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A recent opinion article attributes the decline in Christian affiliation and church attendance at least in part to a backlash against the "Christian right", especially among young people.
Recent legislation on the state level such as that allowing doctors to refuse to treat LGBT patients on the basis of religious conviction seems to run contrary to the example of Christ himself. The actions of many who claim to be Christians often fail that test of "What Would Jesus Do?" (WWJD) once popularized on everything from t-shirts to jewelry to coffee mugs.
This decline isn't limited to Christianity:
Even in our threads here, people have bemoaned the bad name some Christian groups give to the faith. It is hardly surprising that some people are driven away by that. Is tapping into the desire for social justice of American youth the way for Christian churches to be revitalized?
Thoughts?
While prominent progressive Christian voices exist, too often the loudest voices in American Christianity often sound nothing like Jesus — the radical healer and teacher who taught his followers to love their neighbor and free the oppressed. The "Jesus Saves" signs at the US Capitol insurrection, Franklin Graham and Marjorie Taylor Greene's excoriations of LGBTQ rights and the US Catholic hierarchy's abysmal response to the sexual abuse scandal all make a mockery of Christian teaching about love, dignity and justice.
Recent legislation on the state level such as that allowing doctors to refuse to treat LGBT patients on the basis of religious conviction seems to run contrary to the example of Christ himself. The actions of many who claim to be Christians often fail that test of "What Would Jesus Do?" (WWJD) once popularized on everything from t-shirts to jewelry to coffee mugs.
This decline isn't limited to Christianity:
It is worth observing that paganism is a religion, too, but that's not the point here. The author continues with the hope (wishful thinking?) that:Consternation about church decline and the secularization of America reached a fever pitch this Holy Week when Gallup released a new poll that found a majority of Americans do not belong to church, synagogue or mosque. This was the first time the membership percentage fell below a majority since Gallup first started asking the question in 1937.
These findings are troubling to many. "This is perhaps the most distressing graph related to the future of America," Eric Sammons, editor-in-chief of the conservative Catholic Crisis Magazine wrote on Twitter, adding, "We are officially living in a pagan nation."
This Easter, I hope my fellow Christians who deeply care about the future of our movement to spread the Gospel of love will recommit ourselves to build a movement that more people want to join. We must contest the popular depiction of what it means to be a Christian today. Church decline is not a rejection of our message of love, it's a rejection of our movement's failure to model that message for the world.
. . . we as Christians should not look for the living Jesus movement among the dead remains of conservative Christian hate that looks nothing like the love Jesus embodied. Instead, we should look forward to a resurrection of Christianity that fights system oppression and stands in solidarity with the most vulnerable. We should look for the living of the Gospel among America's youth today. Alongside their relative lack of formal religious devotion, today's young Americans are known for their commitment to social justice.
Even in our threads here, people have bemoaned the bad name some Christian groups give to the faith. It is hardly surprising that some people are driven away by that. Is tapping into the desire for social justice of American youth the way for Christian churches to be revitalized?
Thoughts?