit in 1969 and has since added chapters
and affiliated congregations around the United States.
National
sources
Click
the map for interview sources
in your state and region
Victor
J. Stenger is a professor emeritus of physics and astronomy at the University
of Hawaii and an adjunct professor of philosophy at the University of Colorado.
He is the author of God, the Failed Hypothesis: How Science Shows That God
Does Not Exist, published in January 2007. Contact vstenger@mindspring.com. Dr. Francis
Collins is director of the National Human Genome Research Institute of the
National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. Collins is a scientist who believes
in God. He has explained his views in many press interviews and in his book,
The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief. Contact
301-496-0844, fc23a@nih.gov. Daniel
C. Dennett is a professor of philosophy and director of the Center for Cognitive
Studies at Tufts University in Medford, Mass. He is the author of Breaking
the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon. A summary of his arguments
can be found in this Jan. 20, 2006, essay, “Common-Sense
Religion,” in TheChronicle of Higher Education. Contact 617-627-3297,
ddennett@tufts.edu. The Rev. Edward T. Oakes is a Jesuit priest who teaches theology
at the University of St. Mary of the Lake in Mundelein, Ill. Oakes wrote a Jan.
22, 2007, essay, “Reason
and Pop Atheism,” posted on the blog of the conservative religious journal
First Things. Contact 847-566-6401. Susan
Jacoby is the New York-based author of Freethinkers: A History of American
Secularism. Contact through her literary agent, Georges Borchardt Inc.,
at 212-753-5785, info@susanjacoby.com. William Lane Craig is a research professor in philosophy at Biola
University in La Mirada, Calif. He lives in Atlanta, Ga. Craig wrote a chapter,
“Theistic Critiques of Atheism,” for the Cambridge Companion to Atheism.
Contact williamlanecraig@gmail.com
or through his personal
Web site. David
Hay is a scholar at the department of divinity and religious studies at
King’s College, University of Aberdeen, in Scotland. He is the author of Something
There: The Biology of the Human Spirit, released in March 2007. He argues
that spiritual experience is on the increase and that Enlightenment skepticism
of religion is harmful. Contact j.d.hay@abdn.ac.uk. Alister McGrath is a former atheist and now an evangelical Christian
and a theology professor at the University of Oxford’s Harris Manchester College.
He is a prolific writer and public apologist for Christianity and is author
of several books, including The Twilight of Atheism: The Rise and Fall of
Disbelief in the Modern World and the forthcoming The Dawkins Delusion?
Atheist Fundamentalism and the Denial of the Divine, with Joanna Collicutt
McGrath. Contact alister.mcgrath@hmc.ox.ac.uk. Erik J. Wielenberg is an associate professor of philosophy at DePauw
University in Greencastle, Ind. He is the author of Value and Virtue in a
Godless Universe, which argues that life has meaning and a moral structure
even if God does not exist. Contact 765-658-6275, ewielenberg@depauw.edu. Julian
Baggini is a British philosopher, writer and blogger who is the author of
Atheism: A Very Short Introduction. He is also the founder of the magazine
and Web site The Philosophers’ Magazine.http://www.philosophersnet.com/ Contact
julian@julianbaggini.com. James A. Beverleyis a theologian and professor of Christian
thought and ethics at Tyndale University College and Seminary in Toronto. He
is the author of The God Solution: A Reply to the God Delusion, due out
in July 2007. Contact jbeverley@tyndale.ca. Robert Altemeyer is an associate professor of psychology at the University
of Manitoba. He is the co-author of Atheists: A Groundbreaking Study of America’s
Nonbelievers. Contact 204-474-9276, altemey@cc.umanitoba.ca. Penny Edgell is an associate professor in sociology at the University
of Minnesota and lead author of the 2006
study on the social acceptance of atheists in America. Contact 612-624-9828,
edgell@umn.edu. Alvin Plantinga is John A. O’Brien Professor of Philosophy at the
University of Notre Dame. He is the author of “The
Dawkins Confusion: Naturalism ad absurdum,” a review of Richard Dawkins’
The God Delusion in the March/April 2007 issue of Books & Culture.
Contact 574-31-6254, plantinga.1@nd.edu. Joan
Konner is a professor emerita and dean emerita of the Columbia Graduate School
of Journalism in New York City, and is author of The Atheist's Bible: An
Illustrious Collection of Irreverent Thoughts, which was published in June
2007. Contact jk25@columbia.edu.
Background
Atheism generally
means a belief that there is no God or gods. But the term is notoriously difficult
to define. Scholars say that the term in its most familiar current usage originated
in the Enlightenment period in the late 18th century, when rationalists first
began to identify themselves as having no belief in the divine or supernatural.
The Founding Fathers of the United States were imbued with some of that worldview,
and many of them professed no belief or held to a delimited role for God, such
as that expressed by deism.
But scholars say
that over time the country increasingly harked back to its Pilgrim traditions
to revive a more overtly religious — and Christian — national character. Freethinkers
such as Robert Ingersoll (d. 1899) in the 19th century and author Ayn Rand (d.
1982) and Madalyn Murray O’Hair (d. 1995) in the 20th century were prominent
nonbelievers who reacted against that trend. While such secularists often had
devoted followings, they remained profoundly countercultural figures.
Whether the prominence
of today’s nontheism is anything more than a periodic vogue for unbelief is
a matter of speculation. Many believe that the rise of religious conservatism,
the political failures of President Bush and renewed debates over creationism
and evolution have helped raise the profile of atheists in a way that it would
not have been otherwise. The atheist movement also has been given a boost by
the global focus on religiously motivated violence, which has sparked a debate
about whether religion is inherently harmful. Breakthroughs in neuroscience,
genetics and evolutionary biology have also sparked arguments that religious
belief can be explained through science.
It is important
to note that atheism or secularism of any stripe is not the same as secularization,
a societal trend that is not necessarily associated with an anti-religious agenda
or belief.
Wikipedia’s online
article on
the history of atheism is a good overview. As with any open-source material,
the content should be double-checked.
POLLS It is
widely debated how many Americans could be classified under the category of
unbelievers. Part of the problem has to do with defining the category. Some
argue that only those who affirm that there is no God or supernatural phenomenon
can be classified as true atheists. Others say the category should embrace a
“soft” atheism, or forms of agnosticism, or simply indifference to religion.
There are others, including religious believers, who join forces with nonbelievers
in advocating for an absolute separation of church and state.
As a result of
these uncertainties, the number of atheists or nontheists in the United States
can range anywhere from 1 percent of the country to 10 percent or higher. The
figure has been bolstered in recent decades by a number of Americans who dissociate
themselves from organized religion.
Here are a number
of surveys on the issue of unbelief and religious intensity:
The 2001
American Religious Identification Survey, which surveyed 50,000 people,
put the number of Americans affiliated with “no religion” at 29.4 million, a
sharp rise from the 1990 survey that had the figure of so-called “nones” at
14.3 million. The survey, which was conducted by the Graduate Center of the
City University of New York, estimated that 1.9 million identified themselves
as atheist or agnostic.
A March
2007 Newsweek poll shows that 91 percent of Americans voice a belief
in God. That figure reflects a fairly constant level of belief, as indicated
by this February
2003 Harris Poll showing that nine in 10 Americans believe in God.
A 2006 survey
by researchers at the University of Minnesota found that atheists are the least
accepted social group in the United States. The researchers found that Americans
rate atheists below Muslims, recent immigrants and homosexuals, among others,
in “sharing their vision of American society.” The researchers say atheists
account for about 3 percent of the population. The survey was published in the
April
2006 issue of the American Sociological Review. Details are
available in an online news
release.
A January
2007 Gallup Poll (subscription required) shows that 32 percent of Americans
would like organized religion to have less influence, 27 percent would like
it to have more, and 39 percent say that the current amount of influence is
just right.
A February
2007 survey by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found
that nearly four in 10 Americans say they would be more likely to vote for a
candidate who is “Christian,” the second most positive trait tested. Only the
trait of “military service” ranked higher, at 48 percent. Moreover, 63 percent
say they would be less inclined to support a presidential candidate who “does
not believe in God,” which the results indicated was the most negative trait
tested. Some 46 percent say that they would be less likely to vote for a “Muslim”
and 30 percent say they would be less likely to vote for a “Mormon” candidate.
A February
2007 USA Today/Gallup Poll showed that 53 percent of Americans would
be reluctant to vote for an atheist candidate for president. That was the highest
negative figure in the survey, exceeding the rank for a homosexual or Mormon
candidate.
An August
2006 Pew survey shows how divided Americans are about whether there is too
much or too little religious influence in American politics and society.
BOOKS Books
arguing for and against atheism:
God Is
Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything by Christopher Hitchens (May
2007)
Something
There: The Biology of the Human Spiritby David Hay (March 2007)
The New
Encyclopedia of Unbelief, edited by Tom Flynn (April 2007)
God, the
Failed Hypothesis: How Science Shows that God Does Not Exist by Victor J.
Stenger (January 2007)
The Creation:
An Appeal to Save Life on Earth is a series of letters to an unnamed Southern
Baptist minister from Edward O. Wilson, a Pulitzer Prize–winning entomologist,
pleading for secular humanists like himself and religious believers to work
together to save the environment.
Letter
to a Christian Nation and The End of Faith: Religion, Terror and the
Future of Reason, both by Sam Harris
The God
Delusion by Richard Dawkins
The God
Solution: A Reply to the God Delusion by James A. Beverley (July 2007)
Breaking
the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by Daniel C. Dennett
Freethinkers:
A History of American Secularism by Susan Jacoby
Atheists:
A Groundbreaking Study of America’s Nonbelievers by Bruce E. Hunsberger
(now deceased) and Robert Altemeyer
The Twilight
of Atheism: The Rise and Fall of Disbelief in the Modern World by Alister
McGrath
The Dawkins
Delusion? Atheist Fundamentalism and the Denial of the Divine (July 2007),
by McGrath with his wife, Joanna Collicutt McGrath
ARTICLES News stories about atheism: Read a June
17, 2007 Philadelphia Inquirer review of Joan Konners book,
The Atheist's Bible: An Illustrious Collection of Irreverent Thoughts. Read the April 20, 2007, essay “The
DNA of Religious Faith” in The Chronicle of Higher Education. Author
David P. Barash examines the scientific claims by the neo-atheists that they
can explain the religious impulse. Read “The
Dawkins Confusion: Naturalism ad absurdum,” a review of Dawkins’
The God Delusion in the March/April 2007 Books & Culture, by Alvin
Plantinga. Read an April 20, 2007, Commonweal essay, “The
Dawkins Delusion: Britain’s Crusading Atheist.” Read a March 15, 2007, Los Angeles Times op-ed by Sam Harris
titled “God’s
Dupes.” Read a Feb
22, 2007, Associated Press profile (posted at the San Diego Union Tribune)
of Annie Laurie Gaylor, head of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which
is taking the lead in challenging government policies on religious issues. Read a Jan.
31, 2007, entry on the blog of The Christian Century by executive
editor David Heim about the sharp critiques the new atheists have been receiving
in the secular press. Read “The
New Intolerance,” a Christianity Today editorial from Jan. 25, 2007.
The editorial notes how critical mainstream media reviews have been of many
recent books promoting atheism. Read a Jan. 22, 2007, essay, “Reason
and Pop Atheism,” posted on the blog of the conservative religious journal
First Things by a Jesuit priest, the Rev. Edward T. Oakes. Read a Jan. 11, 2007, essay, “A
Mission to Convert,” by H. Allen Orr in The New York Review of Books
critiquing the latest round of books on atheism. Contact 585-275-3838, aorr@mail.rochester.edu. Read a Jan. 4, 2007, Christian Science Monitor story, “Atheists
challenge the religious right,” on the growing political efforts of secularists. See “The
New Atheists,” a Religion & Ethics Newsweekly segment from Jan. 5,
2007. Time magazine posted an excerpt
from Walter Isaacson’s new biography of Albert Einstein, Einstein: His Life
and Universe (April 2007), which deals with Einstein’s views on religion. Read a Beliefnet.com “blogalogue”
between the atheist author and activist Sam Harris and Andrew Sullivan, the
political conservative and Catholic convert, who defends the idea of religious
belief. Read a January 2005 Religion News Service story, “Nonbelievers
Organize in Fear of Bush White House and Republican Congress,” posted at
Beliefnet.com.