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Report: Mainline Protestant Churches Face Rockier Future (Membership Decline, Evangelicals Growing)
Christian Post ^ | 12/7/2009 | Audrey Barrick

Posted on 12/07/2009 4:27:19 PM PST by SeekAndFind

Mainline Protestant churches seem to have weathered the past decade better than many people have assumed, but the future is raising serious challenges to continued stability, said a Christian pollster.

George Barna analyzed data for The Barna Group's latest report examining mainline denominations. Weekend attendance at mainline churches has remained relatively stable, ranging from 89 to 100, over the past decade but the report suggests that they may be "on the precipice of a period of decline."

Mainline bodies – which the research group identifies as American Baptist Churches in the USA; The Episcopal Church; the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; the Presbyterian Church (USA); the United Church of Christ; and the United Methodist Church – once dominated the Protestant landscape of America but today make up just one-fifth of all Protestant congregations today, the report notes.

Declining membership since the 1950s plus the growth among evangelical and Pentecostal churches have contributed to the shrinking of the mainline sector.

Only 15 percent of American adults identify with a mainline church, according to The Barna Group.

But even among congregants in mainline churches, the report points to a lack of commitment. Adherents are attending church services less frequently than they used to, volunteerism has dropped by 21 percent, and adult Sunday school involvement has decline by 17 percent since 1998.

Only 31 percent of mainline adults believe they have a personal responsibility to discuss their faith with people who have different beliefs and a minority of them are presently involved in some type of personal discipleship activity.

Many are also considering other spiritual options, the report states. Only 49 percent of mainline adults say they are "absolutely committed to Christianity;" less than half contend that the Bible is accurate in the life principles it teaches; more than half (51 percent) say they are willing to try a new church; and 67 percent are open to pursuing faith in environments or structures that are different from those of a typical church.

Additionally, 72 percent say they are more likely to develop own religious beliefs than to adopt those taught by their church and 86 percent sense that God is motivating people to stay connected to Him through different means and experiences than in the past.

Softly-held convictions are not the only things threatening the stability of mainline groups. The Ventura, Calif.-based research group predicts a rockier future as the percentage of adults attending mainline congregations who have children under the age of 18 living in their home has dropped (22 percent); the proportion of single adults has risen to 39 percent of all mainline adult attendees; and the number of divorced and widowed adherents has increased.

While weekend attendance has remained stable the report suggests that mainline churches have been attracting "just enough newcomers" to maintain their attendance levels and has not kept up with overall population growth in America.

Mainline churches are also not attracting many young people who are 25 or younger or minorities. Young adults make up only 2 percent of all adults attending mainline churches and Hispanics and Asians make up only 8 percent of mainline congregants.

The report draws attention to the significance of the failure to draw the growing Hispanic population. Moreover, many Hispanics are found to be leaving Catholicism and joining Protestant churches, but they're mostly settling into evangelical or Pentecostal Protestant congregations.

In other findings, pastors in mainline churches on average last only four years – about half the average among Protestant pastors in non-mainline churches – before moving to another congregation. The future of mainline churches hinges partly on the quality of leadership provided, Barna said.

The report is based on several national surveys among 267 mainline adults in 1998 and 1,148 adults in 2008. The surveys among pastors involved 492 mainline senior pastors.


TOPICS: Current Events; Mainline Protestant; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: 2009polls; barna; christianright; church; ecusa; elca; evangelicals; future; pcusa; protestant; religiousleft; schism; trends; ucc; umc
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1 posted on 12/07/2009 4:27:19 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

**Only 31 percent of mainline adults believe they have a personal responsibility to discuss their faith with people who have different beliefs and a minority of them are presently involved in some type of personal discipleship activity. **

A very sad number.


2 posted on 12/07/2009 4:29:10 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: SeekAndFind
You can't call a church mainline if it no longer preaches and teaches the Gospel of Jesus Christ. What the MSM calls mainline are political country clubs for the politically correct pagan and the faux religion of global warming. It should come as no surprise they are dying.
3 posted on 12/07/2009 4:33:23 PM PST by Patrick1
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To: SeekAndFind

If the gray hair I see every time I’m in Church is any indication, I’d say there is going to be a huge decline in the need for church parking lots over the next 20 years.


4 posted on 12/07/2009 4:34:38 PM PST by MSF BU (++)
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To: SeekAndFind

Real people aren’t going to sit in the pew for 20 years listening to heresy and stick around.

accepting homo’s for clergy positions and now this ;http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2402432/posts

I’d hate to be them come judgement day.


5 posted on 12/07/2009 4:36:26 PM PST by diverteach
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To: Salvation
Most mainline adults I know and have known are vaguely embarrassed by the gospel, probably fearing ridicule from their liberal friends. And if the subject arises will hurriedly move on to a more comfortable topic.

May be related to a UCC service I attended last year, in which the name of Jesus was never mentioned.

6 posted on 12/07/2009 4:36:40 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: Salvation

“A very sad number”

Sad because the fact is that most churches do not teach sound doctrine, hence the fellowship doesn’t really know what they believe. How can you witness if you don’t know what you believe? The Lord may tarry for another thousand years but the age of apostacy has begun.


7 posted on 12/07/2009 4:36:58 PM PST by Murp (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
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To: MSF BU
If the gray hair I see every time I’m in Church is any indication,

Just curious --- doesn't your church have a Sunday School, Children's Program or Youth Program ? Every growing church that I know of have thriving programs like these.
8 posted on 12/07/2009 4:36:58 PM PST by SeekAndFind (wH)
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To: SeekAndFind

Mainline churches are declining, imo, because they are being so open minded their brains fall out.

Sarcasm aside, the essential problem is they no longer emphasize Sola Scriptura and Christ as The Way, Truth and Life.

What follows from that is the liberal social and economic policies we here at Free Republic disdain so much.

Don’t know if the United Methodist Church is considered “mainline”, but they are going that way, too.

A danger resides in stand alone evangelical churches: hobby horses, the danger of exclusivity, and some other problems. We in evangelicalism would do well to beware, even as we see the Christian churches of yesteryear go the way of the dinosaur.


9 posted on 12/07/2009 4:37:41 PM PST by Recovering_Democrat
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To: Murp

I know what the Catholic Church believes! I wish more Catholics did too.

Many of the people here on FR know their faith and are willing to speak out.

I think we all wish that there were more. (Can we clone ourselves? LOL!)


10 posted on 12/07/2009 4:41:42 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: diverteach
****Real people aren’t going to sit in the pew for 20 years listening to heresy and stick around.****

Unless of course they might be seeking a parties presidential nomination.

11 posted on 12/07/2009 4:41:42 PM PST by fkabuckeyesrule (Dagmar is back. Yeah!!!!!!)
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To: SeekAndFind
The "mainline" denominations aren't mainline anymore. They are dying.

The why is simple; when the spirit departs the body dies.

many Hispanics are found to be leaving Catholicism and joining Protestant churches, but they're mostly settling into evangelical or Pentecostal Protestant congregations.

There is an interesting dynamic. The fast growing churches are being flooded with people of catholic background. There is a kind of cross fertilization going on as mainline protestants become catholics and catholics migrate into especially the "non-denominationl" evangelical movements. The effects are seen not so much at the doctrinal level where doctrines remain pretty firm, but at the level of a kind of sensibility.

12 posted on 12/07/2009 4:49:00 PM PST by marron
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To: SeekAndFind

Regarding other comments about demographics, my church (a Christian Reformed Church [the more conservative of the two Dutch Calvinist denominations]) has bazillions of kids. I know because I sit in the back. It is amazing to see how many good [any generally well-educated, unlike the liberal stereotypes] folks are having 3-5 kids these days. Gives one hope. It doesn’t mean that our pastor is politically incorrect (he still hates the Iraq war; on the other hand, he did subtly slam the Lutherans for going gay), it just means that preaching the Gospel and holding up the Bible as a guidepost for all of us is an honest and attractive message.


13 posted on 12/07/2009 4:51:31 PM PST by opocno (Iran, the other dead meat)
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To: SeekAndFind
I agree with all of the above. Mainline “churches” are social clubs at best and, at worst, have been perverted into advocates for “social justice” and other statist causes. Good riddance to bad rubbish (and I say this as someone who grew up in a “mainline” denomination).
14 posted on 12/07/2009 4:53:00 PM PST by Opinionated Blowhard
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To: SeekAndFind

Thank you Evangelicals. The West needs strong Protestant churches.


15 posted on 12/07/2009 5:06:27 PM PST by Rosemont
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To: Recovering_Democrat

>>Don’t know if the United Methodist Church is considered “mainline”, but they are going that way, too.

The UMC is considered mainline, and like all mainline churches, it has a problem. They need to attract the young adults, but young adults are confused. They want an all-inclusive, big tent atmosphere that accepts everyone for what they are and never judges or nudges. But, once they get inside, that type of church offers nothing in the way of spiritual guidance and it just becomes a social club for them. They want a huge church, with all the amenities, but don’t want to contribute money or time to make it happen.

Basically, they want a church with everything, as long as someone else pays for it and does all the work. They don’t want to read the Bible or listen to long sermons or to attend in-depth Bible study, but they want the full understanding from their first day. It’s just a reflection of what they want from everything in our sound-bite, special-effects, entitlement culture.

I’m heavily involved in the UMC’s ReThink Church initiative in my congregation and the contradictions between what people want and what they say they need are enough to make you want to give up. But I keep trying to figure out the balance and help create a place where people can come to know Jesus.


16 posted on 12/07/2009 5:08:33 PM PST by Bryanw92 (Question O-thority)
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To: SeekAndFind

This isn’t really all that surprising.

Evangelical Churches have a vibrant faith. They have faith in Christ, faith in the Scriptures, and faith in the workings of the Holy Spirit.

Mainline Churches, for the most part, have become little more than, “Let’s-Dress-Up-On-Sundays-And-Play-Happy-Feel-Good-Hour.” Sure, many of them, such as the Episcopalian Church, have wonderful liturgies but that means nothing when there is no substance involved.

I myself am fond of traditional liturgies, which is why I have not gone the Evangelical path myself. Fortunately, I attend an Anglican church in California - our diocese broke away from the ECUSA and is quite traditional in its faith. Were it not for this, I’d personally probably put aside my love of liturgy for my love of sound doctrine in Christ - outward forms must always take a backseat to living faith.

Catholics, along with Orthodox Christians, are in a unique position in that the nature of their views precludes the idea of the faithful departing the Church. Sedevancatists aside, the more faithful one is to traditional Church teaching the less likely they will be to depart from the Church itself due to Church teaching that it IS the One True Church of Christ. This has granted these Churches an advantage in being able to maintain their more faithful and zealous members. As Protestants, however, we do not believe this about our own denominations and thus the tendency to leave and form new groups when the old are found wanting.


17 posted on 12/07/2009 5:21:59 PM PST by MWS
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To: Bryanw92
but they want the full understanding from their first day

They need an in depth teaching of Mark 4:4-8

As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up.

"Other seed fell on the rocky ground where it did not have much soil; and immediately it sprang up because it had no depth of soil.

But when the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no root.

Other seed fell among thorns, which grew up and choked the plants, so that they did not bear grain.

"Other seeds fell into the good soil, and as they grew up and increased, they yielded a crop and produced thirty, sixty, and a hundredfold."

Mark 4:28 For the earth bringeth forth fruit of herself; first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear.
18 posted on 12/07/2009 5:22:26 PM PST by presently no screen name
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To: Bryanw92

I say bless you if you’re really working to change the UMC.

The mission of that church organization, imho, has become polluted with liberals in leadership positions.

I left it years ago, sad about the situation in the UMC as a whole and at my congregation in particular. We were heavily active in the worship service planning—trying to make it friendlier to younger people while remaining biblical.

Older adherants to the faith didn’t like the loud music. And so it goes.

Long story short, we left.


19 posted on 12/07/2009 5:43:55 PM PST by Recovering_Democrat
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To: presently no screen name

“Sola Scriptura”

Yeah, I guess if you want a church that rejects birth control, it’s the sola scriptura folks you want... ;)

There are many reasons for why they are declining, but turning away from sola scriptura is not one of them.


20 posted on 12/07/2009 5:47:48 PM PST by BenKenobi
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