Declining fertility rates have a significant correlation with increased secularization, according to Baylor University professor Philip Jenkins.
In a Regent College (Vancouver, British Columbia) live-stream titled “Fertility and Faith: A Conversation with Philip Jenkins,” the Baylor University professor of history and co-director of the program on historical studies of religion, explained Thursday that demography derives from changes in religious belief.
Much of modern Africa tends to be devoutly religious and they also happen to have high fertility rates, Jenkins said. By contrast, the lower a population’s fertility rate the greater the likelihood it is for people to separate from faith communities and religious institutions. The fertility rate, then, serves as an insightful window into how societies around the world become more secularized.
Amid the relatively recent collapse in fertility rates around the world, especially in Europe, secularization is rising. Jenkins noted that if you told him the fertility rate of any given country it would be fairly easy to say whether that nation allows legal same-sex unions, surmise its attitudes toward faith and religion, and how strong its religious institutions are.
While this correlation is not brought about by simple causation, the link is nevertheless demonstrably present, he stressed.
In the 1960s, the fertility rate in Denmark began to drop below replacement level as the country became more secular. Meanwhile, in the sub-Saharan African country of Uganda, the average woman had five children and religious belief was strong. This pattern holds true across the world with a notable few that seem to buck the trend….
Population rates that many considered Scandinavian have spread around the world. Half of the states in India now have half the replacement level fertility rates, Jenkins continued. Whereas originally, the projection for 2050 was going to be that the global population would number 11 billion. It’s more likely that the figure will be approximately 9 billion. Concern is rising now about “population contraction” and the military, commercial, and economic implications that come with it.
In the 1980s, a typical Iranian woman had seven children in her lifetime, he said. Presently, the rate hovers at 1.5-1.6, about the same level as Canada. Though viewed as a religious country because of their ardent Islamic government, the Iranian people have secularized. The head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard complained that of the 60,000 mosques in the nation, only around 3,000 are actively attended.
Surveys of what average Iranians think show that many consider themselves “spiritual but not religious,” and plenty more are atheists, he said, whereas mainline orthodox Islam is a “minority pursuit.”
The United States has been somewhat of an anomaly in that it’s a developed nation but remains highly religious and had a relatively high fertility rate. In the last decade, however, it has secularized significantly and the fertility rate has also plummeted. Those who are known as “nones” — people who no longer affiliate with any particular faith tradition — have grown sharply.
“The proportion of nones in the U.S. has risen very dramatically in the last 10 to 15 years in exactly the same period that the fertility rate has dropped. And the three largest religious communities in the U.S. right now are evangelicals, Catholics, and nones. And within just a year or two, the nones are going to be the largest of those three groups. That is a stunning change in a very short time,” Jenkins said.
The U.S. is also culturally divided and it’s easily predictable that states with high fertility rates and high faith practice vote Republican and low-fertility and low faith states vote Democrat, he explained.
“Fertility is an extremely good predictor of religious behavior and the political behavior that grows out of it, particularly in an age of culture wars,” Jenkins said.
Secularization can occur very rapidly, he emphasized, highlighting how the Netherlands was once known for its strong religious practice in the 1940s and 19050s, but that changed by the 1980s. The Dutch have since become one of the most secular people in history….
The above comes from a Nov. 14 story in the Christian Post.
Chapeau to those Catholic families willing to be fruitful and multiply. Resistant to the death peddlers, these Catholics deserve much praise and support, their very presence signals hope. Pray for them as they try to populate heaven.
Perhaps rather than abortion, women could agree to have a willing qualified couple adopt the child.
Have another baby, this world was meant for souls, do your part.
God didn’t do his part for me. So, sorry. would love to have had a family.
God did do His part for you, accept His will. That’s your part.
“Growth of nones in U.S. means fewer kids”
hopefully, over time,
it will also mean fewer nones
Because good Catholics like you will be evangelizing them, right?
Their good Catholic parents will do that job, you anonymous, can stay on the sidelines and complain about (fake) overpopulation.
I’ve never complained about overpopulation. You must have me confused with someone else. You seem to have utterly misunderstood the exchange with Helen Wheels. I was too sarcastic, I think. She seems to think it is good that people with no religion don’t have children because then people with no religion will die out. And of course that is not how it works and not something we should be hoping for. It is our job to make sure that they have heard the good news. Lord, send workers for the harvest.
Actually, that is how it works – Godless aborting contracepting people won’t have progeny to whom they would pass along their evil worldview. Procreating open to life Catholics will have lots of children to teach about God and His kingdom. Believers outnumbering non-believers, that’s a good thing. Even better if we can get them to believe.
And by the way, pick a name, too many of you fearful “Anonymous” types to keep track of. Intended chaos, no doubt.
Why are you trying to keep track?
FHU, please, if you are a Christian, review what the Gospel says about the Kingdom of God. Especially the one about it being a dragnet and about it being a small amount of yeast.
Why yes Anonymous at 9:07 am, I am a Christian, and as a Catholic Christian I get extra points!
Do notice how fake Catholics get absolutely crazed when they are called out on their support for contraception, abortion, homosexual behavior, lack of belief in the Real Presence, lax Mass attendance, the list goes on. You question the faith of those who bother to prompt you to consider the sake of your soul, which is not “Anonymous” to God. Don’t say you weren’t warned.
no ….. good catholics like YOU
Thank you, though not worthy. And yes, working on that.
It was deemed safe by the Father
for the Holy Family to return from Egypt
when King Herod was … Dead.
Time-honored method of solving many problems.
What is most needed, today, is to turn away from destructive Modernist trends, and return to Traditional Marriage, traditional roles of men and women, and establishing good, solid, warm and loving, traditional family homes– making good “nests,” to raise a family in. Traditional Marriage and Family is the core of both church and society.
Well, it’s funny, but true! The “Nones” will have few children– and someday, become extinct! They all need to be evangelized, baptized, and brought into the Church!