Secular spirituality grows among educated. Is this revival?
There is such a thing as a secular spirituality, and that may be what we are seeing today.

John Stonestreet is the President of the Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview, and co-host with Eric Metaxas of Breakpoint, the Christian worldview radio program founded by the late Chuck Colson. He is co-author of A Practical Guide to Culture, A Student's Guide to Culture and Restoring All Things.
There is such a thing as a secular spirituality, and that may be what we are seeing today.
Even as hostility toward Christianity and Christian morality has increased in recent years, a growing number of atheists, former atheists, and secularists verbalized the role Christianity played in shaping the Western world.
People often joke that if they’d known becoming a grandparent was so much fun, they would have done it before having kids.
AI chatbots have already been implicated in at least two suicides.
Even if matter and energy are the fundamental “stuff” of which everything is made, it would not follow that everything can be reduced to the sum of matter and energy.
Christians shouldn’t fall for this, no matter where it comes from.
Abortion and IVF are, as currently practiced, “two sides of the same child-commodifying coin.”
In the end, the prevention and disposal of babies becomes a kind of political sacrament, celebrated to a cartoonish degree.
Both sides of the presidential race are (finally) set, and Americans remain historically dissatisfied with both options.
Cultural Christianity recognizes that the blessings of a Christian worldview do extend beyond the community of actual believers.