The key facts (you can skip the author's "analysis," which obviously reflects his bias):
Since 1988, the General Social Survey has been asking Americans of different ages what they believe about God. For decades, the answer did not change much. Around 70 percent of members of the Silent Generation said that they “know God really exists” and “have no doubts about it.” That same sentiment was shared by about 63 percent of baby boomers and Generation Xers.
But in 2018, millennials expressed a lot less certainty. Only 44 percent had no doubts about the existence of God. Even more doubtful were members of Generation Z — just one-third claimed certain belief in God.
Today, scholars are finding that by almost any metric they use to measure religiosity, younger generations are much more secular than their parents or grandparents. In responses to survey questions, over 40 percent of the youngest Americans claim no religious affiliation, and just a quarter say they attend religious services weekly or more.
It's striking that so many could be "certain" about something that is certainly false, but what's heartening is the trend line. Since religiosity has been strongly associated with almost all the retrogressive tendencies in American society (not all the religious are reactionary, of course, but almost all the reactionaries are religious), this is a hopeful sign, notwithstanding all the ominous ones.
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