The words you are searching are inside this book. To get more targeted content, please make full-text search by clicking here.
Discover the best professional documents and content resources in AnyFlip Document Base.
Search
Published by FLCOGOP, 2022-04-18 13:01:30

The Religious Life of Gen Z

The Religious Life of Gen Z

The Religious Life of Gen Z

By Mike Frost
-April 7, 2022

At the beginning of the 20th century, sociologist Max Weber prophesied that religion-
less modernity would become unbearable for secular society. He predicted the
emergence of what he called late modernity, a period in which people embraced a kind
of polytheism, hybridizing their spirituality by welding together different beliefs and
practices in an attempt to find enchantment in the midst of bland secularism.

He might have been right.

Deakin University recently published their Worldviews of Generation Z report, based on
research done with Australians aged 13-18.

Up until its release, most social commentators have tended to assume that young

people are largely apathetic when it comes to religion. But the Deakin researchers
found that some of this had to do with how we’ve been asking teens about religion.

Equipping pastors to equip leaders for life 1|Page

When confronted with traditional surveys that ask them to identify themselves as
Catholic Christian, Protestant Christian, Muslim, Hindu, etc, teens are nonplussed. The
Deakin team found that these fixed ideas of religious identity are no longer applicable to
young people.

Instead, Deakin used contemporary theories of religious diversity, and asked teens
about six different spirituality “types” — this worldly, indifferent, spiritual not religious,
seekers, nominally religious, religiously committed. Their results looked like this:

THIS …

Far from being disinterested, the study found “that young people negotiate their
worldview identities in complex, critical and caring ways that are far from ambivalent,
and that are characterised by hybridity and questioning.”

If you’re wondering what hybridity looks like, read this quote by international model,
Miranda Kerr, as she describes her religious outlook:

“I’m not Buddhist. I’m Christian. I pray every day. I meditate every day and I do yoga.
I’m not religious, I’m spiritual. And praying is something my grandmother taught me as

well. To pray and be grateful, have gratitude, is a big thing for me. I like to pray and I

like to meditate. Doing just three minutes of prayer and a minimum of five minutes
meditation twice a day sets the tone – like an arrow so that you’re hitting your target.
When I pray I always thank Mother Nature for all the beauty in the world; it’s about
having an attitude of gratitude. And then I pray to Christ to say, ‘Thank you for this day
and my family and my health,’ and now that I’m older I’ve added, ‘Please illuminate me.

Equipping pastors to equip leaders for life 2|Page

Please open my heart chakra. Open my aperture and uplift my consciousness so that I
can be the best version of myself’.”

To the specific findings of the Deakin University study, the Worldviews of Generation
Z report makes fascinating reading. They found:

Teens were generally very positive about different faith groups:

• 85% of teenagers had a positive attitude towards Christians;
• 80% had a positive view of Buddhists;
• 75% had a positive attitude to Hindus;
• 74% had a positive attitude to Muslims;
• 83% had a positive view of those who have no religion.

Teens affirm and were open to religious diversity in Australia and thought different faiths
should have religious freedom:

• 91 % thought that having people of many different faiths made Australia a
better place to live;

• 90 % thought that students should be allowed to wear religious clothes or
jewellery to school;

• 88% thought that all religious groups in Australia should be free to practise
their religion the way they want to.

Opinion was divided when it seemed that religion might impinge on them:

• 44% thought that religion caused more problems in society than it solved;
• 50% thought people with very strong religious beliefs were often too intolerant

of others;
• 33% thought religion should have no place in our parliament or official

ceremonies;
• 32% thought that local communities should be able to prevent the construction

of mosques or temples in their area if they didn’t want them.

Equipping pastors to equip leaders for life 3|Page

What can we say about the emerging face of religious belief in Australia? As the
researchers concluded, when it comes to religion, teens are complex, critical and
caring.

GEN Z IS COMPLEX

The religious outlook of teens in Australia is, well, complicated. Far from being apathetic
about it, teenagers are in fact hybridizing a kind of bespoke religious life without
necessarily any belief in God or involvement in traditional religious communities.

The report states, “For the most part, they don’t believe or belong in the same ways as
members of older generations, and the majority of them don’t see themselves as
belonging to a religious tradition or organisation.”

The researchers found a majority of teens (58%) never attend services of worship,
though this drift from the church doesn’t mean teens are becoming a generation of
atheists, or rejecting spirituality.

“Certainly, belief in God is declining among members of the younger generations, but a
lot still believe in a higher being or life force, or are just unsure.”

The study found certain spiritual ideas drawn from Asian religious traditions were very
popular among teens, with 50 per cent of teens believing in karma, while about a third
(29%) believe in reincarnation.

“Most of those teens don’t identify as Buddhists or Hindus, but their interest in those
beliefs is evidence of a changing spiritual landscape among teens,” said Andrew
Singleton, one of the authors of the report.

“The idea of karma has become a kind of semi-mystical shorthand for ‘what goes
around, comes around’ in this life.”

Some Australian teens are also open to other spiritual ideas, believing in ghosts (31%),
communicating with the dead (25%), astrology (20%) and UFOs (20%).

It all reminds me of that statement by the actor Sarah Michelle Gellar when she said, “I
consider myself a spiritual person. I believe in an idea of God, although it’s my own
personal ideal. I find most religions interesting, and I’ve been to every kind of

Equipping pastors to equip leaders for life 4|Page

denomination: Catholic, Christian, Jewish, Buddhist. I’ve taken bits from everything and
customized it.”

Andrew Singleton from Deakin University writes, “Teens live in a diverse, complicated
world, and not that many are willing to shut the door completely on non-material
possibilities. Just don’t expect them to be loyal to older ways of doing things.”

GEN Z IS CRITICAL

All that said, teens appear to be very critical of those with strong traditional religious
beliefs, with about half of them thinking they are too intolerant of others.

“There is an appreciable proportion who think religion causes more harm than good, are
against the construction of Mosques and temples, are concerned about intolerant
religious beliefs and think religion has no place in Parliament.”

The researchers also point out that young people’s suspicion toward traditional religions
might have been skewed somewhat, given their surveys were completed during
Australia’s marriage equality postal vote. The rancor around that issue might have
influenced their answers.

But teens today are also aware of the church’s involvement in clergy child sexual
assault scandals, and the Stolen Generations policies, as well as Muslim extremism in
incidents like 9-11 and Sydney’s Lindt cafe siege. Little wonder they think meditation,
yoga, and karma are good, while religious fundamentalism is bad.

GEN Z CARES

Social commentators have surmised that the brutalizing effects of secularism,
consumerism and capitalism would lead not only to a re-flowering of religious interest,
but also an era of religious competition and possibly war. It certainly looked like they
might have been partially right, given the rise of Al Qaeda, ISIS, and the reemergence
of neo-Nazism and Christian fundamentalism.

But Gen Z might be bucking the trend.

Equipping pastors to equip leaders for life 5|Page

Their concerns about the way strongly held belief leads to intolerance and aggression
shows how much they care about peaceful coexistence. As we saw earlier, teens have
an overwhelmingly positive attitude towards Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, and
Muslims. They just don’t want to be one.

Other studies show them to be deeply concerned about addressing climate change,
challenging systemic racism, and promoting social justice. In other words, they care
about creating a better world. And they want others to care too.

Some religious leaders have expressed deep concern about the hardening secularism
of Western culture. But the Worldview of Generation Z reveals a very different
challenge, one Lesslie Newbigin described this way:

“The result is not, as we once imagined, a secular society. It is a pagan society, and its
paganism, having been born out of the rejection of Christianity, is far more resistant to
the gospel than the pre-Christian paganism with which cross-cultural missions have
been familiar. Here, surely, is the most challenging missionary frontier of our time.”

The religious life of Gen Z will require a complete game change to church-as-usual
approaches to apologetics and evangelism.

Mike Frost

https://mikefrost.net
I’m a 20-year veteran of the
academy, but I still don’t call myself
an academic. On my immigration
forms I write “teacher” in the
occupation box. I’ve taught at Morling
College in Sydney that whole time and
am currently the head of the
missiology department there.

Equipping pastors to equip leaders for life 6|Page


Click to View FlipBook Version