"I think that the core doctrines of Christianity - the incarnation, the resurrection, life after death-these are as strong as ever. In fact, the belief in life after death has increased in this century"
About this Quote
The subtext is a sociologist-priest’s confidence in the data and in the durability of human longing. Greeley isn’t merely claiming that Christians still believe; he’s implying that belief is adaptive. “Core doctrines” reads like a deliberate narrowing: forget denominational quarrels, sexual ethics battles, or liturgical style wars. The engine of the tradition is the promise that death isn’t the final editor.
Context matters. Greeley came of age amid postwar prosperity, Vatican II upheaval, and a late-20th-century marketplace of spirituality: therapy culture, New Age experimentation, near-death narratives, and privatized belief untethered from church attendance. His line quietly concedes that people may drift from institutions while clinging harder to metaphysical comfort. It’s both a warning and an opportunity: the church can’t rely on cultural authority, but the appetite for transcendence remains stubbornly, statistically alive.
Quote Details
| Topic | Faith |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: PBS Religion & Ethics: Extended Interview with Andrew Gre... (Andrew Greeley, 2002)
Evidence:
I think that the core doctrines of Christianity , the incarnation, the resurrection, life after death , these are as strong as ever. In fact, the belief in life after death has increased in this century.. I verified the quote in a primary-source interview transcript published by PBS Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly on May 10, 2002. In the interview, Greeley says this in response to a question about whether Americans’ religious beliefs are softening. I did not find an earlier primary-source publication or speech containing this exact wording in the sources searched, so this is the earliest verifiable primary-source occurrence I could confirm. Quote-aggregation sites reproduce the same wording, but they are not primary sources. The phrasing and punctuation on PBS use em dashes rather than the hyphenation found on many quote sites. |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Greeley, Andrew. (2026, March 11). I think that the core doctrines of Christianity - the incarnation, the resurrection, life after death-these are as strong as ever. In fact, the belief in life after death has increased in this century. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-that-the-core-doctrines-of-christianity-139722/
Chicago Style
Greeley, Andrew. "I think that the core doctrines of Christianity - the incarnation, the resurrection, life after death-these are as strong as ever. In fact, the belief in life after death has increased in this century." FixQuotes. March 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-that-the-core-doctrines-of-christianity-139722/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I think that the core doctrines of Christianity - the incarnation, the resurrection, life after death-these are as strong as ever. In fact, the belief in life after death has increased in this century." FixQuotes, 11 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-that-the-core-doctrines-of-christianity-139722/. Accessed 11 Mar. 2026.




