Gone are the days of the unyielding God-fearing mother as the archetype of good parenting, suggests a recent article from the Los Angeles Times. According to multiple reports, research has shown that a secular upbringing may be healthier for children. According to a 2010 Duke University study, kids raised this way display less susceptibility to racism and peer pressure, and are โless vengeful, less nationalistic, less militaristic, less authoritarian, and more tolerant, on average, than religious adults.โ But the list of benefits doesnโt stop there.

Citing Pew Research, the Timesโ Phil Zuckerman notes that thereโs been a recent spike in American households who categorize themselves as “Nones” โ their religious affiliation being โnothing in particular.โ According to Zuckerman, modern nonreligious adults account for 23 percent of Americans. As early as the โ50s, that figure was only four percent. And with godlessness on the rise, researchers have begun analyzing the benefits of nonreligious child rearing more closely.
โFar from being dysfunctional, nihilistic and rudderless without the security and rectitude of religion,โ writes Zuckerman, โsecular households provide a sound and solid foundation for children, according to Vern Bengston, a USC professor of gerontology and sociology.โ Bengston oversees the Longitudinal Study of Generations, the largest study of families and their religious affiliations in America. After noticing an uptick in nonreligious households, Bengston added secularism to the study in 2013. โMany nonreligious parents were more coherent and passionate about their ethical principles than some of the โreligious’ parents in our study,โ said Bengston in an interview with Zuckerman. โThe vast majority appeared to live goal-filled lives characterized by moral direction and sense of life having a purpose.โ
And check this out: Atheists โwere almost absent from our prison population as of the late 1990s,โ accounting for less than half of one percent of inmates, according to reports by the Federal Bureau of Prisons. โThis echoes what the criminology field has documented for more than a century,โ Zuckerman writes, โthe unaffiliated and the nonreligious engage in far fewer crimes.โ
Additionally, a troublesome report from the BBC last year found that religious children were less likely than their nonreligious peers to distinguish fantasy from reality, based on a study conducted by Boston University. Presented with realistic, religious, and fantastical stories, children were then asked whether they thought the story was real or fictional. Researchers found that โ[c]hildren with a religious upbringing tended to view the protagonists in religious stories as real, whereas children from non-religious households saw them as fictional.โ And why is this problematic? Because it muddies the waters of a childโs differentiation between reality and fiction, and even the spiritual from the fantastical.
โFor secular people, morality is predicated on one simple principle: empathetic reciprocity, widely known as the Golden Rule. Treating other people as you would like to be treated,โ writes Zuckerman. โIt is an ancient, universal ethical imperative. And it requires no supernatural beliefs.โ
So there you have it, folks. With all this in mind, go forth and rear your godless hellfire demon children, yโall. They’re likely to be less racist, less violent, and more tolerant! That’s a win if I’ve ever heard one.




