Sex and Secularism: What Happens When You Leave Religion, A survey of over 14,500 American
Secularists. A ground-breaking study of sexuality among the non-religious.

About the principle researchers:

Dr. Darrel W. Ray is a psychologist, director of The Institute for Performance Culture and author
of the best selling book The God Virus: How Religion Infects Our Lives and Culture and author of two
books on organizational psychology. In his career he has been interviewed for the Wall Street Journal,
ABC News Nightline, and many other media sources. He has spoken throughout North America as well as
Ireland and the UK. His new book, Sex and God: How Religion Distorts Sexuality will be released in late
2011. Amanda Brown is an undergraduate at Kansas University studying sex and sexuality.

Key findings:

  1. Sex improves dramatically after leaving religion.
  2. Sexual guilt has little staying power after leaving religion.
  3. Those raised most religious show no difference from those raised least religious in their sexual
    behavior.
  4. Those raised most religious experience far more guilt but have just as much sex.
  5. Religious parents are far worse at educating their children on matters of sex.
  6. Religious guilt differs in measurable amounts according to denomination.

This ground-breaking study surveyed over 14,500 secularists about their sex lives. This first of its
kind survey looks at attitudes and behavior related to sexuality and religion including religious sexual guilt,
parenting behavior, sex education and sexual satisfaction before and after leaving religion.

The most important finding shows dramatic improvement in sexual satisfaction and a decrease in
guilt after people left religion. Approximately 55%% of respondents said their sex life greatly improved an
8, 9 or 10 (on a 10 pt. scale) after leaving religion while only 2.2% said it became worse.

The primary findings show that people who are religious have a good deal of guilt about sex
and sexuality but their behavior is about the same as the non-religious.
Guilt is a key component of
religious attitudes about sex but actual behavior, whether first masturbation, first oral sex, first intercourse,
etc. do not change appreciably with religiosity.

The US government has been deeply involved in abstinence only education for almost 10 years.
The government’s own research shows that such programs do not work or at best, delay the onset of sexual
behavior by months. Results of this survey closely mirror those of abstinence only programs. Children
from religious homes don’t delay sexual activities appreciably but they feel guilty about doing it and
probably know less about sex and protecting themselves, than their secular counterparts.

One key finding was a clear pattern of improvement in sexual satisfaction depending on
former religious affiliation. (See chart below) Those leaving high guilt religions showed the most
improvement in their sex life.

The study found guilt to be measurably different depending on the denomination. This may sound
obvious, but no one has actually tried to measure this before. The study concluded that Mormons,
Jehovah’s Witness, Pentecostal, Seventh Day Adventists, and Baptists are among the most guilt driven of
religions with Unitarians, Atheists and Episcopalians being among the least.

In the US, many religious leaders are against sex education in schools and insist that parents and
churches should be primarily responsible. Results of this survey show parents, whether religious or not, are
not particularly good at talking to their children. More secular parents do talk to their children 38% of the
time to a mere 13% of religious parents. People from religious homes felt that their education in sex was
poor compared to those from less religious homes.

Most religions preach strongly against pornography so it is reasonable to think that porn use would
be less among the more religious. This survey found that porn use is quite high in all groups and is a key
source of sex education for religious teens. The most religious teens said they got their sex education from porn 33% of the time, the less religious 25.2% of the time. The survey found that 90% of men were using pornography by age 21 with no significant difference between those most and least religious. For women,
over 50% were using porn by age 21 and 70% at age 30, with little difference between most and least
religious.

Religions teach against sex before marriage, but the survey found that differences between the
most and least religious was negligible. Most important, religious teens said they got their sexual education
from personal experience 50.2% compared to 42.4% for the less religious. In other words, children raised
most religious are experimenting with sex more than those raised non-religious.

Women and men saw equal improvement after religion. Those who felt their sex life was worse
gave revealing comments like:

“Since leaving religion, I have not had a physical or emotional relationship with my wife.”

“Since becoming an atheist I have not met anyone who does not have some religious or ‘spiritual’ belief
system. As a result, life is very lonely. I am proactively meeting new single members of the opposite sex, in
an effort to find someone who does not believe in the supernatural.”

Some said that religion contributed to marital problems. Those married to very religious people had the
least satisfying sex lives and reported many restrictions on what was allowed, even if they had been
married many years.

“Once, my wife came home from Church and announced that there will be no more oral sex because the
priest said oral sex was a sodomy and she should not practice it.”

“His religiosity prevents us from having honest discussion. I feel like there is an unseen wall between us
now.

The researchers expected to find those who left religion with residual effects of guilt for years
after. Surprisingly, those who had been out of religion for several years reported few residual effects with
great sexual satisfaction. Many indicated that leaving religion had a strong positive impact on their sexual
satisfaction.

The study concludes that “biology happens” and people will have sex regardless of religious
training. Religious parents do a poor job of educating their children leaving them without the tools to make
good decisions. That religious people have more guilt about sex but do it just as much. That the effects of
religion wear off fairly quickly for most people once they leave religion entirely. Finally, leaving religion
improves sexual satisfaction dramatically for most people.

The full report can be downloaded at www.IPCpress.com (free registration required to download). Dr. Ray is available
for comment, discussion or interviews.

For further information please visit www.ipcpress.com