Posted on 12/25/2022 7:03:51 PM PST by DoodleBob
When Andre Audette first arrived at Notre Dame for grad school, he got a brochure about living in South Bend, Indiana.
That brochure included a section on churches and advice on which Catholic parish to attend if you were conservative and which to attend if you were liberal.
While Audette ignored the brochure’s advice — choosing a different parish altogether — the link between church shopping and politics stuck with him.
“I found that kind of fascinating,” said Audette, now an assistant professor of political science at Monmouth College in Central Illinois.
Audette is co-author of a new study on the role politics plays in finding a church, published in “Religion and Politics,” a journal of the American Political Science Association. The study — based on a survey of 2,000 Americans — found about half of those surveyed said they had gone shopping for a new church. The survey also found about 1 in 10 Americans (11.1%) said they’d left a church for political reasons, with another 7% saying they’d “seriously considered” leaving their church over politics.
Evangelical Christians (81%) were most likely to have shopped for a new church.
Mainline Protestants (30%) and atheists (32%) were most likely to say they’d left a church or thought about leaving over politics. Atheists (16%) were least likely to have shopped for a new church, while Black Protestants (13%) were least likely to have left a church due to politics.
When it comes to politics, Mainline Protestant churches are in a difficult spot, because they are more politically diverse than either evangelical churches or Black Protestant churches. In the 2020 election, 91% of Black Protestant voters supported Democratic candidate Joe Biden, while 84% of white evangelical voters voted for Republican candidate Donald Trump, according to analysis by Pew Research.
Mainline Protestants, which Pew described as “white, non-evangelical” Christians, were split — with 43% voting for Biden, 57% for Trump.
When they are shopping for a new church, evangelicals go looking for another conservative evangelical church like the one they left, where most people vote Republican, said Audette.
“Democrats are mostly just leaving the more liberal denominations,” he said. “It’s a hard time to be a mainline Protestant right now.”
The study in “Religion and Politics” was based on survey data collected in 2017. Audette suspects that political polarization has gotten worse since then, especially due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which likely intensified the role politics plays in congregations.
Audette, who is Catholic, said he’s seen polarization affect both Catholic parishes and Protestant churches, turning congregations into the same kind of echo chambers that can be found in other parts of American culture.
“We are starting to see churches that are really formulating their identity around these political ideals,” he said. “That’s really harmful, because it used to be the case that when you’d go to church, you’d sit next to someone who’s a Republican, someone who’s Democrat, and you’d get a little bit of cross-cutting discussion going,” he said. “That’s not happening anymore.”
Scholars such as Ruth Braunstein at the University of Connecticut have argued that the rise of partisan politics, especially by the religious right, has helped fuel the decline of organized religion and the rise of the nones — Americans who claim no religious identity. About 3 in 10 Americans now would be considered nones, according to Pew Research. In the book “Secular Surge,” which looks at the nation’s growing secular population, the authors argue that conservative politics has made some Americans “allergic to religion.”
A recent survey from Lifeway Research, an evangelical research group, found that half of Protestant churchgoers agreed with the statement, “I prefer to attend a church where people share my political beliefs.” That same survey found that 55% of Protestant churchgoers said people in their congregation shared their political beliefs, while only 23% said people in their church held different beliefs.
Pew Research found in 2016 that about half (49%) of Americans have looked for a new congregation at some point in their life. The most common reason was that they moved (34%), got married or divorced (11%) or disagreed with clergy (11%). That study found that the quality of sermons (83%), a warm welcome (79%), the style of worship (74%) and location (70%) had the most impact when choosing a new house of worship.
Audette, who co-authored the study with Shay R. Hafner, one of his students at Monmouth, has argued in the past that politics may be good for some churches, driving up attendance, but can be bad for religion. In a 2016 article, based on a previous study, he and co-author Christopher Weaver compared the mix of religion and politics to American fast food — which tastes good but is not good for you.
“Although the overall number of fast food consumers continues to shrink, the most successful chains can gain more of the remaining consumers by doubling down on the very practices that are shrinking the market,” they wrote. “Similarly, a church’s political activities may do little to change the public image of religion in the U.S., but they do make the church more appealing to those who still attend church.”
The appeal of politics to churchgoers puts pastors in a difficult spot, he said, something he hopes to study in the future. The very things that may help their church grow could turn away those outside the church.
“Do you double down on the people that are interested in conservative religion and politics and just try to appeal to them?” he said. “Or do you try to open it up, engage some topics that might be uncomfortable for people? That’s a really hard decision to make.”
No supposition. Based upon my actual, church-going experience in the 1960s and 1970s in America's heartland.
You got sumpin' better?
I call! (Poker)
Regards,
Apparently some Liberals are religious.
I wasn't referring to conversations being conducted while the Holy Host was being elevated!
Didn't your pastor or priest ever conclude the service and then include a few "program notes" about upcoming church events? A parish breakfast, Dads' Softball Game, or the like?
Regards,
Well, more power to yuh!
And "Cheers!"
(hic!)
Regards,
The Left has politicized EVERYTHING. How did we find ourselves in this situation? Spineless Republicans haven’t stood up to the bullying in any areas of our lives.
College students have said, in record numbers, they fear disagreeing with their Profs as it will affect their grades. The Left wants our beloved country to completely fail and Republicans in Government ‘go along to get along’. They are going along right into a broken country where Marxists will jump in to ‘save us’. The fat lady is preparing to sing.
I'm very happy to be wrong here. I was thinking in general of the historically black denominations such as AME/AME Zion and National Baptist, which are the religious equivalent of NAACP.
All the historically white denominations have split in two conservative/liberal, but that doesn't seem to happen in the historically black denominations.
“A rainbow flag in front of a church is a red flag for me.”
________________________________
You think?????
Me too! No F’n way I’d even step foot in a rainbow flag draped church!
Might as well have NO church!
Either you follow the Holy Bible to the one true God, or you don’t follow the Bible and follow some dream of what you wish God was.
Sadly, few churches actually follow the Bible anymore. It’s the main reason why America is now lost.
Church should not be about feeling good about yourself. Church should be about realizing how pathetic you are in comparison to the pureness of Jesus, and doing everything you can to help everyone improve. Most simply can’t handle the truth, or want to work any harder than they already do at it.
I finally left a fairly liberal UMC when they said anyone who disagreed with the new LGBT wokeness was a bigot. I saw that it was becoming a cult. We went to a very conservative non-denom but we moved so we are now in a non-political UMC.
“Atheists (16%) were least likely to have shopped for a new church”
It’s another Sherlock sighting!
Because they know they'll never have to put up with the nonsense forced on white churches.
I hope it all comes back to bite them in the butt one day.
I took my family to a social event at our church. As people began mingling, I found myself withdrawing and not wanting to talk to anyone. This puzzled me: these are people I love and it’s not like me to be that way.
I began praying about it, and I saw in my mind a church we had passed on the way to our church. It had a rainbow flag out front and their sign had some message that was pro-homosexual. I was grieving over that church.
I grabbed a couple of my friends and we went to a corner and prayed about that church.
The church we attend on Sunday makes FR look leftist.
Hilarious!
Well. Habitual. Probably went to church in their youth and feel like it’s a comfort to continue to go. And the fake gospel they hear makes them feeeeeel good.
Got one like that in my family. Very woke and supports the agenda of the left. And he's an Episcopalian. Very big on being part of his flock.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.