I seldom need to be reminded that I am a step or two behind the times. But my atavistic tendencies were almost comically dramatized a week ago, when I returned home from three days spent re-enacting a nearly 500-year-old religious ritual — only to glance at the front page of my very own newspaper and learn that "the fastest-growing religion in the United States [is] ... none at all."
The Star Tribune's well-read occasional series on "The unchurching of America" had already poignantly described the struggles of many churches, especially in rural areas, as their congregations grow smaller and older. In last Sunday's third installment, reporter Jean Hopfensperger explored what she called "the biggest force behind … empty pews across Minnesota and the United States — [the fact that] nearly one in four Americans now declare themselves unaffiliated with any organized religion."
In a way, I suppose I am part of this thoroughly modern trend. Having grown up as something of a lukewarm mainline Protestant (if that's not a redundancy), I have long since become something of a religious dilettante, sampling and admiring various faiths from a safe distance.
But the hard stuff — contemplative Catholicism — has exerted the strongest pull.
For more than 30 years, I've spent a three-day weekend each autumn in quiet reflection at Demontreville Jesuit Retreat House in Lake Elmo. It's an unusual Twin Cities institution where, since 1948, up to 70 men have gathered nearly 50 weekends each year to collectively, but silently, undertake the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius (founder of the Jesuits), a series of Christian reflections on the purpose of life.
Ignatius developed this workout regime in Spain — in the 1520s.
As you might imagine, most of the pilgrims at Demontreville are devoted cradle Catholics, with a few of us dedicated dabblers mixed in. And though we all seem in most respects to be spectacularly ordinary fellows, it is oddly pleasing to learn that such old-fashioned tastes in spirituality make us a sort of subversive sect in today's fashionably (and increasingly) secular society — almost as rebellious as the early Christians were.
And in another sense, we "retreatants," as the Jesuits call us, are citizens of the world compared with the proliferating "nones" in America and Western Europe, who are becoming steadily more unlike the rest of humanity in this respect. As I've noted several times before, swelling global populations of Muslims and conservative, Southern Hemisphere Christians are making non-Western humanity ever more devout even as the rich world loses faith.