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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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<text>
<title>
(Apr. 05, 1993) The Church Search
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Apr. 05, 1993 The Generation That Forgot God
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
RELIGION, Page 44
The Church Search
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Baby Boomers dropped out in record numbers. Now many are finding
spiritual homes again--and American religion will never be
the same.
</p>
<p>By RICHARD N. OSTLING--With reporting by Jordan Bonfante/Los
Angeles, Ratu Kamlani/New York, Elizabeth Taylor/Chicago and
Lisa H. Towle/Raleigh
</p>
<p> Back in the early 1960s, when cars were big and hair was
short and families that prayed together stayed together, the
Walceks said grace before meals and went to Mass every single
morning. Emil and Kathleen sent their nine children to the local
parochial schools in Placentia, California, and on Sunday
mornings at St. Joseph's the family took up two pews.
</p>
<p> Then one by one, the children set off on their spiritual
travels, and in the process perfectly charted the journey of
their generation. Emil Jr., 45, and Edward, 32, dropped out of
church, and stayed out. John, 43, was married on a cliff
overlooking Laguna Beach, divorced--and returned to the
Catholic Church, saying, "Maybe the traditional way of doing
things isn't so bad." Joe, 41, also returned to the fold after
marrying a Ukrainian Catholic. Mary, 40, married a lapsed
Methodist and worships "God's creation" in her own unstructured
fashion. Rosie, 38, drifted into the Hindu-influenced
Self-Realization Fellowship. Chris, 34, picked Unitarianism,
which offered some of Christianity's morality without its dogma.
Theresa, 36, spent five years exploring the "Higher Power" in
12-step self-help programs. Ann, 30, called off her wedding when
her nonpracticing Jewish fiance embraced Orthodoxy, a crisis
that "sparked a whole new journey for me."
</p>
<p> There was a time in America when a spiritual journey meant
a long, stormy crossing of the soul, an exploration mapped by
Scripture and led by clergy through the family church. Catholic
you were born and Catholic you died, or Methodist, or Jew. Of
the generation born after World War II, 95% received a
religious upbringing, and had they behaved like their parents
before them, the churches and synagogues of their childhood
would be thriving.
</p>
<p> Today, a quiet revolution is taking place that is changing
not only the religious habits of millions of American but the
way churches go about recruiting members to keep their doors
open. Increasing numbers of baby boomers who left the fold years
ago are turning religious again, but many are traveling from
church to church or faith to faith, sampling creeds, shopping
for a custom-made God. A growing choir of critics contends that
in doing whatever it takes to lure those fickle customers,
churches are at risk of losing their heritage--and their
souls.
</p>
<p> According to Wade Clark Roof, a sociologist at the
University of California at Santa Barbara who has studied
boomers' attitudes toward God, about a third have never strayed
from church. Another one-fourth of boomers are defectors who
have returned to religious practice--at least for now. The
returnees are usually less tied to tradition and less dependable
as church members than the loyalists. They are also more
liberal, which deepens rifts over issues like abortion and
homosexuality.
</p>
<p> The returnees are still vastly outnumbered by the 42% of
baby boomers who remain dropouts from formal religion. Roof's
polling, however, found that most said they felt their children
should receive religious training--creating an opportunity
that churches are rushing to meet. Two potent events that might
draw dropouts back to the fold are having children and facing
at mid-life a personal or career crisis that reminds boomers of
the need for moorings. "You have to start thinking about God in
the face of how to raise children in a society that has lost all
connection to God," says Hollywood screenwriter-director Michael
Tolkin, 42. He has ended up a more prayerful Jew than his
liberal parents after seeking religious training for his
children.
</p>
<p> When West Europeans drop out of church, as large
majorities do, they typically lose interest in belief too, but
America remains unpromising ground for atheism and agnosticism.
One of the most intriguing discoveries in Roof's research for
A Generation of Seekers (Harper San Francisco) is the growth of
what he calls "believers but not belongers." Americans who
leave religious institutions do not necessarily abandon
religious faith. Even most dropouts say they believe in God;
though one-third also believe in reincarnation, ghosts and
astrology. The God of their understanding is not necessarily the
personal, all-powerful and all-knowing deity of orthodoxy. Nor
is the Jesus affirmed by boomers necessarily the Son of God and
unique Saviour of humanity.
</p>
<p> On Thanksgiving in 1991, Patricia Newlin, a lapsed
Lutheran, met a young co-worker, a born-again Christian, on a
business trip to Paris. They walked along the Seine in the
shadow of Notre Dame and discussed the idea that we all carry
around with us a God-shaped vacuum and try unceasingly to fill
it with other things. "That notion just struck an incredibly
responsive chord in me," remembers Newlin. She realized that she
"had created an idol out of work, had sacrificed my time and
effort to it, and it stopped working." She was baptized in
January 1992 and began attending Redeemer Presbyterian Church
in New York City and working in a homeless shelter. Four years
ago, Redeemer was a 15-member Bible-study group on Manhattan's
Upper East Side. "I said, let's not build a church for us,"
recalls Pastor Timothy Keller. "Let's build a church for your
friends who don't go to church." It now has 1,200 members, half
of whom had not been affiliated with a church.
</p>
<p> In the wrenching realignment of church loyalties, mainline
Protestantism and Judaism have felt by far the most pain. For
Presbyterians, Methodists, Episcopalians, nearly half the
children born into the church end up leaving for good. Six major
denominations report a combined net membership loss of 6.2
million, to a current 22.2 million, since the mid-1960s. Despite
its many problems, Catholicism has held its own. By Roof's
survey, 70% of those raised as Jews have dropped out, a
disastrous loss that coincides with low birthrates, a steep
increase of intermarriage with non-Jews, and the slim odds that
children from such marriages will end up practicing the faith.
</p>
<p> The unprecedented membership decline in old-line
Protestant churches inspired Roof to delve more deeply into the
subject. These affluent, predominantly white, relatively liberal
denominations date from colonial times and long controlled
America's spiritual and cultural values. Now they are on the
defensive, losing members and influence. Meanwhile, churches on
either side of the spiritual spectrum are growing fast: the
conservative evangelical Protestantism on one hand and an
assortment of Eastern, New Age and unconventional religions on
the other.
</p>
<p> Analysts say mainliners are suffering because they have
failed to transmit a compelling Christian message to their own
children or to anybody else. "One thing about the Episcopalians,
Methodists and Catholics," says Margaret Poloma, professor of
sociology at the University of Akron, "is that people in
leadership positions are out of touch with the people in the
pews. The evangelical churches have made a real attempt to reach
out to younger people." Though strict, doctrinaire religion
might seem to drive away the tolerance-minded boomers,
liberalism fares even worse. When the faith replaces firm claims
to truth with a spongy, homemade folk religion, younger members
seem to take it as an invitation to look elsewhere. The thriving
evangelical churches, in contrast, have successfully struck a
balance between compromise and capitulation. They recognize that
boomers want choices, but, Roof argues, "they are also setting
some boundaries, morally and religiously."
</p>
<p> The Smiths joke that they are "cashews," an Irish Catholic
married to a Jew who drifted away from his faith after his bar
mitzvah. Chicago attorney Stephen Smith and his wife Eileen now
find themselves searching together. "This isn't about having
material goods and being empty. That's a cliche," says Stephen.
"It's being in a place you can safely drop your guard. It's
wanting to put meaning to a world where kids are shot going to
school." The Smiths often attend Mass and also visit liberal
Rabbi Allen Secher's monthly gatherings for those who don't fit
into mainstream Judaism. Half humorously, some call themselves
Secher's Searchers. "There's an enormous hunger," says Secher,
but "I'm not seeing a lot of synagogues opening up and being
creative enough to deal with that."
</p>
<p> By ancient tradition a church is designed to celebrate the
glory of God, the majesty of its vaults and the delicacy of its
windows reflecting his exalted nature. Now, however, it must do
many other things as well. "People are in the seeking mode.
They are looking for places to get their needs met," says
Pastor Joe S. Ratliff, whose mainly black Brentwood Baptist
Church in Houston has swelled from 500 to 10,000 members over
13 years. "Why can't a church be seeker friendly?" Brentwood
provides traditional Sunday school and prayer cells, but also
a singles ministry (more than half the adult members are
unmarried or divorced), prison ministry, AIDS ministry, food
pantry, golf club and numerous after-school programs for youth,
including tutoring.
</p>
<p> The churches that are booming--Willow Creek Community
Church near Chicago, for example, or the 429 congregations
cloned from Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa, California--do not
resemble buttoned-down temples of Wasp propriety. Ministers
themselves talk of being "customer oriented" and attend seminars
to become "church growth" experts. Jeans are as welcome as suits
and ties; theater seats replace pews. Instead of using
hymnbooks, congregations sing lively, if saccharine, choruses
with words projected on a screen. Worship may include skits,
audience participation or applause.
</p>
<p> Some successful boomer churches are shrines to secular
movements, particularly the 12-step programs modeled on
Alcoholics Anonymous. "We refer to ourselves as wounded
healers," says Minister Mike Matoin of Unity in Chicago, himself
a former bellhop, bouncer, cabdriver, and child of an alcoholic.
"A lot of baby boomers can relate to us. We've been through our
own recovery, and we're not on a pedestal." If a spiritual
search is going on, it is for an inner child. In a room
remarkably empty of religious paraphernalia, on a riser, behind
the pulpit, an enormous teddy bear sits in the background. "The
twentysomethings," observes Matoin, "are searching achievers.
Working hard. `I've got a condo, Rollerblades, but something's
missing.' They've got prosperity but not peace of mind. The
person in his 40s or 50s, it's the life experience. Busted
relationships. They're alcoholics, married to alcoholics, bumped
around, lost jobs, and they find a safe harbor."
</p>
<p> The eclectic, New Age-ish church has grown from 10 members
to more than a thousand since 1977. It offers everything from
self-help groups like Debtors Anonymous to a "pet ministry" for
adopting stray animals. Songs one Sunday ranged from Oh, What
a Beautiful Mornin' to Danny Boy. In between, sneaker-shod
Matoin bounded around like a school coach: "Everyone here was
born to be a winner: you've got the choice." When he finished,
the crowd sang, "Weave, weave us together in unity and love.
Weave, weave us together. Let there be peace on earth, let it
begin with me." As the meeting climaxed in hugging, Matoin
raised his arms high and boomed, "Hey, God, make my day! Go for
it!"
</p>
<p> Vicki and Bill Sledge met through a singles group
sponsored by a Baptist church where they eventually married. But
in January 1990, not long after the birth of their second child,
the Sledges decided, after much "heart-wrenching soul
searching," that it was time to move on. After long research,
the couple landed at Custer Road United Methodist Church in
Plano, Texas, which has grown 50% since 1990. "Unlike some of
our generation, we could not imagine abandoning church
altogether. We just needed something that spoke to us in a
different way," says Vicki. The church has adult and youth
choirs, classes in everything from Bible study to parenting.
Preaching is "conversational," says associate minister Pete
Robertson. Sermons last no more than 15 minutes. "The days of
the 20-, 30- or 40-minute sermons are gone."
</p>
<p> Ministers are often the first to see the dangers of
supply-side spirituality. "Patterning the church after a
mega-supermarket can only lead us to failure," warns Methodist
D. Stephen Long of Duke University's Divinity School. "I'm not
opposed to the churches using some marketing techniques, but I
fear what is happening is that marketing techniques are
beginning to use the church. We can't target groups we want for
the church simply by locating points of desire. Somewhere
there's got to be some judgment about whether these desires are
appropriate." He rejects the notion that the job of ministers
is to keep people happy and the pews filled. "A pastor has to
shake things up," he says. "The point isn't to accommodate
self-centeredness but to attack it. If you don't, then the
Gospel becomes just one more commodity we seek to package."
</p>
<p> Catholic theologian Avery Dulles grumbles that just about
everything in America, religion included, "succeeds to the
extent that it can arouse interest and provide entertainment."
Even voices within the prospering conservative Protestant camp
are beginning to ponder the wages of success. A stinging
indictment of Evangelicalism's theological corruption will
appear in the forthcoming book No Place for Truth (Eerdmans) by
theologian David F. Wells of Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
in Massachusetts. Even among conservatives, warns Wells,
biblical truth "is being edged out by the small and tawdry
interest of the self in itself." The Christian Gospel, he says,
is becoming "indistinguishable from any of a host of alternative
self-help doctrines."
</p>
<p> Some of today's most influential religious figures are no
longer theologians but therapists. For Evangelicals, the guru
is Colorado's James Dobson, a child psychologist whose daily
radio show, Focus on the Family, dispenses advice over 1,200
stations. Among mainline dropouts and seekers the star is
Connecticut psychiatrist M. Scott Peck, who fused the
psychological with the spiritual in The Road Less Traveled, a
New York Times paperback best seller for a record 490 weeks.
Peck was baptized a Christian in 1980 but sees no reason to join
a church; his latest book, A World Waiting to Be Born, claims
that businesses could become the true spiritual citadels of
tomorrow.
</p>
<p> The battle over church strategies heated up this winter
with the publication of a lively book, The Churching of America
1776-1990 (Rutgers), in which sociologists Roger Finke and
Rodney Stark interpret 214 years of U.S. religion as a series
of marketing coups. Historian Martin E. Marty summarized their
interpretation: "No God or religion or spirituality, no issue
of truth or beauty or goodness, no faith or hope or love, no
justice or mercy; only winning and losing in the churching game
matters.'' Marty, a Lutheran, remarks that it is "lethal" to
reshape churches around the claims of returnees who are ignorant
of the heritage, or to capitulate to a "random selection of
cravings, nurtured by non-Christian and anti-Christian forces."
</p>
<p> Other, younger ministers, schooled in a different set of
assumptions and traditions, disagree. "Who says targeting a
group is unbiblical?" asks North Carolina Pastor Doug Humphrey.
"After all, Paul preached primarily to the Gentiles, while Peter
focused on the Jews." Humphrey and his Dallas Theological
Seminary classmate Buddy Walters have marketing on their minds.
They are in the process of planting a new church, set to open
its doors for the first time next week on Easter morning. They
have completed their demographic studies, chosen their
advertising strategy, sent out the direct mail and targeted
their ideal audience: the 5,000 or so potential congregants
found in just one corner of North Carolina's Research Triangle.
Their Triangle Community Church will be nondenominational. "Most
churches haven't done a good job of responding to a culture
that's changed," says Humphrey. "We don't need to change the
message, but we can change the way we package it." He has his
Easter morning sermon all planned: "Is the Resurrection a Fact
or Fantasy?"
</p>
<p> "People seem to be very concerned with the fact that the
so-called baby boomers feel free--feel the compulsion, really--to question, that we shop around and don't have `brand
loyalty,' " says Joe B. Brown, 44, senior pastor at Hickory
Grove Baptist Church in Charlotte, North Carolina. "Well, I
don't find in the Bible where Jesus condemned people for asking
too many questions. I do find where Jesus condemned people for
thinking they had all the answers." When he arrived at Hickory
Grove eight years ago, Brown could expect, at most, 500 people
at a Sunday service. Today Sunday morning worship draws 5,000;
Sunday evening, 2,000; and the Wednesday night service 2,000
again.
</p>
<p> Though Hickory Grove is a member of the Southern Baptist
Convention, only 30% of its members, whose average age is about
30, have been Baptists from birth. These variegated members are
drawn together through close-knit support groups for substance
abusers, adult children of alcoholics, and people with eating
disorders, as well as through small Bible-study groups that also
provide advice and comfort in the event of divorce, economic
trouble or illness.
</p>
<p> There is genuine creativity in the reconfigured faiths
being fostered by the new seekers. Much is gained when houses
of worship address real needs of people rather than purveying
old abstractions, expectations and mannerisms. Many of those who
have rediscovered churchgoing may ultimately be shortchanged,
however, if the focus of their faith seems subtly to shift from
the glorification of God to the gratification of man.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>