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- <text id=89TT1323>
- <link 93TG0002>
- <title>
- May 22, 1989: Those Mainline Blues
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 22, 1989 Politics, Panama-Style
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 94
- Those Mainline Blues
- </hdr><body>
- <p>America's Old Guard Protestant churches confront an
- unprecedented decline
- </p>
- <p>By Richard N. Ostling
- </p>
- <p> In the beginning was mainline Protestantism. At Plymouth
- Rock and Jamestown, and for 3 1/2 centuries thereafter, the
- denominations known today by that label defined the spiritual
- and moral ethos of the U.S. These prominent Wasp bastions
- nurtured the founders, imparting to them notions of republican
- government and individual freedom. Dominating American
- Protestantism, these churches shaped virtually every aspect of
- an evolving nation: its pioneering colleges, its 19th century
- novels of sin and rectitude, its capitalist ethic of striving
- and saving, and a world-conquering spirit that was shared by
- missionaries and entrepreneurs alike. Mainliners were at the
- forefront of social crusades from independence to abolition,
- women's suffrage to Prohibition, civil rights to Viet Nam
- protests.
- </p>
- <p> During the past two decades, however, that center has
- dropped away. The central fact about mainline Protestantism in
- the U.S. today is that it is in deep trouble. This stunning
- turnabout is apparent in the unprecedented hemorrhaging of
- memberships in the three major faiths that date from colonial
- times. The United Church of Christ (which includes most
- Congregationalists) has shrunk 20% since 1965, the Presbyterian
- Church 25%, and the Episcopal Church 28%. As for two related
- denominations that mushroomed in the 19th century, the United
- Methodist Church has dropped 18%, and the Christian Church
- (Disciples of Christ) 43% after a de facto schism. Together,
- these five groups suffered a net loss of 5.2 million souls
- during years when the U.S. population rose 47 million. (In
- addition to these five denominations, "mainline" generally
- refers to the old, culturally established, predominantly white
- Protestant groups belonging to the National Council of
- Churches.)
- </p>
- <p> Nor is any upswing in sight. Mainline congregations, says
- Isabel Rogers, former Moderator of the Presbyterian Church
- (U.S.A.), are "no longer the primary shapers of values in
- American society." What, then, does their decline portend for
- a society that has been so largely built upon their values and
- precepts? That is hardly a trivial matter. How the nation
- defines itself spiritually will have much to do with its future
- political directions and with the strength of its moral
- foundations, which are increasingly under siege by drugs,
- violence and pervasive greed.
- </p>
- <p> The mainline plight might be understandable if all of U.S.
- Christendom were reeling under the shocks of secularism and the
- inroads of new, alien faiths. But that is not the case. During
- the past two decades, black Protestant groups have gained,
- Roman Catholic membership has grown a solid 16%, and the boom
- in the conservative evangelical churches (including
- Fundamentalists, Pentecostals and charismatics) has caused some
- to envision a religious revival.
- </p>
- <p> Why this massive power shift? Explanations abound. No doubt
- cultural and demographic changes have eroded mainline churches.
- Constant organizational reshuffles have taken a toll. In
- addition, far too many mainline churches are sorely lacking in
- the marketing and communications savvy that the Evangelicals
- employ to win new members. In fact, a contingent of prospering
- evangelical congregations exists within each of the mainline
- denominations. A preoccupation with political and social issues
- at the expense of good old-fashioned faith has alienated many
- members. Not only are the traditional denominations failing to
- get their message across; they are increasingly unsure just what
- that message is.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, the mainline retains sufficient social status
- to be the spiritual home for half the U.S. Congress, as it has
- been for most U.S. Presidents. George Bush is a churchgoing
- Episcopalian, although he communes more naturally with Billy
- Graham and Jerry Falwell than with his own bishops. Presbyterian
- convert Dwight Eisenhower testified to the extraordinary
- mainline influence that existed at midcentury when he journeyed
- to New York City in 1958 to lay the cornerstone for the
- headquarters building of the National Council of Churches.
- </p>
- <p> Although it formerly symbolized mainline ascendancy, the
- N.C.C. is now shaken by a crisis that signals the decline of the
- religious Old Guard. The organization, which this week is
- grappling with its internal problems at an all important board
- meeting in Lexington, Ky., suffers partly from its member
- denominations' tribulations. For instance, the shrunken
- Presbyterian staff, just moved from the N.C.C. building in New
- York City to Louisville, has been cut by 400, in part to ward
- off a $7 million shortfall. With 49% of active lay Presbyterians
- heading toward retirement, said a study published last year,
- future money problems will be "almost beyond belief." Other
- mainline agencies face a similar fiscal crunch.
- </p>
- <p> Critical shortcomings are evident in virtually every
- activity concerned with the teaching and spreading of the faith.
- Examples:
- </p>
- <p> SUNDAY SCHOOL. Enrollments are plummeting even faster than
- overall membership is. In the past two decades, participation
- has decreased an average of 55% in the major denominations.
- Dorothy Bass of the Chicago Theological Seminary blames the
- decline on mainline failure "to transmit the meaning and
- excitement of Christianity from one generation to another, one
- person to another."
- </p>
- <p> HIGHER EDUCATION. A century ago, most U.S. colleges and
- universities were controlled by mainline Protestantism and
- constituted the faith's most important channel of cultural
- influence. But gradually, mainline schools have become
- indistinguishable from secular campuses, leaving distinctly
- Protestant higher education to the Evangelicals. This
- "revolution" occurred with "nobody noticing and nobody seeming
- to mind," remarks Duke University historian George Marsden.
- </p>
- <p> FOREIGN MISSIONS. Spreading the gospel abroad was once a
- quintessential mainline activity, but today evangelical
- agencies sponsor four-fifths of American Protestant
- missionaries. Mainline strategists play down proselytism and
- insist that foreign countries should recruit their own workers.
- Similar woes affect the N.C.C.'s most successful agency, Church
- World Service, the overseas relief and development arm. Its
- expenditures have fallen substantially, and are now exceeded
- several times over by those of World Vision, the leading
- evangelical agency.
- </p>
- <p> RADIO AND TELEVISION. Broadcast religion was once a
- mainline monopoly, but since the 1960s it has been dominated by
- evangelical aggressiveness. In the wake of the squalid
- televangelism scandals, mainliners last fall launched an
- interfaith cable network called VISN. It is potentially their
- most strategic project in many years, but so far programming has
- been dull and dated. Significantly, it was a secular cable
- company, not mainline agencies, that came up with the idea for
- VISN.
- </p>
- <p> Because of population and demographic shifts,
- long-established mainline churches often find themselves
- struggling along in unpromising locations. On a typical Sunday
- in downtown Pasadena, Calif., for example, only 80 mostly
- elderly worshipers attended services at the First Congregational
- Church, a cavernous old citadel built to hold a thousand people.
- The sparsely populated pews contrast dramatically with the
- overflow crowds that regularly jam the ultramodern Church of the
- Nazarene, situated on the fast-growing outskirts of town.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the location, though, the Evangelicals are handily
- winning the game of enlisting members. Most mainline churches
- do not consider it their mission even to compete. Despite
- mainline emphasis on racial justice, conservatives in the
- Southern Baptist Convention and Assemblies of God are more adept
- at recruiting urban blacks and Hispanics, just as they are more
- successful at planting new churches in growing suburbs. When
- John Vaughn of Southwest Baptist University compiled a list of
- America's fastest-growing Protestant congregations, 445 of the
- 500 were outside the mainline.
- </p>
- <p> In their book American Mainline Religion, Wade Clark Roof
- of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and William
- McKinney of Hartford Seminary pin much of the blame for decline
- on long-term demographic trends. As with higher-status groups
- generally, the authors report, birth rates in traditional
- Protestant churches dropped below replacement levels in the
- 1960s, and future trends are alarming because of the rising
- average ages of members. Moreover, note Roof and McKinney, while
- liberal congregations never excelled at converting nonbelievers,
- they used to attract a steady flow of "switchers" from other
- churches. Social-climbing gains by high-prestige mainline
- churches began to dwindle in the 1960s.
- </p>
- <p> Most damaging of all is a doubling of "back door" losses
- since the 1960s, especially as younger adults bred in
- Establishment churches drift into irreligion. "Most
- Episcopalians who have left have not gone over to the
- conservative churches," says Presiding Bishop Edmond Browning.
- "They have gone nowhere."
- </p>
- <p> Paradoxically, mainline churches are being hurt by past
- success. Many are living off income earned from old wealth and
- feel no urgency to attract new supporters. They have also been
- lulled by their social status, which formerly made it possible
- to attract members without any effort. The Rev. Roger Zimmerman,
- who is industriously turning around a Disciples of Christ church
- near downtown Louisville, says that his socially prominent
- congregation long had a "white glove" mentality: "They didn't
- reach out and evangelize. They expected people to come of their
- own accord."
- </p>
- <p> In addition, mainline religion has been undercut by some of
- its own cultural achievements. The churches persuaded people to
- embrace tolerance and inclusiveness, says Hartford Seminary's
- David Roozen, but in doing so lost their internal sense of
- identity. Similarly, liberal Protestant leaders encouraged
- antiauthority movements in the 1960s, only to find youths
- rejecting them as part of the despised Establishment.
- </p>
- <p> The penchant of mainline leaders for embracing progressive
- causes has sparked bitter internal disputes, especially over
- homosexuality and women's rights. The Rev. H. Boone Porter,
- editor of the Living Church, an Episcopal weekly, complains that
- "national officials have taken positions which, frankly, the
- rest of us do not understand." There are also continual
- squabbles over the political stands by clergy who sound like
- McGovern-Mondale Democrats while lay members are largely
- Reagan-Bush Republicans. Several denominations have also lost
- members through conservative schisms.
- </p>
- <p> More important than rancor over specific positions is the
- impression that social crusading is turning the faith into a
- "political agenda masked with a veneer of spirituality," in the
- harsh words of Kent Hill of the conservative Institute on
- Religion and Democracy. A. James Reichley of the Brookings
- Institution believes that mainline "social and political action
- takes away from the religious focus." Mainliners sometimes seem
- more convinced about the virtues of the Sandinistas or the vices
- of Nestle than, say, the meaning of Christ's Crucifixion and
- Resurrection.
- </p>
- <p> The mainline leaning for liberal politics and low-cal
- theology drew on a sort of rationalism that, in the view of
- Richard Mouw of California's Fuller Theological Seminary, is no
- longer fashionable. "We are experiencing a reaction against
- modernity," says Mouw. "We are getting magic and the occult and
- the New Age. There's a return to a premodern world view." Mouw,
- an Evangelical, asserts that the churches were seriously
- mistaken in seeking to duck the age-old questions: "Who am I as
- a human being before God? How can I face my own death? How can
- I be forgiven for my very real sins?"
- </p>
- <p> A back-to-basics mood is palpable among those training for
- the Protestant clergy, many of whom are older students who are
- entering second careers. President Neely McCarter of the Pacific
- School of Religion in Berkeley says his graduates are still
- liberal in politics but "more conservative biblically and
- theologically. They want more worship, and they want more
- spirituality." At New York City's Union Theological Seminary,
- too, prayer groups have grown up, although, reports a
- participant, they are regarded as "kind of like a subculture."
- Many mainline youths prefer conservative training at such
- growing nondenominational schools as Fuller, Trinity Evangelical
- in Illinois and Gordon-Conwell in Massachusetts.
- </p>
- <p> Should the mainline denominations move boldly left of their
- current wishy-washy liberalism or should they turn back to the
- evangelical old-time religion that they espoused until well
- into the 20th century? Analyst McKinney insists that if the
- mainliners move right, the exodus of disgruntled younger members
- would "blow the back door out." But that is not likely to occur
- anyway, at least if national staffs have anything to say about
- it. Theressa Hoover, a highly influential Methodist bureaucrat,
- contends that "you don't change focus just because
- constituencies give you trouble. We've taken as much of a
- beating in the past and never retreated."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the successes of numerous local congregations, few
- experts foresee mainline Protestantism regaining its former
- clout and prosperity. Are the ballyhooed Evangelicals thus
- destined to constitute America's new religious center? One
- shrewd analyst in that conservative camp, Fuller's Mouw, has a
- surprising reply: "If there is an Establishment voice today, it
- is that of Roman Catholicism. The Catholics are the calm,
- dignified, authoritative voices, insofar as there are any at
- all." Lutheran Richard John Neuhaus even wrote a book claiming
- this to be The Catholic Moment for America.
- </p>
- <p> But John Mulder, president of Louisville Presbyterian
- seminary, thinks it is unclear what kind of new moral core
- American society will develop or who will shape it. Most likely,
- America will never again have an unofficially established faith
- such as mainline Protestantism was for centuries. Perhaps, then,
- those genteel old churches are destined to fight a rear-guard
- battle to counteract a "society whose values are at odds with
- the gospel," in the mordant words of Spurgeon Dunnam of Texas,
- Methodism's most influential editor.
- </p>
- <p> McKinney thinks the mainliners' present struggles could one
- day give them special strength. "America is being
- disestablished on the world scene," he explains. "How do we make
- sense out of being Americans in the 21st century?" In his
- scenario, churches that are currently being dethroned may help
- the American people come to terms with a similar humbling of the
- nation's status 50 and 100 years hence. Perhaps, then, mainline
- churches are being cast into a narrow sectarian role not unlike
- that of the European refugees who are known to history as the
- Pilgrims and Puritans. Unlike their 17th century predecessors,
- however, they have no New World to conquer.
- </p>
- <p>--Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles, Barbara Dolan/Chicago and
- Michael P. Harris/New York
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-