Missions of Nonbelief: The Atheist Megachurch Movement
Charity R. Carney
Dar-win!
Former preacher Jerry DeWitt engaged in this unusual call and
response with participants at a recent Freethought Convention that I attended
at a local university. This meeting was the first annual secular convention to
take place in East Texas and it attracted hundreds of folks from the region who
came to commune with likeminded atheists/secular humanists/skeptics. I went to
observe and to hear a bit more about a new interest of mine: atheist megachurches.
I’ve read a bit about atheist congregations in the news (the NYTimes had a good
article last year) and growing international organizations like Sunday
Assemblies (recently covered in Salon),
which actually engage in missionary work to promote godless congregations.
Evangelical atheism is hipster chic and oddly Christian corporate. And it’s
just a little complicated. Are they “churches” (which is something that is
debated within secular circles) and how do they fit in to the traditional
concepts of “congregations” and “fellowships”? Much of their success stems from
their emulation of popular Christian church designs—their services mimic
Christian worship and congregations provide a sense of community and support
for members. The difference is they do all of this in a “godless” environment.
And that’s a big difference.
In the southern states, the approach to organized atheism
makes a lot of cultural sense. The atheist preacher I heard, DeWitt, runs
Community Mission Chapel in Lake Charles, Louisiana. He is a member of a cohort
of former Christians who have left the faith and adopted a secular humanist
worldview. The atheist congregations that they construct or join are described
as an attempt to bridge their atheism with a culture that revolves around
evangelical Protestantism. DeWitt (a former Pentecostal preacher) argued that
there is so much pressure in the Bible Belt to belong to a church—business
relationships are formed in Sunday School classes and friendships in the
sanctuary pews—that the irreligious need a space, too. His chapel carves out
that space within a society that often excludes non-believers. It also offers a
support network for congregants because they do not have connections to the
care and service of local Christian churches. DeWitt contends that his chapel
removes a lot of pressure for attendees who are often asked which church they
belong to. If they are not “out” as atheists in the conservative, religious
culture of Louisiana, then claiming membership to the innocuously named “Community
Mission Chapel” can help them maintain their atheist anonymity.
Certainly, secularism is not a new force in the American
religious/intellectual sphere. Susan Jacoby has written
at length on secularism as a major influence on American public life. I
found some passages in Philip Hamburger’s Separation
of Church and State interesting as I was poking through the literature to
investigate historical touchstones for the present phenomenon. Hamburger’s description of the evolution of
the National Liberal League and American Secular Union in the 19th
century struck me as eerily similar to the current atheist movement. DeWitt can
count himself as part of a preaching tradition that includes figures like
Samuel P. Putnam. In the 1880s, Putnam was dubbed the “Secular Pilgrim” and he
traveled as an atheist itinerant, “preaching the gospel of Humanity.” He led
services at a festival given by the Chicago Secular Society, which met in a
repurposed church building and opened their services with a choir greeting the
congregation. Putnam was one of several secularists who created churches and
Sunday Schools aimed at combatting the pervasive Christian influence on the
republic (see Hamburger, Separation of
Church and State). Christian forms for atheist missions—it’s starting to
sound familiar, no? I’d also reference David Hempton’s Evangelical
Disenchantment: Nine Portraits of Faith and Doubt here because it seems
to have particular relevance to folks like DeWitt who exited Christianity to
form their own chapels of nonbelief. Current atheist churches might not have
the same goals as past freethought missions, but they do share the notion that
there should be space in the public sphere for the irreligious. I’m looking
forward to hearing more from Leigh Schmidt, too, on the subject of public
atheism, as there is much more to the history here that needs to be explored.
(See Emily’s post
from last year.)
While DeWitt’s chapel reflects southern evangelical trends
(it’s a smaller congregation, the services include exhortations, singing, and a
sermon delivered with a recognizable Pentecostal fervor), Sunday Assemblies draw
on the practices and promotional activities of Protestant megachurches. Sunday Assemblies hold weekly meetings in cities
across the United States and Great Britain. They have also reached into
Belgium, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Canada, France, Hungary, Germany… it’s a
massive movement. The organization professes to be a “godless congregation that
celebrates life.” They want to encourage members to “live better, help often,
wonder more.” While they do not have a doctrine, their charter is organized
like a church doctrine and their services include liturgy, singing in unison,
and a message. They don’t accept tithes, necessarily, but they do engage in
fundraising through indiegogo and through their own website. And that swanky website appears to be very
consciously designed to look very much like some of the major megachurch websites.
(I’ll draw your attention to a past
post by Kate Bowler on this fascinating subject.) By adopting similar advertising
patterns and offering comparable amenities and community-building activities,
the assemblies are taking on mega status. I’m curious to look further in to the
pop culture references they make in their services and compare those to the
messages of evangelical pastors like Matt Pitt and Ed Young, Jr (which I’ve
written about here
and here
and… more places).
As the movement grows, I’m interested to see if and how it
takes on cultural patterns of other megachurches. Will they continue to
advertise the same way? How much influence will popular culture have on both
secular and spiritual megachurches? And how will Christian churches respond to
the growing appeal of atheist congregations? While secular churches have been
around for a while, it appears that the strategies utilized by Christian
megachurches have established successful patterns for the growth of atheist
congregations, which might (should) make Christian leaders question whether
it’s the method or the message that is drawing so many new members.
Comments
That is, is the relation of this phenomenon to a small Unitarian (or perhaps even some mainline Protestant) congregations
the same or different than the relation between a Baptist-flavored megachurch and small Baptist congregations?
M. Hulseth is quite right about "unitarianism," which started by denying the Trinity and ended up not believing in even one God, necessarily.
In the end, "liberal" theology became "humanism," which became mere politics, and liberal politics at that.
This is a very good paper on Unitarianism, which was financially obliged to merge with the theologically noncomplementary Universalism in 1961, which today is UUism, which is pretty much as M. Hulseth notes
http://www.meadville.edu/uploads/files/101.pdf
We've seen this movie before. Atheist "churches" are just cutting to the chase.
In the end, the only common ground is where there isn't any.