Where Have All the Presbyterians Gone?

Wall Street Jounral: Where Have All the Presbyterians Gone?

Nondenominational churches are the fastest growing in the country.

Are we witnessing the death of America's Christian denominations? Studies conducted by secular and Christian organizations indicate that we are. Fewer and fewer American Christians, especially Protestants, strongly identify with a particular religious communion—Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian, Pentecostal, etc. According to the Baylor Survey on Religion, nondenominational churches now represent the second largest group of Protestant churches in America, and they are also the fastest growing.

More and more Christians choose a church not on the basis of its denomination, but on the basis of more practical matters. Is the nursery easy to find? Do I like the music? Are there support groups for those grappling with addiction?

This trend is a natural extension of the American evangelical experiment. After all, evangelicalism is about the fundamental message of Christianity—the evangel, the gospel, literally the "good news" of God's kingdom arriving in Jesus Christ—not about denomination building. …

… But there are some signs of a growing church-focused evangelicalism. Many young evangelicals may be poised to reconsider denominational doctrine, if for no other reason than they are showing signs of fatigue with typical evangelical consumerism.

For example, artists such as Keith and Kristen Getty and Sojourn Music are reaching a new generation with music written for and performed by local congregations. Yes, prosperity preacher Joyce Meyer sells her book "Eat the Cookie, Buy the Shoes," which encourages Christians to "lighten up" by eating cookies and buying shoes (seriously). But, at the same time, Alabama preacher David Platt is igniting thousands of young people with his book "Radical," which calls Christians to rescue their faith by lowering their standard of living and giving their time and money to Church-based charities. …

 


Comments

4 responses to “Where Have All the Presbyterians Gone?”

  1. Dr. Moore emphasized on Twitter that he didn’t write the headline. It was the WSJ editors.

  2. Journalists editing religion stories … rarely a positive outcome. 😉

  3. This makes two instances in just a few months of the WSJ editors focusing on Presbyterians in articles that were broader in scope. The other one (even though it did talk about the PCUSA, inaccurately but nonetheless it was there) was the 12/3 piece “Presbyterians Against Israel.” Makes me wonder what’s going on at the WSJ…

  4. Interesting catch, Chad. “Presbyterian” evidently is an important symbol to someone at WSJ.

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