Internet May Interfere With Religion, Keep Americans From Going To Church: Scholars

Is The Internet Bad For Religion?
|
Open Image Modal
In this photo taken June 1, 2012 John Cass displays the Search for Jesus home page from his iPad at the Billy Graham Evangelical Association's headquarters in Charlotte, N.C. The remarkable success of evangelist Billy Graham?s Crusades for Christ was not due to his preaching alone, but also the immense amount of preparation and follow-up that went into planning each revival. Now, the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association is taking that experience and harnessing it to save souls through the Internet in a way that perhaps only such a large, respected and established organization can. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

(RNS) A new paper draws an intriguing conclusion to a question scholars have wrestled with for several decades: Why are Americans dropping out of church?

One reason? They’re logging on to the Internet.

Allen Downey, a professor of computer science at Massachusetts’ Olin College of Engineering, found that between 1990 and 2010 the share of Americans claiming no religious affiliation grew from 8 percent to 18 percent while the number of Americans connected to the Internet rose from almost nothing to 80 percent.

Downey cautions — as do his critics — that correlation does not equal causation.

“We can’t know for sure that Internet use causes religious disaffiliation,” Downey said. “It is always possible that disaffiliation causes Internet use, or that a third factor causes both.”

But Downey, whose paper, “Religious affiliation, education and Internet use,” was published late last month at — where else? — an online site dedicated to scientific papers, is pretty sure he’s onto something.

Examining data from the General Social Survey, an ongoing and multigenerational study of Americans, Downey draws a link between higher levels of education and income and lower levels of religious identification.

His study shows that as Americans reported more Internet use, their religious identification dropped. Those who reported only a few hours of weekly Internet use were 2 percent less likely to claim a religious affiliation than those who use no Internet. And those who use the Internet more than seven hours weekly are even less likely to adhere to a religion — by an additional 3 percentage points. “That effect turns out to be stronger than a four-year college education, which reduces religious affiliation by about 2 percentage points,” he said.

Other scholars say Downey’s finding may be too pat.

Stephen O’Leary, an associate professor at the University of Southern California who studies religion on the Internet, thinks the situation is more complex and nuanced.

“Let’s call it the influence of the religious marketplace,” O’Leary said. Since the 1960s, with the influx of non-Christian immigrants to the U.S. and the increased mobility of society, Americans’ exposure to a wide range of spiritual, religious and nonreligious ideas has burgeoned.

“Internet use is part of that, but what it really does is magnify to a dramatic level the degree of choices one has,” O’Leary said.

Other forces unrelated to the Internet are at work, too. O’Leary said younger Americans are less likely to trust religious authority in the wake of the Catholic Church child sex abuse scandals.

“That has, more than almost any other thing, alienated a whole generation,” O’Leary said. “And it is not just Catholics. It goes to all religious authority by extension.”

Still, O’Leary cautions that the decline in religious affiliation — due to the Internet or otherwise — does not mean an equal rise in atheism.

“They haven’t given up their belief in the supernatural. They just don’t feel they need organizations or institutions to bring it to them,” he said. “And you don’t have to believe in any god to light a candle or hold hands and utter a mantra or chant.”

Downey’s findings dovetail with those of the Pew Research Center’s 2012 look at the “nones,” the terminology for Americans with no religious affiliation. That study found that almost 20 percent of all Americans — and a third of those under 30 — are nones.

By examining data from the CIRP Freshman Survey, conducted among first-year college students, Downey discovered that between 1985 and 2013 — approximately the same amount of time that the GSS measured Internet usage — the percentage of freshmen who identified as nonreligious tripled, from 8 percent to 25 percent. He predicts on his blog that number will reach almost 26 percent next year — more than the share of students who identify as Catholic.

“I think this is an underreported story,” Downey said.

Still, Downey is cautious about blaming the Internet, which he figures accounts for only about 20 percent of the overall decline in religious affiliation. An additional 25 percent, he says, can be attributed to fewer people being raised with a religious affiliation, and 5 percent might be due to increases in college education.

“That leaves 50 percent of the decrease unexplained by the factors I was able to include in the study, which raises interesting questions for future research,” he said.

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

Religious Apps
Bible Quiz 3D - Religious Game(01 of13)
Open Image Modal
Spread the word of God with ✞ Bible Quiz 3D - Religious Game ✞ Get on a missionary journey and help the priests all over the world baptize as many unbelievers and turn them into Christians! Download this fun quiz game and answer the questions from Holy Bible to help as many followers embrace the love of God and become true believers! Play against other missionaries and see who will finish all baptism ceremonies first!Get this educative quiz Bible trivia and help your children learn more about the Holy Book through playing and fun! By answering these interesting quiz questions about Bible verses and characters kids will learn more about their religion and accept God while playing Bible games! This Bible application is great for the whole family and it's perfect for teaching kids Christianity at Sunday School (Sabbath School).Google Play
Hallelujah(02 of13)
Open Image Modal
★ Are you around a lot of stupid people that take a long time to figure stuff out?★ Do you need a choir singing "Hallelujah" in your pocket!★ Get the new "Hallelujah" button!★ Just press and hold the button for a long as you need a "Hallelujah!"Includes a recording from a world renowned choir!!!Google Play
Confession: A Roman Catholic App(03 of13)
Open Image Modal
Designed to be used in the confessional, this app is the perfect aid for every penitent. WIth a personalized examination of conscience for each user, password protected profiles, and a step-by-step guide to the sacrament, this app invites Catholics to prayerfully prepare for and participate in the Rite of Penance.iTunes Store
Zabihah: The Original & World's Largest Guide to Halal Restaurants & Mosques(04 of13)
Open Image Modal
Zabihah brings the world's largest and most comprehensive halal restaurant database to your iPhone. With it, Muslims and others can immediately locate halal restaurants, mosques, and markets in their area. iTunes Store
Not by Bread Alone 2012(05 of13)
Open Image Modal
Access the daily inspiration of Not by Bread Alone through this app. Bring up the current day’s readings and reflection, jump to the page of any other day in the season, change the type size as you like, and share daily readings with friends through email.In just minutes a day, be nourished by brief but deeply insightful meditations on repentance and redemption, sacrifice and salvation, resurrection and new life. With Scripture as the foundation for each day’s brief entry, readers will find the guidance they need to become closer to God’s word during this holy time of year.Google Play
Kabbalah Oracle(06 of13)
Open Image Modal
Kabbalah Oracle brings the secret wisdom of the Kabbalah to the iPhone/iPad user for easy access. Divinatory readings are cast using the mystical symbols of the Dreidel, the Hebrew alphabet and the Tree of Life or Sefirot. Use this application to peer into your future or your soul.iTunes Store
Buddha Box HD(07 of13)
Open Image Modal
Buddhist Chant Machines are small, portable sound machines containing a number of different Buddhist chants, given out at Buddhist temples throughout the world. They are intended for use when it's just not possible to get to a temple, or if you just wanted to chant/meditate on the go. Each box usually contains either two or more chants, they particularly contain, "Amituofo" & "Namo Amituofo" (Chinese for Amitabha Buddha.) Being Buddhist myself, I found myself wishing I had my Buddhist Chant Machine with me at times I had either forgotten it, or the batteries were dead. Being an iPhone owner, I decided to make an app that would allow me to have my very own personal "Buddha Box" with me at all times! iTunes Store
Mizrach Compass - מצפן לירושלים (08 of13)
Open Image Modal
The Mizrach compass is designed to help you know in which direction Jewish people pray. Technically, it plots the location of the Kodesh Hakodashim (31° 46' 40.8" N, 35° 14' 7.44" E), which is near the Kotel (Western Wall) in Jerusalem. It then uses your current longitude, latitude plus the built in digital compass to point you in that direction.iTunes Store
iSalam: Qibla Compass(09 of13)
Open Image Modal
This invaluable App features Compass & Qibla direction finder that points accurately towards the Kaaba'h from practically anywhere in the world.iTunes Store
Bible(10 of13)
Open Image Modal
On more than 95 million devices all over the world, people are reading, listening to, and sharing the Bible using the #1 rated Bible App—completely free. Hundreds of Bible versions, hundreds of reading plans, dozens of languages. Add your own highlights, bookmarks, and public or private notes. Customize your experience for easy reading. iTunes Store
Hindu Gods and History(11 of13)
Open Image Modal
This is an application which helps you to learn about Hindu gods history, temples, Festival and much more.This application contains all basic God's history, concepts of holy book (Bhagavad Gita), Ramayana, Mahabharata, Chalisa and Aarti.India is a very diverse country and we respect all religion! Google Play
Heartpoints: Track My Christian Walk And Pray Daily(12 of13)
Open Image Modal
Monitor your heart and grow in grace with the help of this easy-to-use app. Instantly log your reactions and responses to daily life while receiving relevant Scripture verses for every moment you face. No Internet needed. FREE.Heartpoints is a GPS for the Christian heart. In our fast-paced world, finding time to reflect on the spiritual condition of your heart is no easy task. Our practical iPhone app introduces a smooth and simple system that allows you to conduct ongoing examination of your thoughts, reactions, and motives throughout the day. Pairing your responses with relevant Scripture verses that match your struggles or triumphs, the app enables you to “Watch and pray so that you will not fall into temptation”.iTunes Store
Equanimity - Meditation Timer & Tracker(13 of13)
Open Image Modal
The elegant meditation timer times your sittings, provides a beautiful journal for sitting notes, and displays graphical tracking giving you clear feedback on your meditation practice. It's carefully designed to be the ideal companion for anyone who meditates.The journal is comparable in quality to many standalone note-taking apps. It allows you to optionally take notes after your sittings, and lets you browse through your meditation history as either a visually annotated log or textual journal. All of your recorded data can be exported, as a nicely formatted email that you can print, or as a table that you can load into a spreadsheet. You can also email individual journal entries - useful for posting them on a blog.iTunes Store