Do You Need God to Be Good?
In a sweeping survey of thousands across 34 countries, the Pew Research Center wanted to discover whether people felt that you needed to believe in God in order to be moral.
The results varied depending on economic development, education and age, with higher percentages in emerging economies holding to the importance of theism. But as a whole, a median of 45% say it is necessary to believe in God to be moral and have good values.
It should come as no surprise that the more a country or person is irreligious, the higher the percentage say it is not necessary to believe in God to be a moral person.
What should be alarming to those of us in the U.S. is that the 44% of Americans who say belief in God is not a prerequisite to be moral represents a 14 percentage-point jump from 2002 when only 30% embraced that idea. Among the 34 countries surveyed, the United States exhibited the largest decline in people feeling you need God to be moral.
But does linking belief in God to morality even matter?
Very much.
If you believe that God is critical to morality, then you are saying that morality is not something determined, but rather discovered; that right or wrong, good or bad, true or false, is not subjective but objective. Such things exist outside of ourselves; they have not been resolved, they have been revealed.
If you don’t believe that the existence of God – or belief in the existence of God – is necessary for morality, then you have redefined morality to be something other than rooted in transcendent truth. You have determined that morality is self-generated, self-monitored and self-ascribed. In short, you have become God to yourself.
If the majority in any given society or culture come to the idea that morality is not rooted in anything outside of themselves, then that society or culture becomes the final arbiter of what is moral. What is true, good and right becomes whatever a 51% majority say is true, good and right.
Of course, that is precisely where we find ourselves today. At least in the West. It’s no longer “what is true for you is true for you, and what is true for me is true for me,” but “what is true for us is true for us.”
And what becomes true for “us” becomes the moral standard for society at large and the means by which to declare other positions as immoral. The entire moral order of a culture can be turned entirely on its head. If you need evidence, look no further than homoerotic behavior being historically and universally condemned, to today when (in what amounts to a cultural nanosecond) people who condemn homoerotic behavior are considered the immoral ones.
Make no mistake—the “rise of the nones” carries enormous cultural implications, and makes the importance of the evangelization and transformation of culture through the centrality of the local church all the more pressing. Because the reason you need God to be good is simple:
You need God to know what good even is.
James Emery White
Sources
Christine Tamir, Aidan Connaughton and Ariana Monique Salazar, “The Global God Divide,” Pew Research Center, July 20, 2020, read online.
Griffin Paul Jackson, “Lukewarm Faith Shrinks as More Say Religion Is ‘Very Important’ or ‘Not at All,’” Christianity Today, July 24, 2020, read online.