Synopses & Reviews
According to a 2012 report by the Pew Forum on Religious Life, a third of American adults under the age of thirty claimed no religious affiliation. The reports findings can easily paint a dismal picture of American religion, yet the future may be brighter than we imagine. While studies indicate that this generation of emerging adults is less likely to be involved with religion than their parents and grandparents, some religious institutions are successfully retaining, nurturing and developing young believers. But which are these organizations? What methods are they employing? And can their strategies be successful for other religious groups?
In Got Religion?, veteran journalist Naomi Schaefer Riley sets out to identify and meet with religious leaders across America who are successfully engaging and growing the number of young members in their congregation. In interviews with clergy, academics, and (most importantly) the young men and women themselves, she uncovers a series of practical cross-denominational solutions that leaders of all faiths can employ in their own communities.
Unlike other books, Rileys research goes beyond one faith to lay out the reasons that people in their early twenties to mid-thirties are leaving their churches, synagogues, and mosques. She discovers that the secret to maintaining these congregants may lie not in catering to this demographic with more flashy programming and cutting edge technology but rather in giving them opportunities to take responsibility and truly serve their communities.
Through a series of vignettes, Riley discusses how an all- American mosque, a Catholic teacher-training program, an evangelical church plant, and a synagogue-hopping program, for instance, can not only foster a sense of community among young people, but also successfully compete against modernday entertainment. She shows how service-based programs encourage ownership of faith, how churches can collaborate to bring in new members without stealing each others sheep, how congregations have asked older members to give up some responsibility to encourage young adults to step up, and how a focus on the old-fashioned concept of neighborhood can reinvigorate faith communities.
An essential guide for religious leaders who are trying to grow their congregation of emerging adults, Got Religion? provides a broad, ecumenical view of the problem and offers proven methods in getting young adults to commit to religious institutions for now and years to come.
Review
Naomi Schaefer Riley is an astute cultural observer and critic, and a very good interpreter of the larger meanings and implications of social science research. For those concerned about the religious live of emerging adults,
Got Religion? will be essential reading.” Christian Smith, William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Sociology and principle investigator, National Study of Youth and Religion
In researching and writing Got Religion? Naomi Schaefer Riley has accomplished a difficult task. She has managed to make fairly dense millennial generation demographic material both interesting and understandable. She has also connected the dots in illustrating how such material is relevant and instructive to those who seek to bring young people back to their various faith traditions.” Dr. Richard Land, president of Southern Evangelical Seminary
Review
The precipitous drop in religious affiliation among young people in the United States has been covered to the point of exhaustionoften generating more heat than light. In
Got Religion? Naomi Schaefer Riley weaves together a compelling counter narrative that focuses on the best examples of how various communitiesJudaism, Catholicism, non-denominational Christianity and Islamare successfully engaging young people. It is a study in American ingenuity, insight and reinvention as it applies to faith communities and it should be read by anyone in the field who believes that studying what works is the best way to fix what's wrong.” Bill McGarvey, author of
The Freshman Survival Guide
Got Religion? offers two reassuring messages to those worried that the under-thirty generation is running away from religion. First, it shows that the problem is not confined to particular faiths. Mormons and Muslims turn out to be as concerned as Catholics, Protestants and Jews. Second, it demonstrates that creative programs can succeed in luring young people back to religion. There is reason for hope. Chocked full of ideas and insights, this is a book that anyone interested in youth engagement should read.” Jonathan D. Sarna, president, Association for Jewish Studies; the Joseph Engel Visiting Professor of American Jewish Studies, Harvard University; the Joseph H. and Belle R. Braun Professor of American Jewish History; and chair, Hornstein Jewish Professional Leadership Program, Brandeis University
Review
No one writes about the religious experiences, beliefs, and practices of contemporary Americans more astutely or with great insight than Riley. In
Got Religion? she explores the factors that tend to draw young adults into, or alienate them from, communities of faith. This is far from an exercise in merely academic sociology of religion. It contains valuable lessons for faith communities and their leadersfrom Catholics and Jews to Mormons and Muslimsabout what they can do to give young people, including young couples with children, stability and responsibility, helping them to deepen their spiritual lives and form habits that will serve them well in every dimension of their lives.” Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence, Princeton University
If you want a book with pat answers to the "problem" of millennials and organized religion, you've come to the wrong place. If, however, you want to consider the many ways that adults in their 20s and 30s engage with religion, God, and peoplehood, if you want a book that holds just as many questions as it does answers, then pull out your highlighter and get comfortable. Riley takes us on a fascinating journey that traverses religious, geographical, racial, and cultural boundaries. Learn from those who may share a different understanding of God but a similar drive to create a meaningful life. I know I did.” Rabbi Shira Stutman, director of Jewish programming at Sixth and I
Naomi Schaeffer Riley is one of the keenest analysts of American religious life today. In this book, she takes up a question that every religious community is asking. Not everyone will agree with everything in this book, but everyone who cares about American religious life will find a provocative and fruitful catalyst for conversation and action.” Russell D. Moore, president, Southern Baptist Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission
Synopsis
Why are young people dropping out of religious institutions? Can anything be done to reverse the trend? In
Got Religion?, Naomi Schaefer Riley examines the reasons for the defection, why we should care, and how some communities are successfully addressing the problem.
The traditional markers of growing up are getting married and becoming financially independent. But young adults are delaying these milestones, sometimes for a full decade longer than
their parents and grandparents. This new phase of emerging adulthood” is diminishing the involvement of young people in religious institutions, sapping the strength and vitality of faith communities, and creating a more barren religious landscape for the young adults who do eventually decide to return to it. Yet, clearly there are some churches, synagogues, and mosques that are making strides in bringing young people back to religion.
Got Religion? offers in-depth, on-the-ground reporting about the most successful of these institutions and shows how many of the structural solutions for one religious group can be adapted to work for another.
The faith communities young people attach themselves to are not necessarily the biggest or the most flashy. They are not the wealthiest or the ones employing the latest technology. Rather, they are the ones that create stability for young people, that give them real responsibility in a community and that help them form the habits of believers that will last a lifetime.
About the Author
Naomi Schaefer Riley is a weekly columnist for the New York Post. From 20052010, she was the deputy Tastepage editor of the Wall Street Journal where she wrote about religion, higher education, and philanthropy. She is the author of Til Faith Do Us Part: How Interfaith Marriage is Transforming America, an editors pick by the New York Times Book Review, The Faculty Lounges . . . And Other Reasons You Wont Get the College Education You Paid For, The Quad: How Religious Colleges and the Missionary Generation are Changing America, and co-editor of Acculturated: 23 Savvy Writers Find Hidden Virtue in Reality TV, Chick Lit, Video Games, and Other Pillars of Pop Culture.
Table of Contents
Preface / vii
Introduction / 1
Location, Location, Location:
How the Theology of Place Is Plugging Young Adults back into Their Communities and Their Churches / 17
The All-American Mosque:
How Shedding Immigrant Ways Can Reshape Islam in the United States / 35
Joining the Service:
How the Catholic Church Is Training a New Generation of Laypeople to Be Spiritual Leaders / 55
Whats NEXT?
Channeling the Enthusiasm of Birthright Israel into a Permanent Jewish Commitment / 73
A Ward of Their Own:
How the Mormon Church Is Turning Twenty-Somethings into Community Leaders / 91
When No One Needs Church Anymore, How Do You Make Them Want It?
The Relevance of the Black Church in the Twenty- First Century / 107
The End of Sheep Stealing:
How Churches Can Collaborate to Bring Twenty-Somethings Back into the Fold / 123
Conclusion / 139
Notes / 155
Index / 157