Finding Faith Today
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About this ebook
This book presents the findings of a multi-year study on how people come to faith in the US context. It involves about 1,800 persons who recently made a new profession of faith or some other public commitment across various religious traditions in the US. An initial study was conducted twenty-five years ago on Christian populations in England by Bishop John Finney, but surprisingly little research has been done since then. Finding Faith Today is an expansion and follow-up of that study. The book sheds new light on how people come to faith and what sort of spiritual, practical, and social changes accompany that.
The book will be a help to those seeking to open up their communities of faith to others with hospitality and integrity.
Bryan P. Stone
Bryan Stone is Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and E. Stanley Jones Professor of Evangelism at Boston University School of Theology. Among his published titles are: Evangelism After Pluralism (2018), A Reader in Ecclesiology (2012), Evangelism After Christendom (2006), and Faith and Film (2000).
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Finding Faith Today - Bryan P. Stone
Finding Faith Today
Bryan P. Stone
15827.pngFinding Faith Today
Copyright © 2018 Bryan P. Stone. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
Cascade Books
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
Eugene, OR 97401
www.wipfandstock.com
paperback isbn: 978-1-5326-5146-5
hardcover isbn: 978-1-5326-5147-2
ebook isbn: 978-1-5326-5148-9
Cataloguing-in-Publication data:
Names: Stone, Bryan P., author.
Title: Finding faith today / Bryan P. Stone.
Description: Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2018 | Includes bibliographical references.
Identifiers: isbn 978-1-5326-5146-5 (paperback) | isbn 978-1-5326-5147-2 (hardcover) | isbn 978-1-5326-5148-9 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Religions. | Religions—Statistics.
Classification: BL80.3 S74 2018 (paperback) | BL80.3 (ebook)
Manufactured in the U.S.A. 09/10/18
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright © 1989, by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Introduction
Chapter 1: Christians
Chapter 2: Christians: Setting Out on the Journey
Chapter 3: Christians: The Journey
Chapter 4: Christians: Factors Leading to Faith
Chapter 5: Christians: Is There a Change?
Chapter 6: Judaism
Chapter 7: Buddhism
Chapter 8: Islam
Chapter 9: Unitarian Universalists and Quakers
Excursus on Hinduism, Jainism, and Sikhism
Chapter 10: Concluding Observations
Appendix A: Christian Representation in the Survey
Appendix B: Factors in Coming to Faith by Tradition
Appendix C: Changes in Attitudes and Positions on Social Issues
Appendix D: Most Important Feature of the Congregation
Appendix E: Active Seekers or Drawn in by Others Without Actively Seeking?
Appendix F: Significance of Changes
Bibliography
Introduction
How do persons come to faith in our time? Do they set out seeking to adopt a faith? Or does the faith adopt them? Is it a journey? Or is it more like a sudden conversion? Is faith even the right word? Are friends and relatives most important to the process? Do clergy matter? Are books, television, or films significant factors? What sorts of values, practices, and lifestyles tend to change for those who newly come to faith? What, if any, are the substantial differences in how one comes to faith among Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Unitarian Universalists, or persons of other religious traditions? The Finding Faith Today Project is a nationwide research project that attempts to answer these and other questions.
It was around 2003 that I first learned from a British student named Julian Gotobed about the Finding Faith Today study that Bishop John Finney had undertaken in England in 1990. Julian had come to Boston University School of Theology to study, and over the years as I pondered with him Finney’s findings (published in 1992 in the book Finding Faith Today: How Does It Happen?), we wondered if a similar study might be feasible in the US some twenty-five years later. Finney had begun research into the question of how persons become Christians in the 1980s, first interviewing around 400 people and then employing a questionnaire more widely. But surprisingly little research has been done since then on this subject. The current Finding Faith Today project (we chose to keep the same name as Finney’s project) is an expansion and follow-up of that study.
In 2012, I worked with student researchers at Boston University School of Theology to pilot such a study in three US cities: Los Angeles, Boston, and St. Louis. The cities were chosen given their rich social and religious diversity and their spread across the United States geographically. As with Finney’s approach, we initially designed a survey for pastors that gathered information about their congregations and asked them for names of persons in their churches who had made a new faith commitment or recommitment in the past year or so. Unlike Finney, I am not a bishop, and getting pastors to participate in the study, much less send us names of new Christians in their care, proved exceptionally difficult. The fact that pastors themselves had to take the survey as part of the process ended up creating a bottleneck in gaining access to those who were the most important sources of the study: persons who had newly come to faith or had recently returned to faith. While that initial pilot project was limited (108 pastors and only forty-four new Christians completed the survey), it gave us valuable information about the process of coming to faith, and it helped us rethink the survey instrument along with the process of accessing study subjects.
The following year, we set out to undertake the study with a national scope, and rather than asking clergy to take the survey and send us names, we simply asked them to pass along the survey (or the web link to it) to those adults in their churches, age eighteen or older,¹ who had recently made a new faith commitment, recommitment, or profession of faith, or who had experienced what they understood to be a conversion. The nationwide study took place over several years and also included a multi-religious dimension not present in Finney’s original study, so that we could compare the ways persons from different religious traditions come to faith. In the survey instructions, we recognized that for some persons this new commitment might be more like a return to faith or an activation of the religion into which they were born. We also recognized that how one describes this new commitment or conversion will vary from tradition to tradition and person to person. Sometimes the language of conversion is inadequate to describe the way people take up religious practice, as with Buddhism. Moreover, some people who take up Buddhism continue to consider themselves Christians, or adherents of other religious traditions. As with Finney, we did not begin with a definition of Christian
(or of Jewish,
Buddhist,
etc.), but allowed respondents to self-identify. In fact, one of the fascinating and highly important findings of our study is the relationship between what it means to be any of these and how one goes about finding faith. Evangelicals, for example, prioritize certain things in describing what it means to be a Christian that are not at all the same as what Mainline Protestants prioritize. These differences shape how one comes to faith in those two Christian traditions in pretty remarkable ways.
In addition to survey data, we also conducted interviews and focus groups with persons across the country. Our study concentrates on how persons come to faith, how they understand the faith to which they have committed themselves, what they understand to be the most important factors during the process, and any changes in values, practices, or lifestyle that accompany this new commitment. Throughout this book, I have stuck closely with the exact wording of their responses and I have generally not tried to refine or alter their grammar. I leave things in their own words as much as possible so that readers can get a sense of the texture of their responses. We received 1,788 responses: 64 percent of those were from the largest Christian groups—Black, Evangelical, and Mainline Protestants; Roman Catholics; and Orthodox. The remaining 36 percent were primarily from Jews, Buddhists, Muslims, Quakers, and Unitarian Universalists, with a small number of responses from Hindus, Sikhs, and others.
I spend more time in the following chapters on those traditions from which we received a substantial number of responses. For example, only a handful of Jains, Sikhs, Hindus, and persons from traditions such as Wicca, Bahá’í, Unity, Humanism, or Paganism participated in our study, so we were unable to add much to existing knowledge about those traditions. Likewise, the Church of Scientology, the Jehovah’s Witnesses, and the Church of Christ of Latter Day Saints (Mormons) were not able to assist us in gaining access to any of their recent converts, despite repeated attempts, so those faith traditions will not be represented here. Nonetheless, the end result is, we think, a fascinating and largely representative portrait of American religious life.
The first and largest part of the book focuses on Christians, who now make up a little over 70 percent of the US population, and compares our findings with those of Finney’s study at several key points. It also compares Christians from the three largest traditions in the United States (Catholic, Evangelical Protestant, and Mainline Protestant) with one another. The second part of the book explores ways one comes to faith or practice in other religious traditions, examining those paths on their own terms and in relation to other traditions.
A project such as this that has taken place over several years and that has attempted to dig deep into faith traditions across the United States relied heavily on the assistance of many persons, most of them students at Boston University. I am thankful to the School of Theology and to Dean Mary Elizabeth Moore for support of the project, and to the Center for Practical Theology for its funding and staff assistance. In particular, I am thankful to the following persons for their assistance throughout the project.
1. There are strict laws around research with subjects under the age of eighteen that make studying them complicated. It can be done, but we chose to concentrate on adults in this study. Bishop Finney studied persons sixteen and older.
1
Christians
Who Participated in the Study?
1,149 Christian adults (age eighteen and older) participated in the online survey. Among those, the median age was 46, with a slightly younger median age for Evangelicals (43) than for Catholics (46) and Mainline Protestants (49). The age distributions in our study (Figure 1.1) compare fairly well to national demographics, though with a slightly younger cohort of respondents in our study. The Pew Research Center’s 2014 Religious Landscape Study (the most recent such study to date) found the median age of all Christian adults to be 49 (up from 46 in 2007).¹ While the median age of our respondents is similar to that study, it is worth noting that the average age of Christians is rising (a trend that does not bode well for the future of Christianity in the US). At the same time, younger persons are increasingly unaffiliated (those who are now often called the nones
). The average age of those unaffiliated is 36.
Participants in our study had a much higher level of education than the US general public (Figure 1.2). While 76 percent of Christian respondents had a college or graduate degree, that is true for only 29 percent of the US general public.² We know that higher education rates correlate with higher wages, mobility, and civic participation rates, so one has to take those factors into account when assessing the results of our study.
Figure1.2.bmpOne of the fascinating lessons learned from this study is the extent of significant differences among Christians in the United States. Indeed, that is a theme that will run throughout this entire book. The narrative of how people become Christians in the United States has multiple story lines. One of the reasons I distinguish throughout the book between the largest Christian family groups—Roman Catholic, Evangelical Protestant, and Mainline Protestant—is that the differences between them are striking. Christians share much in common; but their differences at key points might lead a researcher to believe she is studying different world religions at times. Even among Protestants, there are large differences, and so throughout the study I draw distinctions between Evangelical and Mainline Protestants. At times, I note unique features of Christian groups who do not always fit easily into these three large categories, but it is difficult to make substantial conclusions from our data about, for example, Orthodox Christians because of their relatively low response rates in our survey (only thirteen of the 1,149 Christians surveyed said they were Orthodox). Historically Black Protestants also have several unique features, but while 3 percent of our Christian respondents identified as Black or African American, most of those were in Evangelical or Mainline denominations so that our data does not allow us to parse out those features more closely. At times, though, the differences between those groups and other Christian groups are worth noting. At times, it is possible to group Roman Catholics and Orthodox together when their responses warrant that, as they sometimes do. But we have not identified them as distinct categories when the sample size was insufficient to draw larger conclusions.
The terms Mainline and Evangelical are sociological categories used to distinguish theological and other historic characteristics among Protestants in the United States. While Mainline denominations were once the largest and most influential group in the United States, their numbers have been almost halved in the last half century so that only about 12–15 percent of the US population now affiliates with Mainline denominations.³ These include the American Baptist Churches, the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), the Episcopal Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the Presbyterian Church (USA), Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), the Reformed Church in America, the United Church of Christ, and the United Methodist Church. Mainline denominations have tended to be more progressive in their stances on social issues and have historically been proponents of the ecumenical movement, symbolized in their memberships in the National Council of Churches. Evangelical Christians, by contrast, tend to be more conservative on social issues and emphasize the authority of Scripture, the need for conversion (often expressed in the term born again
), the importance of evangelizing others, and several doctrinal affirmations related to Christ and his work. The National Association of Evangelicals is a body comprised of forty denominations along with congregations, schools, and other organizations, many of them having no particular denominational ties.
Figure 1.3 summarizes the representation from the primary Christian traditions in the US in our current Finding Faith Today study as compared to US averages more generally. A full list of denominational representation by Christian family can be found in Appendix A.
While it is clear from this chart that in relation to national averages Mainline Protestants are over-represented in our study and Roman Catholics and Evangelicals are somewhat under-represented, the responses of each Christian family are analyzed separately throughout the book so as not to distort the overall picture of how Christians come to faith in the United States. There is plenty of data from each group to allow us to paint an accurate picture of how Christians come to faith within those distinct traditions as well as within the Christian tradition as a whole. About 10 percent of the respondents did not identify their denominational or family tradition, but indicated only that they were Christians. While we have good reason to suspect that most of those individuals are Evangelicals, given that Evangelicals do not always affiliate with a denomination, we cannot know for sure. Their data is included at key points along the way.
How Did Christians Signal Their Faith?
We asked Christians in our study how they signaled their new faith commitment or recommitment. Not surprisingly, there were significant differences among the major Christian traditions at this point. Evangelical and Black Protestants mentioned baptism most often (47 percent) followed by church membership (32 percent) or some form of public declaration, reaffirmation, or testimony. Other markers included confirmation, prayer, baptism in the Holy Spirit, speaking in tongues, and church attendance.
Figure1.4.bmpFor Mainline Protestants, the situation is somewhat reversed with membership (52 percent) cited most often followed by a much smaller number who cited baptism (21 percent). In addition, a good number identified confirmation (14 percent) as a marker, demonstrating the ongoing strength of that practice in Mainline denominations (though it also remains important among some Evangelical groups and denominations). For Orthodox Christians, almost all respondents identified the dual rituals of baptism and chrismation (also called confirmation) that culminate a process of catechesis.
The situation of Roman Catholics is unique given the importance of the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA) for those not baptized as infants, baptized in another Christian church, or baptized but never given religious instruction in the Catholic Church. The RCIA process includes several stages that include study, discussion, prayer, and rites that take place in the context of the Mass. Close to half (42 percent) of Roman Catholic respondents identified the RCIA as the most important signal of their new commitment. Another 25 percent cited confirmation and 13 percent claimed it was their baptism. Other responses included confession, church attendance, and the Roman Catholic welcome back
program, an initiative begun in 2008 to evangelize, reclaim, and welcome back lapsed Catholics.
Much has been made of the drift by Catholics away from the church of their birth (though Catholics actually have one of the highest retention rates among religions in the US) or the fact that most Catholics (77 percent) do not regularly attend Mass.⁴ And yet several outreach programs aimed at welcoming inactive Catholics are making a difference. One such program is Landings,
which provides a safe community of support and reconciliation process
for persons such as Laura, in her thirties, who had not been to church much since her first communion. Laura’s experience is similar to many Catholics in our study. She needed a place where she could ask questions, voice her apprehensions, and learn more about Catholicism.⁵ After participating in Landings, she enrolled in RCIA at St. Charles Borromeo Church in Arlington, Virginia, and eventually became a team leader for the next Landings group.
1. Pew, America’s Changing Religious Landscape,
50
. Their study also showed that the median age of mainline Protestant adults is
52
and the median age of Evangelical and Catholic adults is
49
.
2. Pew, A Portrait of Jewish Americans,
42
.
3. Stetzer, "
23
Easters," para.
8
.
4. Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, Statistics,
line
42
.
5. Peterson, You Can Go Home Again.
2
Christians: Setting Out on the Journey
What is a Christian?
Is a Christian a person who lives in a particular way? Believes certain things? Experiences God in some distinct way? Or perhaps has made some noteworthy set of life commitments? There may be no question more important to this study than the question of what a person making a new commitment to Christian faith understands a Christian to be. Our survey left the question open without providing a list of choices so that persons would not be steered in any one direction. Understandably, a few of the respondents were unsure about what it means to be a Christian, but those were actually quite rare. The vast majority answered the question with confidence and a good degree of clarity, even if that meant offering fairly standard jargon and Christian language.
Answers to the question vary significantly by Christian tradition. Two-thirds of Mainline Protestants focus their answer on a pattern of living, character, or actions, such as the 49-year-old librarian, who put it this way:
Mostly conducting yourself with tolerance and treating others with respect and dignity. Loving your neighbor.
A 28-year-old fundraiser saw being a Christian as:
. . . being a good and kind person who treats others the way they want to be treated and is welcoming and receptive to everyone they meet.
Of course, many people in the world aspire to live out the Golden Rule: do to others as you would have them do to you
(Luke 6:31), and not Mainline Protestants only. But what we heard confirms a pattern of what sociologist of religion Nancy Ammerman has called Golden Rule
Christianity that is well represented among Mainline Protestants. People sometimes distinguish Mainline Protestants from Evangelical Protestants by claiming that the latter are characterized by ideological certainty in relation to traditional Christian beliefs (about the Bible, Christ’s atoning death, the virgin birth, the second coming, etc.) while the former are the exact opposite—ideologically less committed to certainty and more skeptical where such beliefs are concerned. But as Ammerman puts it (and our results support this), many Mainline Protestants are best defined not by ideology, but by practices. Their own measure of Christianity is right living more than right believing. . . . these Christians are characterized by a basic ‘Golden Rule’ morality and a sense of compassion for those in need.
⁶
We did not ask many questions about the content of the religious beliefs of the participants in this study, as that was not our focus. But the contrast is sharp between Mainline Protestants and Evangelical Protestants when it comes to the question of whether lifestyle or belief is most important in defining what it means to be a Christian. While two-thirds of Mainline Protestants focus on actions or lifestyle, only one-third (35 percent) of Evangelicals place the