NY Times
 
The Decline of  Evangelical America
 
 
By JOHN  S. DICKERSON
Published: December 15, 2012 

 
 
Prescott, Ariz.  
IT hasn’t been a good year for evangelicals. I should  know. I’m one of 
them.  
In 2012 we witnessed a collapse in American  evangelicalism. The old 
religious right largely failed to affect the Republican  primaries, much less 
the 
presidential election. Last month, Americans voted in  favor of same-sex 
marriage in four states, while Florida voters rejected an  amendment to 
restrict abortion.  
Much has been said about conservative Christians and  their need to retool 
politically. But that is a smaller story, riding on the  back of a larger 
reality: Evangelicalism as we knew it in the 20th century is  disintegrating.  
In 2011 the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life  polled church leaders 
from around the world. Evangelical ministers from the  United States reported 
a greater loss of influence than church leaders from any  other country — 
with some 82 percent indicating that their movement was losing  ground.  
I grew up hearing tales of my grandfather, a pastor,  praying with 
President Ronald Reagan at the White House. My father, also a  pastor, prayed 
with 
George W. Bush in 2000. I now minister to my own  congregation, which has 
grown to about 500, a tenfold increase, in the last four  years (by God’s favor 
and grace, I believe). But, like most young evangelical  ministers, I am 
less concerned with politics than with the exodus of my  generation from the 
church.  
Studies from established evangelical polling  organizations — LifeWay 
Research, an affiliate of the Southern Baptist  Convention, and the Barna Group 
— 
have found that a majority of young people  raised as evangelicals are 
quitting church, and often the faith, entirely.  
As a contemporary of this generation (I’m 30), I  embarked three years ago 
on a project to document the health of evangelical  Christianity in the 
United States. I did this research not only as an insider,  but also as a 
former 
investigative journalist for an alt weekly.  
I found that the structural supports of evangelicalism  are quivering as a 
result of ground-shaking changes in American culture.  Strategies that 
served evangelicals well just 15 years ago are now self-  destructive. The more 
that evangelicals attempt to correct course, the more they  splinter their 
movement. In coming years we will see the old evangelicalism  whimper and 
wane.  
First, evangelicals, while still perceived as a  majority, have become a 
shrinking minority in the United States. In the 1980s  heyday of the Rev. 
Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority, some estimates accounted  evangelicals as a 
third or even close to half of the population, but research by  the Notre Dame 
sociologist _Christian  Smith_ (http://www.nd.edu/~csmith22/)  recently found 
that Christians who call themselves evangelicals  account for just 7 
percent of Americans. (Other research has reported that some  25 percent of 
Americans belong to evangelical denominations, though they may  not, in fact, 
consider themselves evangelicals.) Dr. Smith’s findings are  derived from a 
three-year national study of evangelical identity and influence,  financed by 
the Pew Research Center. They suggest that American evangelicals now  number 
around 20 million, about the population of New York State. The global  
outlook is more optimistic, as evangelical congregations flourish in places 
like  
China, Brazil and sub-Saharan Africa.  
But while America’s population grows by roughly two  million a year, 
attendance across evangelical churches — from the Southern  Baptists to 
Assembles 
of God and nondenominational churches — has gradually  declined, according 
to surveys of more than 200,000 congregations by the  American Church 
Research Project.  
The movement also faces a donation crisis as older  evangelicals, who give 
a disproportionately large share, age. Unless younger  evangelicals 
radically increase their giving, the movement will be further  strained.  
Evangelicals have not adapted well to rapid shifts in  the culture — 
including, notably, the move toward support for same-sex marriage.  The result 
is 
that evangelicals are increasingly typecast as angry and repressed  bigots. 
In 2007, the Institute for Jewish and Community Research, in a survey of  
1,300 college professors, found that 3 percent held “unfavorable feelings”  
toward Jews, 22 percent toward Muslims and 53 percent toward evangelical  
Christians.  
To be sure, college professors are not representative  of the population, 
and, despite national trends of decline, evangelicals have  many exceptional 
ministries. Most metropolitan areas in the United States have  at least one 
thriving megachurch. In New York City, Redeemer Presbyterian and  the 
Brooklyn Tabernacle pack multiple services every weekend. A handful of other  
churches, like _North Point Community  Church_ (http://www.northpoint.org/)  in 
Alpharetta, Ga., and _Saddleback Church_ (http://www.saddleback.com/)  in 
Lake Forest, Calif.,  see more than 20,000 worshipers each weekend. Savvy 
ministers like the Rev.  Craig Groeschel, founder of _LifeChurch.tv_ 
(http://lifechurch.tv/) , are using new technologies to deliver the “good  
news.”  
The pulse of evangelicalism is also shifting, in many  ways for the good, 
from American politics to aid for the global poor, as  evidenced in books by 
the Rev. _David Platt_ (http://www.brookhills.org/new/pastor.html) , the 
Rev. _Max Lucado_ (http://maxlucado.com/about/)  and the Rev. _Timothy Keller_ 
(http://timothykeller.com/author/) . Evangelicals are  still a sophisticated 
lot, with billions in assets, millions of adherents and a  constellation of 
congregations, radio stations, universities and international  aid groups. 
But all this machinery distracts from the historical vital signs of  
evangelicalism: to make converts and point to Jesus Christ. By those measures  
this 
former juggernaut is coasting, at best, if not stalled or in reverse.  
How can evangelicalism right itself? I don’t believe  it can — at least, 
not back to the politically muscular force it was as recently  as 2004, when 
white evangelicals gave President George W. Bush his narrow  re-election. 
Evangelicals can, however, use the economic, social and spiritual  crises 
facing America to refashion themselves into a more sensitive, spiritual  and 
humble movement.  
We evangelicals must accept that our beliefs are now  in conflict with the 
mainstream culture. We cannot change ancient doctrines to  adapt to the 
currents of the day. But we can, and must, adapt the way we hold  our beliefs — 
with grace and humility instead of superior hostility. The core  evangelical 
belief is that love and forgiveness are freely available to all who  trust 
in Jesus Christ. This is the “good news” from which the evangelical name  
originates (“euangelion” is a Greek word meaning “glad tidings” or “good 
news”).  Instead of offering hope, many evangelicals have claimed the role of 
moral  gatekeeper, judge and jury. If we continue in that posture, we will co
ntinue to  invite opposition and obscure the “good news” we are called to 
proclaim.  
I believe the cultural backlash against evangelical  Christianity has less 
to do with our views — many observant Muslims and Jews,  for example, also 
view homosexual sex as wrong, while Catholics have been at the  vanguard of 
the movement to protect the lives of the unborn — and more to do  with our 
posture. The Scripture calls us “aliens and exiles” (1 Peter 2:11), but  
American evangelicals have not acted with the humility and homesickness of  
aliens. The proper response to our sexualized and hedonistic culture is not to  
chastise, but to “conduct yourselves honorably among the Gentiles, so that,  
though they malign you as evildoers, they may see your good deeds and 
glorify  God” (1 Peter 2:12).  
This does not mean we whitewash unpopular doctrines  like the belief that 
we are all sinners but that we re-emphasize the free  forgiveness available 
to all who believe in Jesus Christ.  
Some evangelical leaders are embarrassed by our  movement’s present 
paralysis. I am not. Weakness is a potent purifier. As Paul  wrote, “I am 
content 
with weaknesses ... for the sake of Christ” (2 Corinthians  12:10). For me, 
the deterioration and disarray of the movement is a source of  hope: hope 
that churches will stop angling for human power and start proclaiming  the 
power of Christ.  
Simple faith in Christ’s sacrifice will march on,  unchallenged by empires 
and eras. As the English writer G. K. Chesterton put it,  “Christianity has 
died many times and risen again; for it had a God who knew the  way out of 
the grave.”  
 
John S. Dickerson is the senior pastor of Cornerstone Church and _author_ 
(http://johnsdickerson.com/)  of the forthcoming book “The Great  Evangelical 
Recession: Six Factors That Will Crash the American Church ... and  How to 
Prepare.”

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