American Study of Youth and Religion

Written by ry on April 5th, 2005

A couple of smart folks from the University of North Carolina have published a book called “Soul Searching: The Religious and Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers”

And there is a great little review by Scott Korb over at the revealer:

In religious terms, according to teenagers, God cares that each teenager is happy and that each teenager has high self-esteem. Morality has nothing to do with authority, mutual obligations, or sacrifice. In a sense, God wants little more for us than to be good, happy capitalists. Smith and Denton elaborate: “Therapeutic individualism’s ethos perfectly serves the needs and interests of U.S. mass-consumer capitalist economy by constituting people as self-fulfillment-oriented consumers subject to advertising’s influence on their subjective feelings.” And to be good, happy capitalists, we should be good, unless if being good prevents us from being happy.

Maybe that helps to explain this recent article by Jonathan Mahler in the New York Times magazine:

When the church was under construction, people would occasionally ask McFarland if it was going to have stained glass or a steeple. ”No!” he’d answer. ”We want the church to look like a mall. We want you to come in here and say, ‘Dude, where’s the cinema?’ “

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