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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, August 11, 2007

Young Protestants drop out

By Cathy Lynn Grossman
USA Today

Protestant churches are losing young adults in "sobering" numbers, a survey finds.

Seven in 10 Protestants age 18 to 30 — both evangelical and mainline — who went to church regularly in high school said they quit attending by age 23, according to the survey by LifeWay Research. And 34 percent of those said they had not returned, even sporadically, by age 30. That means about one in four Protestant-raised young people have left the church.

"This is sobering news that the church needs to change the way it does ministry," says Ed Stetzer, director of Nashville-based LifeWay Research, which is affiliated with the publishing arm of the Southern Baptist Convention.

"It seems the teen years are like a free trial on a product. By 18, when it's their choice whether to buy in to church life, many don't feel engaged and welcome," says associate director Scott McConnell.

The statistics are based on a survey of 1,023 Protestants ages 18 to 30 who said they had attended church at least twice a month for at least one year during high school. LifeWay did the survey in April and May. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points.

Few of those surveyed had kind words for fellow Christians when they reflected on how they saw church life in the four years after high school.

Only a little more than half (51 percent) of Protestant young people surveyed (both the church dropouts and those who stayed on in church after age 22) saw church members as "caring" or had other positive descriptions, such as "welcoming" (48 percent) or "authentic" (42 percent).

Among dropouts, nearly all (97 percent) cited life changes, such as a move. Most (58 percent) were also unhappy with the people or pastor at church. More than half (52 percent) had religious, ethical or political reasons for quitting.

Dropouts were more than twice as likely than those who continued attending church to describe church members as judgmental (51 percent for dropouts, 24 percent for those who stayed), hypocritical (44 percent vs. 20 percent) or insincere (41 percent vs. 19 percent)

The news was not all bad: 35 percent of dropouts said they had resumed attending church regularly by age 30. An additional 30 percent attended sporadically. Twenty-eight percent said "God was calling me to return to the church."

The survey found that those who stayed with or returned to church had grown up with both parents committed to the church, with pastors whose sermons were relevant and engaging, and with church members who invested in their spiritual development.

"Too many youth groups are holding tanks with pizza. There's no life transformation taking place," Stetzer says. "People are looking for a faith that can change them and to be a part of changing the world."

These findings fit with those of other experts.

"Unless religious leaders take younger adults more seriously, the future of American religion is in doubt," says Princeton sociologist Robert Wuthnow in "After the Baby Boomers," due in stores in September.

The proportion of young adults identifying with mainline churches, he says, is "about half the size it was a generation ago. Evangelical Protestants have barely held their own."

In research for an upcoming book, "unChristian," Barna Research Group director David Kinnaman found that Christians in their 20s are "significantly less likely to believe a person's faith in God is meant to be developed by involvement in a local church. This life stage of spiritual disengagement is not going to fade away."

About 52 percent of U.S. adults identify themselves as Protestant or other non-Catholic Christian denominations, according to the 2001 American Religious Identification Survey. That's down from 60 percent in 1990.

MULTITUDE OF WHYS

Seventy percent of Protestants age 18-30 drop out of church before age 23 and give multiple reasons for their departure.

WHY THEY LEAVE

  • Wanted a break from church: 27 percent

  • Found church members judgmental or hypocritical: 26 percent

  • Moved to college: 25 percent

  • Tied up with work: 23 percent

  • Moved too far away from home church: 22 percent

  • Too busy: 22 percent

  • Felt disconnected to people at church: 20 percent

  • Disagreed with church's stance on political/social issues: 18 percent

  • Spent more time with friends outside church: 17 percent

  • Only went before to please others: 17 percent

    WHY 30 PERCENT STAYED

  • It's vital to my relationship with God: 65 percent

  • It helps guide my decisions in everyday life: 58 percent

  • It helps me become a better person: 50 percent

  • I am following a family member's example: 43 percent

  • Church activities are a big part of my life: 35 percent

  • It helps in getting through a difficult time: 30 percent

  • I fear living without spiritual guidance: 24 percent

    Source: LifeWay Research survey of 1,023 Protestants in April and May 2007. Margin of error is plus or minus 3 percentage points.