Yup. My thoughts exactly. As I said above, this sounds a lot like the assumptions of my liberal friends who haven't darkened the door of an EV church in years.Forest Bueller_bf said:Brother, I need to know where you go to church.C. Jordan said:Nondenominational churches as whole are growing because more Christians are disillusioned with denominations. The great majority of people who are going to these Bible churches weren't "lost" people joining. And the great majority aren't coming from Mainstream churches. They're coming from conservative denominational churches. Even Bible churches adhere to fewer doctrinal details than denominational churches of the past.Mothra said:Yes, I agree the prosperity gospel is a big player in Africa in particular. I cannot comment on S. America, but wouldn't be surprised.C. Jordan said:I was thinking of church growth in a global setting. If you dig a bit deeper into missionary literature, you'll find that the fastest-growing brand of Christianity in a global sense is Pentecostalism with a prosperity bent. My missionary friends in Africa and S. America testify to it as well.Mothra said:A google search provided no evidence of your position on the prosperity gospel - which has been a big player for years on television. Has it grown since the 80's? Not sure. Pat Robertson, Oral Roberts, Robert Tilton and the like have always seemed to make a lot of money from it, but their viewership and congregations have markedly declined. Sure, there are people like Osteen who take their place, and perhaps always will be. There will always be people who make money by distorting the gospel. Hell, it happened in Paul's time.C. Jordan said:Pentecostal churches are growing even faster, particularly those that feature the Prosperity Gospel. Does this mean their preaching is closer to the Bible than Bible churches?Mothra said:The non-denominational bible church is growing in large numbers. Many of the mainline denominations are seeing congregants flock to them. It's what happens when you actually preach the word of God, and stick to the fundamentals, instead of tickling the ears of the woke generation.C. Jordan said:Pretty much all Christian denominations in the US are declining. Including conservative ones like the Southern Baptist Convention. And the SBC's decline is more severe than his numbers show. SBC numbers are based on membership, not attendance. If you tracked attendance, the decline would be about as steep as Methodists. The video seem ignores conservative declines. Many conservative churches have abandoned evangelism for culture war.BaylorFTW said:
Roman Catholics would also be in a steep decline in the U.S. were it not for growth from Latino immigrants.
The decline is much more complex than liberal or conservative theology. The video pursues the simplistic, inadequate thesis that conservative theology is the difference. I meet lots of people who call themselves "recovering Baptist" or "recovering Catholic" who are spiritual but who have rejected their former churches for various reasons.
The heart of the problem for many churches is that they refuse to move away from institutional thinking and move to missional and incarnational thinking. They think too much about satisfying their members and too little about reaching out in love and grace to people outside their churches. This issue transcends theology.
Also, the Southern Baptist Convention was growing at a high rate in the late 1960s and the 1970s, when it was allegedly "liberal." Now that it's more conservative, it's declining. Does that mean it was doing a better job honoring the Bible when it was more liberal?
Can't comment on how liberal the SBC was in the 60's and 70's. I highly doubt they strayed from biblical teachings, however, given what I know about the denomination.
My point is equating church growth with conservatism and biblical faithfulness is a tricky proposition. The fact that a church or denomination is growing or declining isn't necessarily in indicator of its faithfulness to the scriptures. Growth and decline comes from a complex interaction of theology, demographics, birth rates, social change, and more.
What we should be talking about more is the fastest-growing segment of the American population: the Nones. They're people who've dropped out of church for various reasons. Many of them are spiritual, but don't identify with any religion. I run into them every day. They've dropped out of both conservative and liberal churches.
Interestingly, conservative theology and church membership and attendance aren't as connected as they once were. For example, a considerable number of people identify themselves as evangelical but don't attend church. This doesn't make sense to me, but it's a reality.
Also, I think the conservatism/liberalism of the church is less important than its sense of mission. I've seen conservative churches with no sense of mission or real evangelism. And I've seen liberal churches with both. So until the mentality of church folks changes, it doesn't matter if they're liberal or conservative. Their churches are going to die.
My position does not suggest that false teachings cannot take hold and gain a following. Indeed, they can and have - throughout Church history. I am also not suggesting that the ONLY reason that the bible church is growing is because it's conservative, though I think there is really no disputing that adherence to the fundamentals is a huge part of it's growing membership. Part and parcel with adherence to the fundamentals is a heavy emphasis on the mission field. Indeed, more than half of my bible church's annual budget goes to the mission field, which would I suspect would be highly unusual in one of the traditional denominations. Christ did call us to be fishers of men after all.
So, where we are going to disagree is on the last part. I believe there is strong evidence that the reason the Bible church is growing, and the traditional denominations are declining is indeed because of the former's adherence to the fundamentals. It's extremely rare to find a liberal church nowdays that is thriving.
These are the trends I've seen over the last 50 years. Mainstream denominational churches to more evangelical denominational churches. More evangelical denominational churches to nondenominational churches. Nondenominational churches to no church.
I've also seen even among conservative churches that the issues people regard as most important have shifted radically. 50 years ago, issues like the meaning of baptism and the Lord's Supper, the nature of church governance, the nature of the Trinity, the nature of Christ, etc., were really important. Today, they've been replaced by abortion, homosexuality, the role of women, the Second Amendment, and loyalty to Trump.
So matters of salvation have become less important among people who identify as biblically conservative and cultural issues have become much more important.
That's sounds like what you've been told is going on. Where I attend the bolded aren't mentioned except in passing at most. The last two have never been mentioned at all.