Why Religion Went Obsolete, Christian Smith
Why Religion Went Obsolete, Christian Smith
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Why Religion Went Obsolete
The Demise of Traditional Faith in America

Author: Christian Smith

Narrator: Chris Sorensen

Unabridged: 16 hr 53 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/16/2025


Synopsis

Is traditional American religion doomed?

Traditional religion in the United States has suffered huge losses in recent decades. The number of Americans identifying as "not religious" has increased remarkably. Religious affiliation, service attendance, and belief in God have declined. More and more people claim to be "spiritual but not religious." Religious organizations have been reeling from revelations of sexual and financial scandals and cover-ups. Public trust in "organized religion" has declined significantly. Crucially, these religious losses are concentrated among younger generations. This means that, barring unlikely religious revivals among youth, the losses will continue and accelerate in time, as less-religious younger Americans replace older more-religious ones and increasingly fewer American children are raised by religious parents.

All this is clear. But what is less clear is exactly why this is happening. We know a lot more about the fact that traditional American religion has declined than we do about why this is so.

Why Religion Went Obsolete aims to change that. Drawing on survey data and hundreds of interviews, Christian Smith offers a sweeping, multifaceted account of why many Americans have lost faith in traditional religion. An array of large-scale social forces came together to render traditional religion culturally obsolete. For growing numbers of Americans, traditional religion no longer seems useful or relevant. Using quantitative empirical measures of big-picture changes over time as well as exploring the larger cultural environment, the cultural "zeitgeist", Smith explains why this is the case and what it means for the future. Crucially, he argues, it does not mean a strictly secular future. Rather, Americans' spiritual impulses are being channeled in new and interesting directions.

Why Religion Went Obsolete is a tour de force from one of our leading chroniclers of religion in America.

About Christian Smith

Christian Smith is the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Sociology, director of the Center for the Study of Religion and Society, and director of the Center for Social Research at the University of Notre Dame.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Greg on July 07, 2025

This is a book I will reference and cite for likely the next decade. A clear diagnosis and explanation of why traditional religion has waned in the last 25 years in the West. Puts some sociological data on Taylor’s A Secular Age. He rises above simplistic answers & provides a multifaceted and data i......more

Goodreads review by Steven on August 02, 2025

A SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE MODERN DECLINE OF RELIGION Christian Smith is a professor of Sociology at the University of Notre Dame. He wrote in the Introduction to this 2025 book, “Over the past three decades, America’s historic religious traditions have suffered major losses. Rates of both bel......more

Goodreads review by William on July 28, 2025

From the viewpoint of a sociologist ironically with a given name "Christian", we have a thorough, evidenced based, and clear analysis of what happened to traditional Religion in American in the last 50 years. He characterizes the decline of religion as obsolescence, rather than, say, a turn to athei......more

Goodreads review by Aleph on August 03, 2025

The purpose of this review is to extract a few nuggets and narrative strands from the massive surrounding overburden of numeric ore that an academic sociologist feels required to accrete. Genre matters. In the introductory chapter, the author declares his hefty tome to be "a work of historical cultur......more

Goodreads review by Jared on July 14, 2025

While this book hits a lot of major issues on the decline of religion in the West, particularly America, it fails to acknowledge at the end that the re-enchantment is leading people Away from Occult and back towards more traditional forms of religion. This book does a great assessment of how we got......more