Posted June 17, 2015
The situation with US Catholic youth actually is grim
Christian Smith
Many American Catholics are worried about the
apparently weak religious faith, practice and commitment of Catholic youth today
and what it portends for the church's future. Some observers are less concerned,
however. Four Catholic sociologists -- William D'Antonio, James Davidson, Mary
Gautier, and Katherine Meyer -- for example, have suggested that some scholars
(including yours truly) overstate the magnitude of the problem. The title of
their Dec. 6 NCR essay [1], for instance, summarizes their view about my recent
book, Young Catholic America: "Assumptions in study on young Catholics lead to
unnecessarily grim outlook." I wish they were correct. But they are not. The
situation, in fact, is grim.
I agree with D'Antonio, Davidson, Gautier and
Meyer that our respective research studies are methodologically sound and
produce reliable data -- at least for answering certain research questions. The
problem in this case is that my colleagues are relying upon data that are
incapable of addressing the issues about the youth in question here. In their
piece, my colleagues did not mention two crucial facts about our differing
studies, the understanding of which helps to explain why we come to such
different conclusions about Catholic youth.
First, the research of my four
colleagues is based upon cross-sectional survey data of Americans who
self-identified as Catholics at the time of the surveys. This enables them to
study generational differences among Catholics, which is a valuable analytical
concern, as far as it goes. However, this methodology systematically ignores
ex-Catholics. By design, it is blind to "defections" of youth (and adults) from
the faith, focusing only on those who are still in the fold. But that is like
trying to evaluate college retention or company job satisfaction by only
studying students who finish their degrees or studying current employees while
ignoring the college drop-outs and disgruntled workers who already left the
firm. The view produced is badly distorted.
By contrast, my National Study of
Youth and Religion [2] is a longitudinal panel study that tracked a large sample
of the same youth respondents over 10 years of their lives. We are thus able to
identify at any given time not only current Catholics, but also ex-Catholics.
And we find (and will publish in a forthcoming report) that fully one-half of
youth who self-identified as Catholic as teenagers no longer identified as
Catholics 10 years later in their 20s. That is a 50 percent loss through
attrition in one decade. If that number is not grim, I do not know what
is.
This helps explain why, according to research by the Pew Research Center
on Religion and Public Life [3], one in 10 adult Americans (13 percent) today is
an ex-Catholic. So the reason D'Antonio, Davidson, Gautier and Meyer can
disagree with my conclusions is not because they have relevant evidence that
says something different; they do not even have the empirical evidence necessary
to speak to the question at hand.
A second difference between our two
studies may help to explain why my colleagues reach such different conclusions.
While their research relied on analyses of survey data alone, my study collected
and analyzed not only survey data but also about 1,000 total in-depth personal
interviews with teenagers and emerging adults around the country. Social surveys
are good for describing simple proportions and distributions at the big-picture
level. But they suffer severe limitations in representing the intensity and
complexity of the feelings, attitudes and moods of real people on the
ground.
Personal interviews are necessary for learning about such outlooks
and emotions. By conducting so many personal interviews, my study provided
powerful gut-level insights into where youth really are in their views about
faith and church, which led to our dismal conclusions. D'Antonio, Davidson,
Gautier and Meyer's survey-only research design could not produce that kind of
immediate research experience and insight. So the reality of the church's
failure among so many youth likely was not as apparent to them.
Here, then,
is the moral of this story. What may seem to be minor distinctions in research
design often make huge differences in the kinds of evidence, comparisons and
conclusions that research can produce and support. The survey studies of
D'Antonio, Davidson, Gautier and Meyer are good for comparing differences in
attitudes among existing adult American Catholic across generations (at least,
the minority that is willing to answer surveys). But they are simply incapable
of addressing and answering the question of the church's more recent (lack of)
success in forming and retaining its youth. Studies that are designed
specifically to answer that question, by contrast, make this fact very clear,
like it or not: The situation regarding Catholic youth and the church is indeed
very grim.
[Christian Smith is the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of
Sociology and Director of the Center for the Study of Religion and Society at
the University of Notre Dame.]
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