Sunday morning worship service is no longer
"church as usual," according to the latest National Congregations Study
(NCS) conducted by Duke University.
In a decade long trend, American religion is
straying away from "an emphasis on belief and doctrine" and is moving
toward an emphasis on "experience and emotion".
In a three part study, the authors of NCS
found that there is a "search for a least-common-denominator kind of
worship in a time of ever less salient denominationally specific
liturgical and theological content."
What this means is that in the last 17 years
churches have dropped the organ, bulletin and choirs and traded them in
for worship bands, sermon notes, and shouting "amen," which is up by
six percent.
At the same time, more spontaneous elements
are on the rise. Hearing testimony from members is up seven percent, and
jumping or shouting is up eight percent.
The study also revealed an increasing trend
toward informality. People are less likely to dress formally for church
and are more likely to use first names when addressing church members,
rather than addressing them by a title such as "Mr., or Mrs., Doctor or
Professor."
Ethnic diversity among pastoral leaders has increased, but the "gender picture" is much different.
"In 2012, women served as senior or solo
pastoral leaders in only 11 percent of congregations, with these
congregations containing just 6 percent of the people who attend
religious services," the study explained.
The "face" of the American Church is now
more ethnically diverse. Congregations have steadily become more diverse
since 1998.
"The percentage of people attending congregations in which no ethnic
group constitutes at least 80 percent of the regular attendees increased
from 15 percent in 1998 to 20 percent in 2012," the study noted. "This
is a steady and notable increase in the percent of congregations in
which no one group has an overwhelming majority of the people."
The study also said that congregations are no longer affiliating with a specific denomination.
"The number of congregations that aren't
affiliated with a denomination rose from 18 percent in 1998 to 24
percent in 2012. White evangelical (30 percent) and black Protestants
congregations (25 percent) have the highest rate of
non-denominationalism."
The study could not pinpoint a reason as to
why the church is changing and worship is on the rise, but the authors
believe the changes aren't over yet.
"We are not in a position to sort all this
out," they said. "Whatever the causes, informal worship has increased in
American congregations, and its rise does not seem to have peaked."
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