Ministry News

6 Major Patterns of Change in the U.S. Church

Change usually happens slowly in the church. But a review of the past year's research conducted by the Barna Group provides a time-lapse portrayal of how the religious environment in the U.S. is morphing into something new.

Analyzing insights drawn from more than 5,000 non-proprietary interviews conducted over the past 11 months, George Barna indicated that the following patterns were evident in the survey findings.

 1. The Christian church is becoming less theologically literate.
What used to be basic, universally known truths about Christianity are now unknown mysteries to a large and growing share of Americans--especially young adults. For instance, Barna Group studies in 2010 showed that while most people regard Easter as a religious holiday, only a minority of adults associate Easter with the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Other examples include the finding that few adults believe that their faith is meant to be the focal point of their life or to be integrated into every aspect of their existence. Further, a growing majority believe the Holy Spirit is a symbol of God's presence or power, but not a living entity. As the two younger generations (Busters and Mosaics) ascend to numerical and positional supremacy in churches across the nation, the data suggest that biblical literacy is likely to decline significantly. The theological free-for-all that is encroaching in Protestant churches nationwide suggests the coming decade will be a time of unparalleled theological diversity and inconsistency.

 2. Christians are becoming more ingrown and less outreach-oriented.
Despite technological advances that make communications instant and far-reaching, Christians are becoming more spiritually isolated from non-Christians than was true a decade ago. Examples of this tendency include the fact that less than one-third of born again Christians planned to invite anyone to join them at a church event during the Easter season; teenagers are less inclined to discuss Christianity with their friends than was true in the past; most of the people who become Christians these days do so in response to a personal crisis or the fear of death (particularly among older Americans); and most Americans are unimpressed with the contributions Christians and churches have made to society over the past few years. As young adults have children, the prospect of them seeking a Christian church is diminishing--especially given the absence of faith talk in their conversations with the people they most trust. With atheists becoming more strategic in championing their godless worldview, as well as the increased religious plurality driven by education and immigration, the increasing reticence of Christians to engage in faith-oriented conversations assumes heightened significance.

 3. Growing numbers of people are less interested in spiritual principles and more desirous of learning pragmatic solutions for life.
When asked what matters most, teenagers prioritize education, career development, friendships, and travel. Faith is significant to them, but it takes a back seat to life accomplishments and is not necessarily perceived to affect their ability to achieve their dreams. Among adults the areas of growing importance are lifestyle comfort, success, and personal achievements. Those dimensions have risen at the expense of investment in both faith and family. The turbo-charged pace of society leaves people with little time for reflection. The deeper thinking that occurs typically relates to economic concerns or relational pressures. Spiritual practices like contemplation, solitude, silence, and simplicity are rare. (It is ironic that more than four out of five adults claim to live a simple life.) Practical to a fault, Americans consider survival in the present to be much more significant than eternal security and spiritual possibilities. Because we continue to separate our spirituality from other dimensions of life through compartmentalization, a relatively superficial approach to faith has become a central means of optimizing our life experience.

 4. Among Christians, interest in participating in community action is escalating.
Largely driven by the passion and energy of young adults, Christians are more open to and more involved in community service activities than has been true in the recent past. While we remain more self-indulgent than self-sacrificing, the expanded focus on justice and service has struck a chord with many. However, despite the increased emphasis, churches run the risk of watching congregants’ engagement wane unless they embrace a strong spiritual basis for such service. Simply doing good works because it's the socially esteemed choice of the moment will not produce much staying power.

 To facilitate service as a long-term way of living and to provide people with the intrinsic joy of blessing others, churches have a window of opportunity to support such action with biblical perspective. And the more that churches and believers can be recognized as people doing good deeds out of genuine love and compassion, the more appealing the Christian life will be to those who are on the sidelines watching. Showing that community action as a viable alternative to government programs is another means of introducing the value of the Christian faith in society.

 5. The postmodern insistence on tolerance is winning over the Christian church.
Our biblical illiteracy and lack of spiritual confidence has caused Americans to avoid making discerning choices for fear of being labeled judgmental. The result is a Church that has become tolerant of a vast array of morally and spiritually dubious behaviors and philosophies. This increased leniency is made possible by the very limited accountability that occurs within the body of Christ. There are fewer and fewer issues that Christians believe churches should be dogmatic about. The idea of love has been redefined to mean the absence of conflict and confrontation, as if there are no moral absolutes that are worth fighting for. That may not be surprising in a Church in which a minority believes there are moral absolutes dictated by the scriptures.

 The challenge today is for Christian leaders to achieve the delicate balance between representing truth and acting in love. The challenge for every Christian in the U.S. is to know his/her faith well enough to understand which fights are worth fighting, and which stands are non-negotiable. There is a place for tolerance in Christianity; knowing when and where to draw the line appears to perplex a growing proportion of Christians in this age of tolerance.

 6. The influence of Christianity on culture and individual lives is largely invisible.
Christianity has arguably added more value to American culture than any other religion, philosophy, ideology or community. Yet, contemporary Americans are hard pressed to identify any specific value added. Partly due to the nature of today’s media, they have no problem identifying the faults of the churches and Christian people.

 In a period of history where image is reality, and life-changing decisions are made on the basis of such images, the Christian Church is in desperate need of a more positive and accessible image. The primary obstacle is not the substance of the principles on which Christianity is based, and therefore the solution is not solely providing an increase in preaching or public relations. The most influential aspect of Christianity in America is how believers do--or do not--implement their faith in public and private. American culture is driven by the snap judgments and decisions that people make amidst busy schedules and incomplete information. With little time or energy available for or devoted to research and reflection, it is people’s observations of the integration of a believer’s faith into how he/she responds to life’s opportunities and challenges that most substantially shape people’s impressions of and interest in Christianity. Jesus frequently spoke about the importance of the fruit that emerges from a Christian life; these days the pace of life and avalanche of competing ideas underscores the significance of visible spiritual fruit as a source of cultural influence.

 With the likelihood of an accelerating pace of life and increasingly incomplete cues being given to the population, Christian leaders would do well to revisit their criteria for "success" and the measures used to assess it. In a society in which choice is king, there are no absolutes, every individual is a free agent, we are taught to be self-reliant and independent, and Christianity is no longer the automatic, default faith of young adults, new ways of relating to Americans and exposing the heart and soul of the Christian faith are required. Although there were a few subgroups that were more likely than average to experience church-based accountability, there was not a single segment for which even one out of every five people said their church does anything to hold them accountable. The segments that were most likely to have some form of church-centered accountability were evangelicals (15 percent), adults living in the western states (10 percent), people who say they are conservative on social and political matters (9 percent), and Baby Busters, who are known to be a highly relational generation (8 percent). Amazingly, while 7 percent of Protestants claimed to have such accountability there was not a single Catholic adult surveyed who claimed to be held accountable by his/her church.

Comments   

 
0 #28 Mrs. Sanchez 2011-01-25 13:39
To Jean S- I'm not lost, and I am not misinformed. I assure you that I read scripture EVERYDAY. I study portions of -not just the Torah(first 5 books of the Bible)- but ALSO the Tanakh (writings and the Prophets/rest of the Old Testament), and Brit Chadashah (New Testament) EVERY WEEK. If you would have read my other posts, you would have seen that I do read the rest of the Bible, and my faith resides in it. I quoted Zechariah, Jeremiah, Matthew, and Luke. You falsly accused me. Matt 5:17-19: "Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil. For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven."
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-1 #27 Jean S 2011-01-19 06:20
Jesus Christ' 'SACRIFICED" His life. No more sacrificial ceremonies are required. To believe such makes His death and suffering null and void! Brings tears to my eyes and sadness to my heart! You can't just read 5 books!
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-1 #26 Jean S 2011-01-19 06:15
George, I agree with all your post; I feel sad for Mrs. Sanchez, so confused, misinformed and just 'lost'
[quote name="George Bakalov"]@Mrs. Sanchez -- With all due respect, Jesus taught the Moral Law of God, not the ceremonial. He said:
"Tear down this Temple and in three days I'll put it back together." (John 2:18-19).
The apostles were Jews and as such there were certain cultural elements they were FREE to continue with. However, they never tried to impose Jewish culture onto the non-Jewish.
I happen to LOVE Jewish culture and traditions but that's besides the point here - you are trying to convince us that the teachings of Jesus and the apostles had for a purpose to bring the non-Jew into keeping the Mosaic ceremonial law and THAT IS SIMPLY NOT TRUE!
You can't just pick and choose. Do you sacrifice animals if you are such a strict Torah adherent?
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0 #25 Jean S 2011-01-19 06:11
The survey really isn't necessary for 'most' people; do you watch the news!
Quoting Bakhtin:
It is extremely difficult for me to critically assess Barna's claims here, as no real documentary evidence is provided. We are simply asked, in all but one instance, to take Barna's interpretation of the data at face value. There are a number of reasons why this approach to extrapolating conclusions from survey data is never good form. I'm willing to dialogue with these assertions but would like to be given the privilege of seeing the extent to which these six conclusions are actually suggested by evidence at hand.
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+2 #24 EvangeliDeborah Todd 2010-12-22 03:13
thanks for the eye opening study.
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0 #23 Mrs. Sanchez 2010-12-17 01:10
Matt 5:18 "For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled ."
Luk 16:17 "And it is easier for heaven and earth to pass, than one tittle of the law to fail."
According to these NT scriptures, No part of the Torah has been done away with, that includes ceremonial law. Last I looked out my window, heaven and earth has not yet passed away. People who say that ANY part of the Torah (commandments) are done away with, THOSE are the ones who are really picking and choosing what commandments they want to keep.
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-2 #22 Mrs. Sanchez 2010-12-16 13:36
George-if you don't know, then you don't know. I won't be mad at you if you can't answer my questions, just admit that you need to study it out more and then study it out and we will all be happy. I know you may think that we can not keep Torah even if we wanted to, but the Bible says I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me, and I will do what I can until He returns and restores all things so that I can keep it how it was originally intended. I am a living sacrifice to God until that day, each day that I keep His commandments I am picking up my cross and carrying it, I am praying in accordance to Torah just like the Jews do to this day, and worshipping Him in accordance to Torah. That is my means of sacrifice in these days, with no Temple.
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-1 #21 Mrs. Sanchez 2010-12-16 13:21
George, the ceremonial law was established in the Torah. It is part of the Torah. Nowhere in the Bible, even the NT, does it say, I will write the Torah (oh, except the ceremonial law) on the hearts of the people. If believers would stop JUST reading and believing the NT ONLY, then we would not have so many denominations and misinterpretations of the NT! The Torah is the foundation of the scriptures we need to understand first, then we can better understand the NT, that is why God gave us the Torah FIRST. The disciples were Jews well versed in the Torah, Paul having learned at the feet of Gamaliel, one of the greatest rabbis ever! The reason they recognized Yeshua, is because they knew what the Torah taught about HIM, and it certainly did not teach that He would do away with any part of God's law. In fact, anyone who taught anything different than what was WRITTEN according to Moses, was a false prophet.
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-1 #20 Mrs. Sanchez 2010-12-16 13:13
Sorry, case not closed. God has the last word, not George. You are pulling a liberal democrat move here-avoiding the truth (scriptures) and you have avoided answering my questions. Zech 14:18 "And any nation anywhere in the world that refuses to come to Jerusalem to worship the King, the LORD Almighty, will have no rain. And if the people of Egypt refuse to attend the festival, the LORD will punish them with the same plague that he sends on the other nations who refuse to go. Egypt and the other nations will all be punished if they don't go to celebrate the festival. On that day even the harness bells of the horses will be inscribed with these words: SET APART AS HOLY TO THE LORD. And the cooking pots in the Temple of the LORD will be as sacred as the basins used beside the altar. In fact, every cooking pot in Jerusalem and Judah will be set apart as holy to the LORD Almighty. All who come to worship will be free to use any of these pots to boil their sacrifices. SACRIFICES!!!!
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-2 #19 George Bakalov 2010-12-16 12:28
@Mrs. Sanchez - No, you can't kill - that's the MORAL LAW I spoke of before. The ceremonial law IS NO LONGER part of the New Covenant - it seems to me you're lacking basic understanding and my time is too precious to start educating someone who thinks they've got it all down. And yes, my Lord is Jesus, Yeshua, whatever name you want to use - no need for emotional speeches, we're discussing specific issues here.

Case is closed as far as I am concerned, God bless you!
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