Our churches face a demographic crisis.
Young people are leaving, even the Southern Baptist Convention is losing members, and when you drill down deeper---comparing church attendance with population growth---the picture looks even more bleak. Simply put, when America's fastest-growing religious segment is "nonreligious," we have a problem. The Barna Group recently compiled the results of a number of national studies and published a list of six reasons why young evangelicals leave the church:
- The church is overprotective.
- Their experience of Christianity is shallow.
- Churches seem antagonistic to science.
- The church's approach to sexuality is judgmental and simplistic.
- They wrestle with the exclusivity of Christianity.
- The church feels unfriendly to those who doubt.
These answers are just what you'd expect, because they correspond to
many leading churches in modern evangelicalism that combine nominally
traditional doctrine with shallow commitment and have been plagued by
rampant divorce and extramarital sex---all
against a backdrop of extreme cultural hostility. In other words, we're
about 95 percent like the surrounding culture and hated for the 5
percent deviation.
But one religious group shows consistent growth year by year and decade by decade. Mormons, living in the same country and culture as evangelicals, keep growing their church. Why? I propose six reasons.
1. Mormons have bigger families.
This is the easiest and simplest explanation. But
it's far from the entire story. In fact, if family size were
determinative, then many churches in America would be growing at a rate
that exceeded general population growth. Continue at David French
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