Most secular media in the U.S. imply that the world is largely
dividing between resurgent Islam and enlightened secularists, with
isolated evangelicals and Catholics left on the sideline. A recent
report by the ;International Bulletin of Missionary
Research indicates otherwise, with one third of the world
professing Christianity, virtually unchanged as a global percentage
since 100 years ago. Christians today are estimated to number about
2.3 billion. About 1.5 billion are estimated to attend church
regularly at over 5 million congregations, up from 400,000 100
years ago.
There are 1.6 estimated Muslims, 951 million Hindus, and
468 million Buddhists. Atheists are thought to be 137 million, a
declining number. The report estimates about 80,000 new Christians
every day, 79,000 new Muslims every day, and 300 fewer atheists
every day. These atheists are presumably disproportionately
represented in the West, while religion is thriving in the Global
South, where charismatic Christianity is exploding. Over 600
million Christians, including millions of Roman Catholics, are
charismatic or Pentecostal.
Where Christians live has shifted dramatically of course.
Once Christian Europe is now largely secularized, while “heathen”
Africa is largely now either Christian or Islamic. China is on its
way to possibly becoming the nation with the most practicing
Christians. And Latin America has surging Catholic and evangelical
populations. Contrary to common assumptions, America remains about
as religious as ever. A 2008 Baylor University survey showed the
percentage of American atheists at about 4 percent, unchanged since
1944. The survey also showed that only about 10 percent of
Americans are religiously unaffiliated, unlike the 15 percent or so
claimed in other recent surveys that claim growing secularization.
Baylor found that many “unaffiliated” are actually tied to
non-denominational churches or spiritual groups. Mainline
Protestantism continues its 45-year meltdown, with Americans less
and less identified with old denominations. But Americans by and
large are attending churches at about the same rate they have for
most of the last 70 years. About one third of Americans are now
evangelical. Fewer and fewer attend, or even have a cultural memory
of, oldline Episcopal or Presbyterian churches. Many stately old
urban sanctuaries sit empty, while nearby thriving congregations
meet in school gymnasiums or hotel ballrooms, if they haven’t
already built a mega-church campus.
A Gallup poll in 2010 showed the percentage of Americans
reporting to attend church regularly (at least monthly) was 43
percent. In 1937 it was 37 percent, was slightly lower in the early
1940s, reached 49 percent during the 1950s, and settled at 42
percent in 1969, where it has remained steady for the last 40
years. Current church membership is about 61 percent of Americans,
lower than the 73 percent reported 70 years ago, but also
reflecting the increased fluidity of Americans religious
affiliation and not a reduction in religious belief or practice.
Many evangelical churches especially deemphasize membership and
instead focus on attendance at worship and in small groups. A Pew
survey found that about 44 percent of Americans have switched
religious affiliations since childhood. Mostly they are switching
away from Mainline Protestantism. Forty-five years ago,
about 30 million Americans belonged to the top 7 Mainline
denominations, accounting for about one sixth of Americans. Today,
it’s about 20 million, accounting for about one
fifteenth.
One standout from the Mainline implosion is the United
Methodist Church. It has lost over 3 million U.S. members since the
1960s, more than any other U.S. church. But, almost uniquely among
U.S. denominations, its membership is international, and it now has
more than 4.4 million members overseas, mostly in Africa. The
church’s global membership just surpassed 12 million for the first
time in its history. Just released data shows the U.S. church lost
more than 300,000 members just across four recent years, while the
African churches gained almost 1 million. The denomination’s most
liberal U.S. regions, on the West Coast and in the Northeast, were
the fastest declining, while the relatively more moderate Southeast
remained almost steady. The United Methodist News
Service quoted a U.S. academic faulting U.S. church decline
on a U.S. population shift from the country to urban areas. This is
nonsense of course. Like all Mainline denominations, United
Methodism’s many once potent urban downtown churches are largely
shells of their former glory. Its growing, mostly conservative U.S.
congregations are in Sun Belt suburbs. The nearly century old
Mainline Protestant liberal project, so preoccupied by secular fads
rather than the historic faith, is collapsing from its own
irrelevance.
At current rates, the Africans might achieve a majority of
United Methodism within 12 years or so in what used to be an almost
entirely U.S. denomination. The Africanization of America’s third
largest religious body is underreported but its impact may be
significant. Almost all the U.S. Mainline denominations have
liberalized their views on homosexuality, as on so many other
theological and ethical issues. But the United Methodists are
edging in the opposite direction thanks mostly to the dramatic
growth of conservative African churches. At its next governing
convention in 2012, about 40 percent of the delegates will come
from outside the U.S., virtually guaranteeing United Methodists
will not follow the Episcopalians, Evangelical Lutherans, United
Church of Christ and others whose membership declines accelerated
after accommodating liberal sexual standards. Those denominations
also have suffered schisms, with conservatives forming new
communions. Many traditional Episcopalians are now aligned with
autonomous, and thriving, Anglican churches in
Africa.
Church liberals, so proud of their historic liberationist
solidarity with the Global South, are befuddled by conservative
African churches. The American United Methodist bishops even
contrived to contain the African influence by proposing a new U.S.
only church convention that would omit the Africans and other
internationals. That plan failed in 2009 when local United
Methodist annual conferences voted overwhelmingly against it. The
Africans will remain full partners in United Methodist governance,
with increasing repercussions for U.S. church members. African
church growth will dramatically affect global Christianity. The
International Bulletin of Missionary Research reports that
Africa had fewer than 9 million Christians in 1900, compared to 475
million today, and 670 million expected by 2025.
More somberly, the missions report also cites 270 new
Christian martyrs every day in the world over the last 10 years,
reaching 1 million during 2000-2010, and compared to 34,000
Christian martyrs in 1900. Presumably, radical Islam can be faulted
for most current-day Christian victims. But overall, despite the
distortions of secular, U.S. elite culture, people of faith in
America and around the world can be hopeful that faith, and not
Western secularism, represents the future for the vast majority of
the world.