The Christian Science Monitor

Why Americans are talking less and less about ‘love’ and ‘kindness’

The Rev. Julia Jarvis, spiritual director of The Interfaith Families Project of Greater Washington, speaks to members of the community in 2014 in Kensington, Md.

It’s not often that Roy Speckhardt finds himself going to church to talk about how to make the world a better place.

Yet as a leader in the community of American atheists and humanists, he’s been part of a few interfaith councils, some of which meet in churches near Capitol Hill. He’s even served on boards for groups advocating religious freedom, offering a nontheistic perspective to wide-ranging interreligious dialogues. Still, it took a while, he says, for some of the denominational leaders to get used to his being around.

“When I first entered these circles, the thought was, ‘Oh, should we allow atheists in?’” says Mr. Speckhardt, executive director of the American Humanist Association in Washington. “Should we allow people who are nonreligious to be part of this essentially religious community? So there was this hesitation and even trepidation – and especially a gap in knowing each other’s language.”

Participants would refer to themselves as “people of faith,” for example. “But pretty quickly people started changing,” Speckhardt says. “They’d

50 percent less ‘love’ and ‘kindness’?Spiritual curiosity among MillennialsDefine ‘neighbor’

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor2 min readInternational Relations
Israel, Gaza, And The ‘Power Of Human Existence’
What does it mean to live in a war zone? For those of us who have never woken up to bomb blasts or endured missile strikes, it’s nearly impossible to imagine. Sure, we’ve seen battle footage and read accounts of the devastation and grief left behind.
The Christian Science Monitor6 min read
On Columbine Anniversary, A Nation Divided Over Guns
A quarter century after a tragic school shooting in Columbine, Colorado, shook the nation, America is as awash in guns as ever, and as divided over them, too. Here in Kennesaw, Georgia, owning guns is literally a rite of citizenship.  When Johnny Dow
The Christian Science Monitor3 min readCrime & Violence
Here Are The Three Keys To Trump’s Defense In Hush Money Lawsuit
Manhattan prosecutors have long telegraphed how they’ll frame their historic criminal case against former President Donald Trump. Mr. Trump paid hush money to porn star Stormy Daniels, prosecutors allege, to keep her from selling the story of their s

Related Books & Audiobooks