If we look at the West, it is almost completely secularized. Traditional Catholic and Protestant countries are mostly secular and while most of the population still indentifies themselfs as Christians they are mostly unpractising. If we look at traditional muslim or orthodox countries(except for former communist one) they are mostly religious. Why is that? I think that that happened because of the RCC mitigation of some strict rules after Second Vatican council. There need to be strict rules, because that literally forces people to follow other teahings of the Church. When the most strict rules go, that is the time when people start ignoring others as well. What do you think?
You are asking a question that the Church is currently puzzling over.
There is no definitive Church dogma on what is happening, but there is one theological hypothesis I’ve heard at length about over the past 20 years. While there are many, it seems in my limited world of understanding to be the most popular (and sobering). It is the possibility that we are either in or witnessing the beginning of what Jesus referred to as the end or fulfillment of the “times of the Gentiles.”–Luke 21:24.
In Romans 11:25, St. Paul stated that his own people, the Jews, were to be few in accepting the Gospel of Christ until a certain event occurred.
Blindness in part has happened in Israel, until the full number of the Gentiles should come in.
According to Jesus in Luke 21:24, the city of
Jerusalem will be trampled underfoot by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled.
At the end of the Six-Day War, upon Israeli troops reaching the Western Wall, then Defense Minister Moshe Dayan was reported as saying: “We have returned to all that is holy in our land. We have returned never to be parted from it again.”
Since the outbreak of the world wars and very much since this occurrence the previous lands of Christendom have become more and more secular. Is this a coincidence? Perhaps. It would be foolish to rush to judgment and say for ourselves what only belongs to God to say.
But even in the Church there has been a watchful eye on this turn of the nations of Christendom away from God, with Europe being the hardest hit. Religion in the Americas has become somewhat hollow as well, assimilating itself to Western culture and mores instead of converting from them.
While countries where the Orthodox are feeling the change too, though in some ways not as dramatically, it is the Eastern cultures that have nothing to do with the Gospel of Christ that have remained culturally intact (though that has begun to fade drastically in many respects). Muslims and Jews have a religion that intertwines with the culture, whereas Western culture demands that religion stay separate from it.
Is this a definite answer of any kind. No. Have the times of the Gentiles expired? We can’t say for sure. Is there any advantage to belonging to other faiths that are connected to their culture more readily? They themselves are fighting (and in some ways losing) the battle against secular Western culture. It’s not religion of any type that is at fault, it is the formidable appeal of secular culture and its ease of assimilating so many to the point of abandoning their heritage, religion and ethnic.
So to answer “Why?” Beyond this it may be something we can only answer in hindsight, once it is all over.
It should be noted that there are other ways to define many of the things I’ve discussed here. There may be valid arguments to the contrary of what I’ve written. The comments above should not be inferred as a testimony representing my personal convictions on these matters.