America's nonreligious are a growing, diverse phenomenon. They really don't like organized religion
Ask Americans what their religion is, and nearly 1 in 3 say this -- none
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Your support makes all the difference.Mike Dulak grew up Catholic in Southern California, but by his teen years, he began skipping Mass and driving straight to the shore to play guitar, watch the waves and enjoy the beauty of the morning. āAnd it felt more spiritual than any time I set foot in a church,ā he recalled.
Nothing has changed that view in the ensuing decades.
āMost religions are there to control people and get money from them,ā said Dulak, now 76, of Rocheport, Missouri. He also cited sex abuse scandals in Catholic and Southern Baptist churches. āI canāt buy into that,ā he said.
As Dulak rejects being part of a religious flock, he has plenty of company. He is a ānoneā ā no, not that kind of nun. The kind that checks ānoneā when pollsters ask āWhatās your religion?ā
The decades-long rise of the nones ā a diverse, hard-to-summarize group ā is one of the most talked about phenomena in U.S. religion. They are reshaping America's religious landscape as we know it.
In U.S. religion today, āthe most important story without a shadow of a doubt is the unbelievable rise in the share of Americans who are nonreligious,ā said Ryan Burge, a political science professor at Eastern Illinois University and author of āThe Nones,ā a book on the phenomenon.
The nones account for a large portion of Americans, as shown by the 30% of U.S. adults who claim no religious affiliation in a survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Other major surveys say the nones have been steadily increasing for as long as three decades.
So who are they?
Theyāre the atheists, the agnostics, the ānothing in particular.ā Many are āspiritual but not religious,ā and some are neither or both. They span class, gender, age, race and ethnicity.
While the nonesā diversity splinters them into myriad subgroups, most of them have this in common:
They. Really. Donāt. Like. Organized. Religion.
Nor its leaders. Nor its politics and social stances. Thatās according to a large majority of nones in the AP-NORC survey.
But theyāre not just a statistic. They're real people with unique relationships to belief and nonbelief, and the meaning of life.
Theyāre secular homeschoolers in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas, Pittsburghers working to overcome addiction. Theyāre a mandolin maker in a small Missouri town, a former evangelical disillusioned with that particular strain of American Christianity. Theyāre college students who found their childhood churches unpersuasive or unwelcoming.
Church āwas not very good for me,ā said Emma Komoroski, a University of Missouri freshman who left her childhood Catholicism in her mid-teens. āIām a lesbian. So that was kind of like, oh, I didnāt really fit, and people donāt like me.ā
The nones also are people like Alric Jones, who cited bad experiences with organized religion ranging from the intolerant churches of his hometown to the ministry that kept soliciting money from his devout late wife ā even after Jones lost his job and income after an injury.
āThey should have come to us and said, āIs there something we can do to help you?āā said Jones, 71, of central Michigan. āThey kept sending us letters saying, āWhy arenāt you sending us money?āā
Although he doesnāt believe in organized religion, he believes in God and basic ethical precepts. āPeople should be treated equally as long as they treat other people equally. Thatās my spirituality if you want to call it that.ā
These days, if a visiting relative wants to attend church, heāll go along, ābut Iām not prone to listening to anybody telling me this is the way it should be,ā Jones said.
About 1 in 6 U.S. adults, including Jones and Dulak, is a ānothing in particular.ā There are as many of them as atheists and agnostics combined (7% each).
āAll the media attention is on atheists and agnostics, when most nones are not atheist or agnostic,ā Burge said.
Many embrace a range of spiritual beliefs ā from God, prayer and heaven to karma, reincarnation, astrology or energy in crystals.
āThey are definitely not as turned off to religion as atheists and agnostics are,ā Burge said. āThey practice their own type of spirituality, many of them.ā
Dulak still draws inspiration from nature.
āIt just feels so good to be next to something so timeless,ā he said, sitting in his yard in the Missouri River town he now calls home.
He finds similar fulfillment in his two-story workshop, where he makes the latest of thousands of mandolins he has created over the decades, enabling people to āshare the joy of music.ā
āIt feels spiritually good,ā Dulak said. āItās not a religion.ā
Burge said the nones are rising as the Christian population declines, particularly the āmainlineā or moderate to liberal Protestants.
āThis is not just some academic exercise for me,ā said Burge, who pastors a dwindling American Baptist church in Mt. Vernon, Illinois. Itās āwhat Iāve seen every single Sunday of my life the last 16 years.ā
The statistics show the nones are well-represented in every age group, but especially among young adults. About four in 10 of those under 30 are nones ā nearly as many as say they're Christians.
The trend was evident in interviews on the University of Missouri campus. Several students said they didnāt identify with a religion.
Mia Vogel said she likes āthe foundations of a lot of religions ā just love everybody, accept everybody.ā But she considers herself more spiritual.
āIām pretty into astrology. Iāve got my crystals charging up in my window right now,ā she said. āHonestly, Iāll bet half of it is a total placebo. But I just like the idea that things in life can be explained by greater forces.ā
One movement that exemplifies the āspiritual but not religiousā ethos is the Twelve Step sobriety program, pioneered by Alcoholics Anonymous and adopted by other recovery groups. Participants turn to a āpower greater than ourselvesā ā the God of each personās own understanding ā but they donāt share any creed.
āIf you look at the religions, they have been wracked by scandals, it doesnāt matter the denomination,ā said the Rev. Jay Geisler, an Episcopal priest who is spiritual advisor at the Pittsburgh Recovery Center, an addiction treatment site.
In contrast, āthereās actually a spiritual revival in the basement of many of the churches,ā where recovery groups often meet, he said.
For some, Geisler said, the God of their understanding is āGUS,ā for Guy UpStairs. Or āSAM,ā for Sure Aināt Me.
āNobodyās fighting in those rooms, theyāre not saying, āYouāre wrong about God,āā Geisler said. The focus is on āhow your life is changed.ā
Participants echoed those thoughts recently at the center. In keeping with the Twelve Step tradition of anonymity, they shared their experiences on condition only their first names be used.
āI grew up Methodist, but I donāt follow any religion,ā said John, 32. āI donāt believe in a big, bearded dude in the sky.ā But after surviving overdoses, he knows that āsomething has been watching over me.ā
Some identified as Christian, but skip evangelizing in favor of supporting each othersā individual paths.
āI donāt push my belief on anybody,ā said Linda, 57. āThe pain bonds us.ā
Those interviewed said their newfound community is essential to their recovery ā and the lack of community contributed to their initial fall into addiction.
Scholars worry that, as people pull away from congregations and other social groups, they are losing sources of communal support.
But nones said in interviews they were happy to leave religion behind, particularly in toxic situations, and find community elsewhere.
Jones agreed that church connections can have benefits ā but not for him.
āWhen you need references and you need other things, those people are there to support you,ā he said. āBut again, what are you willing to sacrifice of your own beliefs to develop that kind of relationship?ā
Marjorie Logman, 75, of Aurora, Illinois, now finds community among other residents in her multigenerational apartment complex. She doesnāt miss the evangelical circles she was long active in.
āThe farther away I get, the freer I feel,ā she said, criticizing churches for prioritizing money over caring for people. She recalled seeing church leaders tell people with depression their problem was sin or demonic possession ā piling guilt upon unaddressed mental illness.
When she was recovering from an injury at a nursing home in 2010, Logman said, her husband was home by himself in despair and died before she could return home. She said her pastor refused to visit him because he hadnāt been involved in church.
She now identifies as agnostic. āIām not throwing in the towel on everything,ā she said. āI still believe in a higher consciousness.ā
Even far from urban centers, nones are finding community.
Adria Cays and Ashley Miller, who live in nearby towns in northwest Arkansas, helped found a group for parents homeschooling according to secular principles.
Even in a predominately Christian region of the Ozarks, they found āpeople like us who were approaching education and just raising their children from a more secular view,ā said Miller, 35.
The women's families regularly share hiking adventures on Instagram. While they donāt describe their explorations as spiritual, they aim to inspire wonder and purpose in their children.
āWe really want them to have a deep connection to nature,ā said Cays, 43.
Added Miller: āWe are part of something bigger, and that is the Earth. There is meaning just in being.ā
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AP journalists Linley Sanders, Emily Swanson and Jessie Wardarski contributed.
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Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APās collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
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The poll of 1,680 adults was conducted May 11-15 using a sample drawn from NORCās probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 3.4 percentage points.