Christian Post
 
 
Learning From Young Atheists: What Turned Them Off Christianity

 
 
By _Eric Metaxas_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/eric-metaxas/) 
July 2, 2013|10:10 am
It's something most Christian parents worry about: You send your kids off 
to  college and when they come back, you find they've lost their faith. The 
prospect  of this happening is why many parents nudge their kids towards 
Christian  colleges, or at least schools with a strong Christian presence on 
campus. 
But in many ways, the damage has been done long before our children set 
foot  on campus. That's the message from a recent article in the Atlantic 
Monthly. 
My friend Larry Taunton of the Fixed Point Foundation set out to find out 
why  so many young Christians lose their faith in college. He did this by 
employing a  method I don't recall being used before: He asked them. 
The Fixed Point Foundation asked members of the Secular Students 
Associations  on campuses around the nation to tell them about their "journey 
to 
unbelief."  Taunton was not only surprised by the level of response but, more 
importantly,  about the stories he and his colleagues heard. 
Instead of would-be Richard Dawkins', the typical respondent was more like  
Phil, a student Taunton interviewed. Phil had grown up in church; he had 
even  been the president of his youth group. What drove Phil away wasn't the 
lure of  secular materialism or even Christian moral teaching. And he was 
specifically  upset when his church changed youth pastors. 
Whereas his old youth pastor "knew the Bible" and made Phil "feel smart"  
about his faith even when he didn't have all the answers, the new youth 
pastor  taught less and played more. 
Phil's loss of faith coincided with his church's attempt to ingratiate 
itself  to him instead of challenging him. According to Taunton, Phil's story 
"was on  the whole typical of the stories we would hear from students across 
the  country." 
These kids had attended church but "the mission and message of their 
churches  was vague," and manifested itself in offering "superficial answers to 
life's  difficult questions." The ministers they respected were those "who 
took the  Bible seriously," not those who sought to entertain them or be their  
"buddy." 
Taunton also learned that, for many kids, their journey to unbelief was an  
emotional, not just an intellectual one. 
Taunton's findings are counter-intuitive. Much of what passes for youth  
ministry these days is driven by a morbid fear of boring our young charges. As 
a  result, a lot of time is spent trying to devise ways to entertain them. 
The rest of the time is spent worrying about whether the Christian message  
will turn kids off. But as Taunton found, young people, like the 
not-so-young,  respect people with conviction-provided they know what they're 
talking  
about. 
Taunton talks about his experiences with the late Christopher Hitchens, 
who,  in their debates, refrained from attacking him. When asked why, Hitchens  
replied, "Because you believe it." 
I don't know what that says about Hitchens' other Christian debate 
partners,  but it is a potent reminder that playing down the truth claims of 
the 
Christian  faith doesn't work. People don't believe those they don't respect. 
Here's something that one of the students told Larry Taunton; he said,  
"Christianity is something that if you really believed it, it  would change 
your life and you would want to change [the lives] of others. I  haven't seen 
too much of that." 
Folks, that's pretty sobering. This puts the ball in our court. Are we 
living  lives that show our children that we actually believe what we say we 
believe?  And here's another question-do we actually believe it? I have to say, 
as a  parent I'm taking this very seriously........ 

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