The arc of human history and belief systems, especially the distinction between human needs and the institutions that arose to meet them. Religion clearly filled multiple roles at different times, social cohesion, moral frameworks, meaning, and yes, population control,long before modern states and legal systems existed.
That need is no longer universal. In many developed societies, governance, law, and education have replaced much of religion’s regulatory function, while the human appetite for meaning, awe, and ethical grounding hasn’t disappeared at all. That tension explains both the separation of church and state in some places and the intensified entanglement of the two in others.
Organized religions tend to protect themselves through exclusivity. Once a belief system becomes institutionalized, it often prioritizes its own survival over continued inquiry. That may be why modern “prophets” are dismissed outright,less because humans stopped seeking insight, and more because institutions stopped tolerating challenges to their authority.
Your menu of modern options is spot on. Many people now operate in hybrid modes: selectively religious, philosophically spiritual, ethically humanist, or simply undecided but intentional about living well. None of those paths seem inherently inferior to blind adherence, and arguably they demand more personal responsibility rather than less.
The “good without God” position, in particular, isn’t moral laziness, it’s a conscious rejection of outsourced ethics. And nature-based or contemplative practices make sense as well; they preserve awe and humility without requiring dogma or fear-based compliance.
It’s the decline of philosophers and public debate that may be more damaging than the decline of religion itself. What’s missing isn’t belief, its rigorous, curious, non-defensive exploration of what it means to be human. If anything deserves a resurgence, it’s that.
In that sense, the question may no longer be which belief system is true, but whether we’re still willing to think deeply, disagree thoughtfully, and evolve at all.