BY: Chloe Brant
Most Australians claim they believe in God or some kind of “higher power” and yet fewer than one in 10 of us attend church every week.
We don’t actively “worship” and yet are apparently comforted by the mere presence of the many churches that operate in our community.
And, despite not believing in God, we send our children to religious schools and turn to the Bible during times of crisis.
In his new book Beyond Belief, Australian social researcher Hugh Mackay argues a growing number of people, particularly young people, are abandoning religion in favour of a different kind of spirituality — one not restricted by institutions or guidelines.
We still crave answers and seek happiness, Mackay says, but more of us are finding it in secular realms: yoga, meditation, music.
Here, Mackay discusses why young people are embracing the Spiritual But Not Religious (SBNR) movement, why we still call upon God when luck fails us, and whether it is possible to find meaning without religion.
Let’s discuss ‘our need to believe’. Why do we need this sense of purpose?
I think the underlining reason is [that] life is a mystery; we want those big questions answered to why we are here. Humans are seekers of answers: Why is the bus late? Why is my child going off the rails?
We constantly need answers, we try to supply them from a religious path — where answers are provided — and so we are led to embrace religious stories. They make us feel calmer and [help] everything make sense.