This is a response post to a top Reddit story that U.S. Christianity is Shrinking (2022):
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/christianity-us-shrinking-pew-research/
So which is it? I see factors going back and forth, and I will define "Christianity" broadly as any of these groups that claim to be Christian for the sake of this discussion (although I personally hold it to be a more narrow definition of only being the Church I believe is exclusively the one Christian Church).
On the one hand, we have groups like the Amish or Mormons who reproduce more than the general nonreligious population. While I see lots of people defecting from religion, I also see a lot of people doubling down on trying to take religion seriously. Those who have defected from Christianity seem to still seek out some kind of substitute religion, whether it is in science, New Age, Buddhism, or what have you.
So what do you think? Is "Christianity" growing or declining?
All depends on how you define “Christianity”. It’s true that a lot of The mainstream Christian Churches/Denominations are having varying degrees of problems. Usually varying by area. However People often conflate issues the major churches/denominations have with the state of Christianity overall.
atheism has no inherent morals (does it?), so I think a lot of Christian morals are still being unknowingly taken to heart but I see some of this fracturing at times as well
Of course not. Why would it?
They think everything's going to be dust anyway. So why be moral?