Author: Ben Martin

Opinion

For the Sanguine Sinners of JBU

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The underground community of JBU nonconformists has been missing for too long now, but Yik Yak is signaling revitalization. The nonconformists are disjointed and isolated at the moment, but they are waving their flags on the anonymous platform. There are no veterans in living memory to guide and unify them, and the lessons of past mistakes will have to be learned all over again. There is a long and difficult road ahead for the troublemakers, and I wish them well on their journey. JBU will never be a proper university without them. College isn’t college without a few cautionary tales, some legendary slip-ups, and one or two celebrated students who made it out unscathed. I am not suggesting that all students should break rules or deal with the devil, nor am I suggesting that there is anything wrong with the way JBU operates. University students are young and idealistic, they need something to fight against, a line to cross, a constraint to resist. Rules are to rebels as lighting is to thunder. Rebels are essential to the composition of the collective personality of the student body; without them, we’re all just drones walking to class with no spark or intrigue.

Opinion

Religious disaffiliation in the United States of America

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One of the biggest questions in social science research stems from the following fact: Christianity is on the decline in the United States. In 2009, 77% of American adults identified as Christian as opposed to 65% today. Meanwhile, those who identify as nothing in particular (the “nones”) are on the rise, jumping from 17% to 26% over the same period according to the Pew Research Center. The numbers are staggering considering the size of the American population. A report by the CIA World Factbook indicates that, at 26%, the nones encompass 87,099,583 people, outnumbering the entire population of Germany by over 7 million. So, the question is, why are people leaving religion, and why aren’t they coming back? This question bears interest to Christians and other religious affiliates alike, as the only way to bring people back is to understand why they are leaving. The nones are defined as the group of people who identify as either atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular.” In other words, they are either mostly or entirely disaffiliated religiously. The group is primarily comprised of young people: 36% of people between the ages of 24 and 30 (born 1990-1996) identify as nones. Older generations are still disaffiliating but at lower rates than young people. Pew Research Center statistics suggest that 34% of older Millennials (b. 1981-1989), 23% of Gen X (b. 1965-1980), 17% of Baby Boomers (b. 1946-1964) and 11% of the Silent Generation (b. 1928-1945) identified as nones in 2015. According to the latest data, the numbers have only gone up since then.