Why is it so hip for a kid to be an atheist?

Religious Affiliation by Age-01

The most recent Pew Research data clearly shows the number of religiously unaffiliated Americans—referred to as “nones” since they claim no religion—is growing with each passing generation.

In his book, “God’s Not Dead: Evidence for God in an Age of Uncertainty”, Rice Brooks reveals that, “the term new atheists has been given to a group of skeptics who have sought to revive the arguments against God and repackage them for a new generation.” Not only are adults increasingly claiming no religion, but their children are following suit as well—and at younger ages.

Our youth have found their voices, and they aren’t afraid to use them. Young people do not hesitate to make their thoughts known on social media or put them on a t-shirt and wear it with pride. Our ABY data infers that the “atheism trending younger” tendency is not just a Western “thing”, but rather that it’s a global phenomenon.

·  35% of youth do not believe that God created the universe
·  16% of youth do not believe there is a God (29% are unsure)
·  35% of youth do not know what will happen after death
·  14% of youth do not practice any type of faith/religion

So what is turning off each successive generation to belief in God, church and religious tradition?

Some complain that organized religion is too suffocating, hypocritical, judgmental, or anti-gay. Others don’t want to enter into the complicated mess that is religion and politics. Allegations of fiscal infidelity and abuse within the church aren’t helping either.

But are any of these really the root cause of what has made it so attractive and trendy for each successive generation to move away from rich, religious traditions? What can we do to help the next generation return to faith?

What we can do to help the next generation return to faith Click to Tweet

Research shows that the most influential factor in a child’s life is family, followed closely by church and religious texts like the Bible. That throws responsibility to parents and church leaders—who might be stepping in as spiritual parents for kids who don’t have family who are believers.

A recent Fuller study analyzes why high school graduates seemed to walk away from their faith after leaving youth group. What they found were gaps where family and church were failing to intentionally talk to youth about next phases of life (like college, a career, new job) and inadequately preparing them to step into these next phases with their faith strapped on tight.

Going a step beyond what research tells us, I would say the most important thing we as parents, church leaders and influencers can do is to instill a sense of destiny into our children and youth. Parents, pastors and Christian leaders need to give each and every boy and girl in their circle of influence a vision of where they fit into God’s big story; how they are each a part of something bigger than themselves with a clear path and defined meaning for their lives.

Parents are the most influential people able to help their children wrestle through some of the basic objections to their faith that they are sure to be confronted with during their late teen/early adulthood years—especially after leaving high school. It is so important for our young people to have more than a subjective experience with their faith. They need to understand the reasons why they believe what they do and actively understand the hope that is in them. 1 Peter 3:15

It's important for young people to have more than a subjective experience with their faith Click to Tweet

To help drive the idea of spiritual destiny home and give kids the ability to dialogue with “family”, we develop programs that not only introduce children and teens to Bible stories, but to a Big Story. Some of our most important partnering is done through the local church where discipleship and mentoring programs ensure that spiritual parents are in place for every child.

The family voice is powerful. We need to be sure kids hear it.

The family voice is powerful. We need to be sure kids hear it. Click to Tweet

Additional reading:


Sources: Atheism Rises, Religiosity Declines in America
Agnosticism/Atheism on the rise among “Millennial” generation
Behold, the six types of atheists
God’s Not Dead: Evidence for God in an Age of Uncertainty
Nones on the rise
More Americans Have No Religious Preference: Key Finding from the 2012 General Social Survey
Three Spiritual Journeys of Millennials
What makes faith stick during college?
updated 5/14/15
updated 5/23/16

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Rob Hoskins is the president of OneHope. Since taking leadership of OneHope in 2004, he has continued to advance the vision of God’s Word. Every Child. by partnering with local churches to help reach more than 2 BILLION children and youth worldwide with a contextualized presentation of God’s Word.

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