I found this on AI when I googled “why are people losing faith in God?” “People leave belief in God due to factors like intellectual doubts, disillusionment with religious institutions’ values or actions (such as hypocrisy or scandals), negative experiences with religious trauma, evolving personal values that conflict with religious teachings, influence from a more secularizing society, and changing family structures that don’t reinforce religious beliefs. The decision is often a complex, personal journey driven by a combination of these societal, institutional, and individual factors.”
Very well stated. Look at each of those reasons given for why people lose faith in God. Surveys say that only 5% of people in the U.S. are atheists, but many more are agnostics (who don’t believe there is enough evidence to decide if there is a God or not) or skeptics (who doubt that there is a God b/c that defies science in their opinion).
So then I googled, “why are people leaving churches”? and this is what I got. “People are leaving the Churches of Christ, as well as other religious groups, due to various factors including disagreement with legalistic practices (like their stance on instrumental music), lack of community and connection, perceived irrelevance to modern society, disillusionment with leadership or institutional hypocrisy, and personal experiences of church hurt or abuse. Other reasons are broader, such as a general trend of secularization and the rise of individual spirituality, where people prefer to find meaning online or outside of traditional religious structures.” Again, a very accurate and complete list of reasons. I struggle greatly with institutional Christianity, the “big business churches” that spend 80% of their money collections on their buildings, staff, an on themselves. I am a house church advocate with no budgets, buildings, or paid preachers and staff (which is the way it was in the first church in Acts). Justin Martyr, 2nd century apologist, said that the only collections taken up were to help the poor, widows, orphans, or stuggling families in their number. I can certainly relate to those who leave their church b/c it is going LGBQT like with the Methodist church or b/c of some scandal of their pastor having an affair with some of his members. All the reasons listed about contribute to the fact that 30% of those surveys check “none” for their religous affiliation. Only 5% of those 30% are atheists and the rest are just disallusioned with institutional Christianity and have “quit church”. Maybe the church has let them down. Maybe if the churches were more into spending their money collected into drilling wells, helping the poor and oppressed, and printing Bibles to share the gospel all over the world, especially to unevangelized nations and peoples. Maybe if the churches were more into just connecting as a family rather than focusing on bands and preachers which draws a lot of people to megachurches (many of whom admittedly do a good job with small groups, community service, and children’s ministries). So the “nones” are no longer going to church to at least have Bible teaching and Christian fellowship. Many of them find their own spirituality in some way, even basic Christian faith, but often they do not teach their children the faith. It is easy for them to just become worldly minded, lacking the spiriutal disciplines of Bible study, prayer, fellowship, etc. Sunday is just another day to go the lake or watch football. Nothing wrong with that unless we are forsaking Christian fellowship.
So, are you a “none”? How solid is your faith in God and in Jesus as the Son of God, our savior, raised from the dead? If your faith getting stronger or weaker? Have you left your church? Is there some other way that you can join with other Christians in a house church or small group? Are you grounding your children in the faith at home with family Bible studies? Do you constantly talk to them about the existence of God and the design in the universe and in nature? Do you talk about God in the home as if He is real?
Something to think about.
