Deseret News
 
Southern Baptists decline as  Assemblies of God grow
 

 


By Adelle M. Banks, Religion News Service 
Published: Tuesday, June 7 2016

 
The Southern Baptist Convention is the largest Protestant denomination in 
the  country, but it continues to lose members and baptize fewer people each  
year. 
The latest statistics, compiled by LifeWay Christian Resources from church  
reports, show membership has dropped by more than 204,000, down 1.3 percent 
to  15.3 million members in 2015. It’s the ninth year in a row there has 
been a  membership decline. 
Baptisms, which have declined eight of the last 10 years, totaled 295,212, 
a  3.3 percent drop, researchers said Tuesday (June 7). 
“God help us all! In a world that is desperate for the message of Christ, 
we  continue to be less diligent in sharing the Good News,” said SBC 
Executive  Committee President Frank Page in a statement. 
Meanwhile, the Assemblies of God, the world’s largest Pentecostal  
denomination, is continuing to see increases in this country. The latest  
statistics, compiled using reports from its churches and released last week,  
show a 
1.4 percent rise in U.S. adherents to 3,192,112 in 2015, up from  3,146,741 
in 2014. 
Hartford Seminary sociologist of religion Scott Thumma said changes in  
denominational totals are driven by such factors as birthrate, retention of  
children as they reach adulthood, and immigration. He said the Assemblies of 
God  are benefiting from immigration — particularly from Central and South 
America as  well as Africa — much more than the Southern Baptist Convention. 
Thumma said some of the drop in SBC membership may be due to a growing  
preference for nondenominational congregations. 
“Nondenominational churches have most of the same characteristics in terms 
of  theology and worship style as SBC churches but without the 
denominational  baggage of its reputation or pronouncements,” he said. 
The Pew Research Center said in 2015 that the share of evangelical  
Protestants who identify with Baptist denominations has decreased since 2007  
from 
41 percent to 36 percent while the percentage identifying with  
nondenominational churches has increased from 13 to 19  percent.

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