That is the gist of this blog post from Greg Bishop. Follow the link to his post, which leads to a news article about how more people in the UK say they believe in ETs / aliens and “the supernatural” than God.
This isn’t news to anyone who follows the intersection of UFOs and religion. Way back when I started this blog, I began with Christopher Partridge’s book UFO Religions. Partridge also authored a book called The Re-enchantment Of The West that I reviewed for an online publication. As this book notes, a few years ago the religion of “Jedi” had a more significant following than mainline Christianity. That ought to tell you something. It isn’t any sort of intellectual battle that’s being waged that has led to this reversal of religious adherence (Jedis are fiction, you may recall). Rather, it’s about three things: (1) a distaste for the deadness inside the church, something that is the result of the church’s moral compromises; (2) the yearning for the supernatural that is characteristic of postmodernism, which movement itself is a reaction to the INABILITY of modernistic science to provide conclusive answers to the big “why” questions; and (3) an intellectual apathy within the church that refuses to creatively address how sacred Scripture dovetails nicely with the wondrous scientific advances that point to the design of our world, choosing instead old, dead, creedal formulations or tired, unworkable prooftexting of the Bible that shows anything but intellectual rigor.
One wonders that, if it’s about intellectual superiority, why figures very opposite to the UK are the norm in the United States. You wouldn’t wonder that if you had been with me at the conference last week. Among the 6000 attendees I doubt we had any Jedis. But scholarship has also failed. It’s amazing to me the number of believing scientists I have known (university professors in all the hard sciences) when juxtaposed with the number of lay people who have little or no theistic or Christian faith. Scholarship has failed to excite the laity, and those ministers who reach the laity.
And for Greg Bishop: If John Lennon would be smiling at this, it wouldn’t be because he’d reached some satisfying conclusion after careful thought and research. It would be because he’s either willingly among the intellectually bankrupt, or had been consigned to that place because of the failures of the church context in which he grew up, including his home life. I’m a friend of one of Lennon’s childhood friends (through the teen years), a scholar with whom I’ll be getting together here in the states in early December. I think I’ll ask him about this. My guess is that he’ll put John in the second category. Lastly, Greg, if given the choice, who’d be burning books today? Would the people who believe in intelligent design be burning books about Darwinism (for the record, I don’t plan to burn the one I just bought), or would it be the other way around? Intelligent design scientists are the ones that want both sides heard, not the other way around. So please don’t hold your breath waiting for a book burning (they’d be too apathetic in the UK anyway).
Michael,
The comment about Lennon was a loose joke, as was the post. I don’t seriously think that people would burn books over an informal and unimportant “survey” conducted by some company under contract to a movie studio.
I always thought that Lennon was commenting on the state of (at least UK) Christianity at the time. He in fact said so when he was forced to apologize for the original comment.
I suspect the failure of institutionalized Christianity is largely due to the impersonal rituals of institutionalization instead of personal relationship with Jehovah through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. Pastors seem more consumed by rituals of institutionalization, e.g. type of dress or building maintenance, than exiting the stained glass buildings and setting an example by living and working among the people. Furthermore, when a member of Jesus Christ’s body has a supernatural experience related to his personal relationship with Jesus Christ that is totally consistent with scripture, he is chastised for his experience as not being common and somehow suspect. Yes, spiritual experiences need to be in strict conformation with canon due to the nature of deceiving spirits, but if those experiences are in conformance, then stop chastising people for them. In order for Christianity to be effective again, the institutionalized church likely needs to disappear with its concomitant waste of misplaced energy and the body of believers needs to assemble and work directly among the people. Although, I hate to say it, maybe the institutionalized church in Western countries needs some persecution.
@Greg: understood!
@tpreitzel: agreed