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Is "NO RELIGION" THE LATEST
RELIGION? (USA), Oct. 18, 2003 http://www.registerguard.com By Jeff
Wright
Just call us 'ORENONE': 'No religion' is most common response
in church membership surveys
When Christopher James of Eugene feels
the need for introspection, he often straps on his backpack.
"When I
get out into nature, immediately I can feel my body chemistry change," he
says. "It's such a physical experience, it affects the rest
of me."
James, 28, sees the outdoors as a place to cultivate his
spirituality. But ask him about his religion and he'll tell you he has
none.
Religion Trends Cafeteria Religion
More about religion
trends
He has plenty of company, throughout the country and especially
here in Oregon. The number of Americans who claim no religious identity in
surveys, dubbed "nones" by experts, has roughly doubled in the past decade,
making them possibly the third-largest group in the nation, after Catholics
and Baptists.
They rank No. 1 in Oregon - one of only four states
where "no religion" was the most common answer in a religious identification
survey commissioned by City University of New York in 2001. The other states
were Washington, Idaho and Wyoming.
Other recent studies draw similar
conclusions, including a 2002 survey commissioned by the Glenmary Research
Center in Tennessee that identifies several cities in Southern Oregon and
Northern California - including Corvallis, Eugene, Medford and Redding - as
those where Americans are least likely to have a religious
affiliation.
Yet most of the 29 million Americans who pick no religion
say they believe in God and often pray or meditate - habits not that
different from the folks who fill the pews each Sunday.
James, who
works for the nonprofit Sustainable Forestry Project, fits the mold. While
asserting he's not religious, "I do believe in a higher power," he says. "For
me, it exists more in the order of the universe and
everyday life."
It's a mistake to assume Oregonians aren't religious
just because many of them avoid organized religion, says Mark Shibley, who
teaches sociology of religion at Southern Oregon University in Ashland. He's
also a contributor to a book due out next spring, "Religion in Public Life in
the Pacific Northwest: The `None' Zone."
"Religion is about
fundamental questions of meaning and purpose," Shibley says. "If dominant
institutions aren't providing that for individuals, they'll seek and explore
and find those things in other arenas."
Leading edge of trend
The
trend lines present intriguing questions: Are Oregonians "ahead of
the curve," leading the way as more Americans move away from
traditional denominations? And just where do people uncomfortable with
mainstream religion go for spiritual nourishment?
While Mormons in
Utah and other dominant regional faiths will persist for a long time, Shibley
says the trend of fewer people identifying with historical traditions is
likely to continue across the country - especially in places such as the
Northwest where one denomination has never dominated.
As for spiritual
alternatives, Shibley identifies three he says are predominant in the
Northwest:
. A "nature religion" embraced by people such as James who
find their spirituality amid snow-capped mountains and ocean surf.
. A
New Age spirituality manifested in everything from channeling to crystals to
astrology.
. An "anti-government milleniallism" movement that encompasses
survivalism and end-of-the-world scenarios.
Other experts, of course,
have other theories. Two University of California at Berkeley professors, for
example, contend that most people who say they have no religion are political
moderates and liberals who feel the "religious right" has co-opted organized
religion, and so want nothing to do with it.
So-called "nones" tend to
be politically active and care about such things as the environment and
corporate and personal ethics, says Patricia O'Connell Killen, who teaches
American religious history at Pacific Lutheran University in
Tacoma.
"For many people, the religious institutions out there aren't
effectively addressing what they see as truly significant issues - mainly
the environment and how we can and should be a human community," Killen
says.
But Killen, editor of the forthcoming book "None Zone," and Shibley
also caution that it's important not to overstate the trend.
Within
Christianity, Catholics and Mormons continue to see their flocks grow in
Oregon, and many conservative nondenominational churches are thriving - in
part, Shibley says, because of a "market savvy" approach that's pulled young
people away from more traditional evangelical groups.
Spirituality
Eugene-style
But in Eugene, at least, the circumstantial evidence for
nontraditional religious tastes isn't hard to find.
Wings, the
long-standing personal development training firm based in downtown Eugene,
serves about 1,000 new clients each year. When the question gets posed at
seminar retreats, "most everyone says they're `spiritual' but maybe only 15
percent say they're `religious,' " says Kristine King, the company's
president and co-founder.
A couple of blocks away, Windows Booksellers
specializes in Christian theology, church history and Bible studies. But
co-owner Jon Stock estimates that roughly 20 percent of his customers are
non-Christians or Christian skeptics. "We live in one of the most unchurched
areas of the country so there's this vacuum, but people still have those
impulses of spirituality," he says. "They may detest or reject traditional
forms, but they're still seeking."
At the secular Book Mark bookstore,
also downtown, owner Larry West devotes two side-by-side shelves to books on
"Religion" and "Spirituality," respectively. He says he sells roughly twice
as many from the "Spirituality" side.
But the most popular books
related to religion at his store are about Buddhism, which gets a larger
shelf to itself. "It does very, very well," West says. "A lot of people here
look at it more as a philosophy of life than as a religion."
For his
own part, West, 60, says he's an atheist - "definitely a `none' " - when it
comes to religion. "I think a lot of people feel the way I do, that living a
good life, ethical life, is what matters," he says. "It's nothing against
organized religions, they all have good ideas, they just seem to
get perverted too often."
Exploring beliefs
At Mother Kali's
near the University of Oregon, clerk Tiffany Haggmark says the feminist
bookstore caters to "a lot of people who don't feel organized religion leaves
room for further exploration of their values and beliefs."
Haggmark, 19,
has lived all her life in Eugene, a community she says doesn't worry much
about religious labels. "I'm asked `What's your astrological sign?' much more
than, `What's your religion?' " she says.
Haggmark's own reading tends
toward books on paganism and earth-centered spirituality, environmentalism
and sustainable living. She says she doesn't claim a religion but nourishes
her own sense of the divine.
"God to me is a cell or a tree or a flower,"
she says. "It's carbon-based."
James, the environmental worker, says
personal hardships - including a heart condition requiring five surgeries -
has helped define his sense of spirituality, as has the time he's devoted to
immigration rights, anti-war and other social causes. He says he feels called
to serve others, even though the motivation may not spring from traditional
religious sources.
"I've had my own struggles and I couldn't have gotten
through them without other people," he says. "I really believe that we're all
so very connected, and I wouldn't feel good about my own existence if I
didn't try to contribute in some way."York
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