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Wednesday, September 06, 2017
'Moralistic Therapeutic Deism.
(Photo: Reuters/Jay Paul)Jannine Faulkner sings during a
worship service before U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie
Sanders, I-Vt., delivers an address to Liberty University students at the school
in Lynchburg, Virginia, September 14, 2015.
"Studies are continuing to confirm that vast swaths of church-going kids
know very little about their Christian faith,"Ed
Vitagliano, AFA's executive vice
president, said on the organization's website on Monday.
"Instead, American Christianity has devolved into what two sociologists
called 'moralistic therapeutic deism.'"
Vitagliano pointed to the work of Christian Smith and Melinda Lundquist
Denton, two sociologists who in 2005 were working at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, and released a book titledSoul Searching: The Religious and
Spiritual Lives of American Teenagers.
Vitagliano described the book — which is said to be among the most
detailed studies on teenagers and religion ever undertaken — as a "bombshell" on
the evangelical community at the time, as it discovered that youth were failing
to grasp some core Christian concepts.
Vitagliano compiled a list based on the study of the top three misleading
beliefs that Christian youths hold today.
The first belief was described as "Moralistic," as in Christian teens
believing that faith is "essentially related to mere human
goodness."
"Any authentic Bible-believing Christian, however, knows that goodness is
neither an inherent human trait nor, even if it was, is it sufficient for a
saving relationship with God," Vitagliano said.
The second incorrect understanding was called
"Therapeutic."
"Somewhere along the line, church-going kids have missed the point about
the Christian faith. Rather than it being a relationship with God by which a
disciple is joined to Christ, follows Him, and becomes more and more like Him,
the modern, younger evangelical has this view of religion: 'It makes me feel
happy,'" he explained.
"In other words, Christianity — or more properly 'church-ianity' — is a
religious form of therapy," it added.