Article: Why More Young Women Are Leaving Church [65% of JW members are women]

by AndersonsInfo 23 Replies latest jw friends

  • AndersonsInfo
    AndersonsInfo

    http://national.deseretnews.com/article/4645/why-more-young-women-are-leaving-church.html

    Stock photo © kulicki
    Faith Compiled by Massarah Mikati Sunday, May 31, 2015

    Why more young women are leaving church

    An increasing number of young women are leading the millennial generation in ditching church, according to a recent study.

    Jean Twenge, a psychology professor at the University of San Diego and author of "Generation Me," and fellow researchers examined data from the Monitoring the Future and American Freshman surveys.

    They found that while the majority of adolescents and young adults remain religiously involved, the number of 12th graders and college students that have never attended religious services has doubled since the 1960s-'70s. In addition, the number of 8th and 10th graders who do not attend religious services has increased by 20 percent to 40 percent.

    According to the study published by the Public Library of Science website PLOS One, the decline in religious orientation is greater among girls, as well as Northeasterners, whites and political liberals. While the number of 12th grade girls who reported never attending church increased 125 percent since the 1960s-'70s, the male increase was less at 83 percent.

    “The rise in cultural individualism may have impacted some groups more than others,” the study said. “Given shifts away from traditional female roles, females may have been affected more than males.”

    Individualism, they explain, is focusing on oneself rather than others and society in general. The study found a correlation — but not necessarily causation — between low religious involvement and high individualism, and vice versa.

    Stemming from individualism — and what often clashes with religious affiliation — is lack of commitment (most religious organizations need some form of commitment), difference of opinion and resulting tension, the inability to submit to authority and the unwillingness to sacrifice oneself (often, religion urges helping others and serving God).

    Hannah Hunt, a 24-year-old, told the Washington Post that the shift away from traditional female roles contributed to her dwindling religiosity.

    Despite their greater generational decrease of religiosity, however, women still make up a majority of the religiously affiliated. A 2015 Pew Study reported that over half of nearly every Christian group constitutes women, with the largest in the Jehovah’s Witnesses church at 65 percent.

    Email: [email protected]

  • Heaven
    Heaven

    For me as a teenager of the '70s, I wasn't agreeing with my parent's religion but also began doubting the claims about God. The misogyny I saw both in the religion and the Bible started putting me off too. The lack of God fixing problems in the world when he is claimed to be all-powerful and all-loving were contradictory and did not sit well with me..

    My mind is very logical. Religion requires you leave logic and reason behind. This is not me. I am just not wired to be religious.

  • DJS
    DJS

    Thanks Heaven,

    You just outed yourself: "My mind is very logical."

    You are really a guy! ;-)

  • 3rdgen
    3rdgen

    Thanks for posting this, Barbara.

    According to pew, only 35% of JWs are male. If you take into account the many who are only there to keep peace in the family or to help their loved ones out, the percentage of BELIEVING males would be even lower.

  • Finkelstein
    Finkelstein

    If I was a guy and wanted to create a religion around myself for glorification, power and control why would I promote a woman to be directly connected to the spiritual world.

    Besides the huge universe couldn't have been built by a weak woman, it had to be a strong guy ( Male)

  • Finkelstein
    Finkelstein

    Perhaps the reason why so many young woman are leaving religious beliefs behind is because these belief institutions many time denigrate woman as second class subservient misogynic institutions , where men have most of the power and control, the JWS would be a good example of that.

    As far as I remember, woman weren't even allowed to hold microphones

  • Divergent
    Divergent
    As far as I remember, woman weren't even allowed to hold microphones

    Actually they are allowed to, but ONLY IF there are no brothers available

  • nelim
    nelim

    Seems logical that if there are more believing women, then the decline can also be steeper ;-)

    I live in Europe, and my impression here is that there aren't so many more JW women than men? Yes, I do see more couples where the husband is not a JW, but the wife is... (and never the other way around), ... but 65%? Why would this be? Or am I wrong?

  • LongHairGal
    LongHairGal

    I can understand this because religions usually put women down.

    As a responsible person who worked and supported myself, I feel I do not deserve this disrespect and this is basically why I walked away from the Jehovah's Witness religion.

    Even though there were other doctrinal issues that did not sit well with me, I would have to say the appalling attitude towards women (and responsible working people) was the main reason I left.

    I would have to be OUT of my mind and have a grudge against myself to endure this garbage and the fear-based mentality that other women there tolerate. Well, they can HAVE it.

  • sparrowdown
    sparrowdown
    More women leaving - god, let's hope so.

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