After the Baby Boomers

by By Robert Wuthnow

Princeton Univ. Press. 312p $29.95

There has been a great deal of anecdotal speculation about religious proclivities and spiritual seeking among so-called Generation X, the children of the baby boomers. Robert Wuthnow, a professor of sociology and director of the Center for the Study of American Religion at Princeton University, takes us beyond mere speculation to compellingly firm data. Drawing on an exceedingly rich archival data set of 16 major research studies over the past three decades, Wuthnow compares young Americans age 20 to 45 to the baby boomers when they were that age in the 1970s. The shifts are in many ways startling and not necessarily promising or benign for organized religion.

Here are some of the most salient differences between the two groups. The 105.3 million young Americans (20-45) are less likely to attend church regularly than did their parents generation at the same age. A growing proportion declare themselves to be non-religious and, significantly, many more were born and raised outside of religion. More teenagers and young adults are sexually active now than in the generation of the 1970s, and more have been raised by single parents. A smaller percentage of young adults are active members of congregations (pretty much across the board denominationally) than a generation ago. Young adults change jobs more than they did a generation ago and such early job insecurities feed into their postponement of marriage and having children.

The crucial difference is that young Americans are postponing marriage longer, putting off having children until later, and are likely to have fewer children than their parents. There are more never married in the 20-45 group today than there were in the 1970s (and the never or not yet married are less likely to attend church than the other group, the baby boomers, did when they were young adults). More do not have children when married. A greater ideological polarization is also evident: a majority (54 percent) of young adults declare themselves to be very conservative or very liberal, more so than two decades ago. More than before, church attendees believe and hold moral attitudes sharply diverging from the infrequent attendees or the unchurched.

Wuthnows data remind us that religious involvement, now as before, is influenced more by whether people are married, when they get married, whether they have children and how many children they have than by almost anything else. The married without children and those with children are all more likely to be church members, to be more active in attendance and to be more orthodox in beliefs and practices.

This article appears in December 17 2007.

John A. Coleman S.J., is an associate pastor at St. Ignatius Church in San Francisco. For many years he was the Casassa Professor of Social Values at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. His books and other writing have focused largely on areas connected to sociology of religion and also to social ethics. His most recent work has concentrated on issues of globalization.