There can be little doubt that experiential religion has powerful  
attraction 
to many people. This is true across the board; bhaki  (devotional) forms of 
Hinduism seem to be the most vibrant  and growing version of that  religion 
and one of the main attractions of Zen Buddhism is its basis in what may be 
called active meditation. No surprise that in Christian faith those groups  
that 
make the most of experience are still growing, in the case of the  
Assemblies
of God, perhaps even increasing more than in the past although maybe 
simply holding steady in terms of growth, the statistics are unclear 
about  that.
 
The question, however, is at what cost?  Yes, experiential faith is a  port 
in a storm, and that's no small thing in a world where storms of life  
happen 
all the time. But if anything is noticeable about Pentecostalism besides  
its 
continuing appeal, it is the fact that it is politically ineffective   
-everywhere. 
This is no accident. And the result of an unblemished record of political  
failures
should say that this is structural. This is related to the observable  fact 
that 
when people who have Pentecostal views do get involved in politics they 
make fools of themselves sometimes despite strong starts. Think Sarah Palin 
and Michelle Bachmann. You can even argue that Pentecostalism makes 
educational achievement problematic. That is, I thought very highly of both 
Palin and Bachmann but in each case it was impossible
not to notice how poorly informed they were.
 
I do not see this changing. Do you?
 
 
Billy
 
=================================
 
 
 
 
Flower Pentecostal Heritage Center
 
June 17, 2014
 
Assemblies of God 2013 Statistics Released

 
The Assemblies of God (AG) is one of the few major denominations in the  
United States to show continuing growth. The AG has now experienced 24  
consecutive years of growth in the number of U.S. adherents, according to a 
_press 
 release _ 
(http://ag.org/top/News/index_articledetail.cfm?targetBay=c97d4d5c-a325-4921-9a9e-e9fbddd9cdce&ModID=2&Process=DisplayArticle&RSS_RSSContentI
D=28142&RSS_OriginatingChannelID=1184&RSS_OriginatingRSSFeedID=3359&RSS_Sour
ce=) from the AG National Leadership and Resource Center in Springfield,  
Missouri. The article compares the AG’s growth to the “declining attendance 
for  many other North American evangelical denominations.” 
The 2013 Full Statistical Report was not posted on the _AG website _ 
(http://ag.org/top/About/statistics/index.cfm) as of today  (6/16/14), but the 
article provided the following notable statistics for  calendar year 2013. For 
comparative purposes, statistics from 2008 and 2012 are  also provided here. 
U.S.  Stats              2008              2012             2013     
2012-13 Growth 
Adherents         2,899,702        3,095,717         3,127,857        1.0% 
Churches                      12,377               12,722                
12,792             0.6% 
Membership      1,662,632         1,780,468         1,805,381        1.4% 
Major Worship 
Service Attendance  1,799,987        1,880,269       1,918,686        2.0% 
Water baptisms           114,091            131,713            137,375      
     4.3% 
Spirit  baptisms             85,667              81,345              83,731 
             2.9% 
Conversions                441,377            453,496          456,395  
0.6% 
Credentialed  ministers34,178            35,867              36,434         
  1.6% 
Worldwide Stats         
Adherents         61,550,938       66,383,778       67,512,302      1.7% 
Preaching Points          332,411           362,791   366,105           
0.9% 
The AG is growing at a faster rate than the U.S. population, which 
increased  by 0.7% in 2013. The number of U.S. adherents has been increasing at 
a  
relatively steady pace — at an average of 1.6% per year since 1989, and 1.5% 
per  year since 2008. 
In recent decades, most mainline Protestant denominations in the U.S. have  
witnessed significant numerical declines. From 1960 to 2011, the United 
Church  of Christ lost 48% of adherents; The Episcopal Church lost 43%; the 
Presbyterian  Church (USA) lost 35%; the United Methodist Church lost 29%; and 
the Evangelical  Lutheran Church in America lost 19%. Others showed 
increases, including the  Southern Baptist Convention (66%) and the Roman 
Catholic 
Church (62%). During  the same period, the Assemblies of God grew by 498%, 
from 508,602 members in  1960. 
While mainline denominations have been declining for decades, in the past 
few  years some evangelical groups, such as the Southern Baptist Convention 
(SBC),  have also begun to decline. SBC leaders recently have shown alarm 
over deceasing  numbers of baptisms and conversions. The number of _SBC  
baptisms has declined for seven straight years_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2014/may/five-reasons-why-southern-baptist-baptize-millennials-sbc.
html?paging=off) .  This demographic  decline has caused _some  pundits to 
predict the slow death of evangelicalism_ 
(http://blogs.houstonpress.com/hairballs/2013/12/the_slow_steady_decline_of_eva.php)
 . 
Robust growth of Pentecostal churches, including the Assemblies of God, 
shows  a different story. All statistics released in the article — water 
baptisms,  Spirit baptisms, membership, attendance, conversions, and numbers of 
adherents,  churches, and ministers — increased last year in the AG. Other 
categories,  including attendance at Sunday evening and midweek services, were 
not included  in the article and presumably declined. The AG press release 
attributes much of  the growth to increases in ethnic minority churches and 
young people: “The  impact is especially evident among Latino adherents, who 
now make up 20 percent  of the Fellowship (more than 40 percent of total 
adherents are ethnic  minorities), and Millennials (ages 18-34), who 
contributed 21 percent of the  growth from 2001-2013.” 
The breakdown of the 2013 numbers will be available in the 
yet-to-be-released  Full Statistical Report. But the _2012  report_ 
(http://agchurches.org/Sitefiles/Default/RSS/AG.org%20TOP/AG%20Statistical%20Reports/2012/2012%20Full
%20Statistical%20Report.pdf)  shows the AG’s significant ethnic diversity: 
Asian/Pacific Islander  (4.3%); Black (9.8%); Hispanic (21.7%); Native 
American (1.4%); White (59.2%);  and Other /Mixed (3.5%). These stats suggest 
that the AG closely mirrors the  ethnic makeup of the U.S. population as a 
whole. The _2010 U.S. census_ 
(http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-02.pdf)  revealed the 
following racial breakdown of  the U.S. population: 
Asian/Pacific Islander (5%); Black (12.6%); Hispanic  (16.3%); Native 
American (0.9%); White (63.7%); and Other /Mixed (6.2%). 
Much of the numerical growth in the Assemblies of God in recent decades has 
 been among ethnic minorities. From 2007 to 2012, the number of AG 
adherents  increased by 8.1%. During this period, the number of white adherents 
increased  by 1.6% and the number of non-white adherents increased by 19.2%. 
This  demographic shift continued from 2011 to 2012, and the percentage of 
white  adherents dropped from 59.6% to 59.2%. When the 2013 Full Statistical 
Report is  released, it is likely to reveal that this demographic shift 
continued apace in  2013. 
The AG’s growth in America is partly due to immigration. The Assemblies of  
God is a global church. About 1% of the world’s population is AG. Only 5% 
of AG  adherents worldwide live in the U.S. Pentecostals who move to America 
from other  regions of the world often bring with them a faith, burnished by 
persecution and  deprivation, that is an important part of their identity. 
Pentecostal refugees  who move to America are like pollen scattered by a 
strong wind — they plant  churches wherever they happen to land. Strong 
African, Slavic, Asian, and  Hispanic AG churches are taking root in American 
soil, 
and their congregations  sing, preach, and testify in the tongues of their 
native countries. 
Interestingly, this demographic shift is also helping to usher in a global  
re-alignment of Christianity. Anglican, Presbyterian, and Methodist 
Christians  in Africa, Asia, and Latin America are generally evangelical in 
belief, 
if not  Pentecostal in worship, and often have much more in common with 
their brothers  and sisters in the Assemblies of God than they do with liberal 
members of their  own denominations in the West. 
The Assemblies of God is growing in America. But the real story is the 
ethnic  transformation of the Assemblies of God. It is becoming less white and 
more  reflective of the ethnic, linguistic and social diversity that exists 
in the  global church. The founding fathers and mothers of the Assemblies of 
God   laid the foundation for this ethnic shift when they committed the 
Assemblies of  God in November 1914 to “the greatest evangelism that the world 
has ever seen.”  In 1921 the Assemblies of God adopted the indigenous church 
principle as its  official missions strategy, in order to better carry out 
world evangelism. The  implementation of this strategy — which recognizes 
that each national church is  autonomous and not controlled by Western 
interests — resulted in the development  of strong national churches and 
leaders. 
And now, in a fitting turn of events,  those churches are sending missionaries 
to America. 
–Darrin J. Rodgers

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