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Saturday, January 7, 2017

Where the church is today - Final Paper Part 2

This is a long one and much of what I discuss probably isn't news to those already actively working in the church.  But it was so informative and rewarding to pull all these factors together.  Can you think of anything I've missed?  I'd love your thoughts!

Learning objective #2: Consider the state of Protestant churches in American society today: what is working, what is not working, what changes are being pursued to bring God’s word to life?


What then are the factors in American society that are most affecting the church as it works its way through this time of change?  John Roberto addresses many of them in his book Reimagining Faith Formation for the 21st Century: increasing diversity in American society, the rise of digital technologies, changes and increasing diversity in religious belief, practices and affiliations, and a decline in religious transmission between generations.   Increasing diversity is evident in the five generations currently living in American society (silent/builders, baby boomers, Generation X, Millennials, and the iGeneration).  The United States population is becoming more diverse, as trends indicate that in the next few decades, white non-Hispanic Americans will decrease and all other ethnic categories will increase.  Diversity is also evident in the many different family structures that have arisen as marriage has declined and divorce has increased.  Roberto summarizes how this factor poses a challenge for churches: “Very few congregations are designed to address heterogeneity...How well is congregational faith formation designed to address this new diversity?  How many faith formation programs are based on outdated understandings of the people in their congregation and wider community,”?  
Another pivotal factor affecting the church is the rise of digital technology.  The Internet has saturated American society over the last couple decades and dramatically changed the way people conduct business and live their lives.  The shift of our lives into physical and digital spaces, which was made possible by the rise of the Internet, mobile devices, and social media networks, has led to the rise of “networked individualism,” in which, “[e]ach person has become a communication and information switchboard connecting persons, networks, and institutions,”.  The Internet has connected people in ways not possible before, over geographic distances and keeping people connected who no longer or never were in the same physical space.  This has redefined people’s sense of the neighborhoods they live in and who their neighbors are.  They are no longer dependent on institutions, like the church, to build connections between people.  This is especially true of Millennials, the first generation to grow up and be formed by digital technologies.  “If we want to meet the needs of our current congregations and to continue to share the Gospel with younger generations, we must understand networks and the new technologies that fuel them,”.
Finally, the number of people who consider themselves religious or claim affiliation with an organized religion has dramatically declined in the past couple decades.  At the same time, the number of people with no affiliation, the “Nones” or “Spiritual but Not Religious” (SBNRs) has increased.  People walking away from the church has been a grave concern for those within the church, but they also provide a way forward.  “Unless the church takes seriously the theological reasons that they [SBNRs] give for staying away from organized religion, any efforts to engage this population will be hampered,”.  This movement away from religion also means that faith is not being passed on from one generation to the next.  Demographically speaking this is problematic for the church because it will continue to lose members as the silent generation, who are loyal church members, dies and as the Millennial and iGenerations choose to not attend.  The church can no longer depend on family and societal expectations to keep people attending church as it did in previous decades.  The statistics of religious affiliation and practice demonstrate a deep discontent with the religious status quo and suggest that people want something different if they are to continue to engage or re-engage with the church.  
Many churches and church leaders have already begun wrestling with these challenges and are finding new ways forward.  Diana Butler Bass and John Roberto are two scholars who have considered the factors of belief, behavior, and belonging.  Previously, people spent their childhood learning what to believe about God (catechism, Sunday School, confirmation), then were expected to adopt the faith practices of their family as they reached adulthood, thereby securing their perpetual affiliation with those beliefs and the institution.  As recent years have shown, that format of fostering religious commitment is no longer effective.  Some church leaders believe that the reverse approach, belonging, behaving, and then believing, may be more relevant in today’s society for several reasons.  First, young people are highly engaged in belonging.  Through digital networks it is easy to belong to many communities, both those people are involved with in the real-world and ones they choose to engage with online.  Behavior remains an important middle step because actions are an effective method of teaching faith.  Younger generations are also attracted to action, as their learning style is strongly participatory and built on experiences.  Finally, placing belief last takes the pressure off of individuals to strictly adhere to a denomination or church’s doctrinal stances, which is something many people have cited as a problem they have with institutional religion.  Intellectual reason and scientific knowledge have dramatically changed humankind’s understanding of God and faith.  The youngest generations of today’s society are much more comfortable exploring these tensions.  A church community that embraces people and gently invites them into the life of the community, while welcoming their doubts and questions and demonstrating how to walk the life of faith in God, will likely be more effective at building faith among younger generations.
Another shift that some churches are making is to spend more time outside their walls.  Some church leaders suggest that if people are no longer coming inside churches to hear God’s word, then perhaps the role of churches needs to shift to bringing God’s word out to the people.  This shift can be seen in ministries that arise independent of denominations in order to avoid the obligations they might otherwise have to a denomination’s bureaucracy.  This shift can also be seen in pastors and church leaders who intentionally and creatively work to bring their ministry outside church walls.  From bestowing ashes on people at a subway station to sharing coffee and donuts at a bus stop to holding a worship service next to a food truck to theology discussions in pubs and coffee houses, churches are working to be present and active in the world in ways that are accessible to the religiously affiliated and unaffiliated alike.
Some within the church are also wrestling with the theology they teach.  They are not abandoning fidelity to God’s Word in order to stay relevant but rather are examining anew what God’s Word can say to contemporary culture.  In her examination of America’s “Nones,” for example, Elizabeth Drescher presents a dichotomy between Golden Rule ethics and Good Samaritan ethics.  She presents Golden Rule ethics as the “old” way: the Golden Rule assumes sameness across humans, that what is meaningful and beneficial to one will be the same for others.  While Nones express appreciation for Jesus’ teaching of this rule and often consider it part of their personal morality, they also point out that sameness among humans is not necessarily true (see earlier discussion of increasing diversity).  Nones, and others within churches, are increasingly concerned with broader, world-wide problems.  They want to meaningfully engage with those who are different from them.  The alternative, then, is Good Samaritan ethics.  Jesus’ lesson in the Good Samaritan is to care for others not as you would have them care for you but to love others in their “otherness”.  This concept is echoed by another pastor considering what a different kind of outreach could look like: “moving from a hand-out ministry, past a hands-on one, to one that values the hand-in-hand...a church’s commitment to an outreach program that insists on legitimate, relational experiences where a person is led to invest in those unlike themselves, not just with their work, but even with their intimacy, is so essential,”.  Exploring how to enact Good Samaritan ethics in church programs may lead to newer ways of speaking God’s Word to the world and attract younger generations who want to engage with their faith in participatory, relational, meaning-making ways.
 Another newer theological movement to consider is how people are finding and valuing the sacred in the ordinary.  In the Introduction to Grounded, Diana Butler Bass describes the “vertical theology” that most Christians have been taught: God is far above us in heaven and we humans are on earth, where churches are necessary to mediate between sinful humans and holy God.  In contemporary society, however, Bass sees this understanding breaking down.  “People are leading their own theological revolution and finding that the Spirit is much more with the world than we have previously been taught,”.  Drescher’s understanding of Nones confirms Bass’ assertion that people are finding and naming things holy in their everyday lives.  Many churches have recognized this and begun thinking creatively about how to join people in their sacred ordinary.  This is evidenced by their willingness to have deep theological discussions in bars and coffee shops rather than inside churches.  It is seen in events like Blessing the Backpacks before children start a new school year or a Blessing of the Animals to recognize the importance of pets in people’s lives.  Studies show that religiously affiliated Americans find sacred meaning in the same ordinary things that Nones do, things like food, family, and friends.  This common ground among two different groups demonstrates the contemporary attitude in America that churches do not have a monopoly on God or God’s presence.  Churches who can honor and become involved in the many ways that people see God in the world will have better success connecting with contemporary Americans.  
The many applications of technology to the work of the church are still being discovered, but this discovery process has already led to some exciting innovations.  One application is to use technology to provide church resources to people not physically in the church.  This can include live-streaming a church’s worship service so that members who are unable to physically attend can still participate and feel part of the congregation.  This also means distributing videos, podcasts and other content to facilitate faith formation at home among families.  One of the most significant applications of technology, however, lies in its ability to build and maintain relationships.  Since social media platforms have enabled people to live and share their lives online, churches have an opportunity to be present on those platforms.  Their presence should not be merely to advertise what is going on in their church but to engage in relationship building.  One pastor considers his vocation in this new era to be a “relational leader” whose goal is not to preserve the institution of the church but rather, “to be in relationship, and in relationship we have an opportunity to share the Gospel, finding ourselves in relationship together with God,”.  Relationships motivate young generations and they are an effective way to share God’s Word.  Utilizing technology and social media to make churches a “meaningful node” in people’s networks will help to strengthen the mission of the church.

Books cited in this portion of the paper:
John Roberto, Reimagining Faith Formation for the 21st Century: Engaging All Ages and Generations
Keith Anderson, The Digital Cathedral: Networked Ministry in a Wireless World 
Diana Butler Bass, Christianity After Religion: the End of Church and the Birth of a New Spiritual Awakening
Nate Phillips, Do Something Else: The Road Ahead for the Mainline Church
Elizabeth Drescher, Choosing Our Religion: the Spiritual Lives of America's Nones
Diana Butler Bass, Grounded: Finding God in the World-a Spiritual Revolution     

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