lpetrich
Contributor
This may seem almost too good to be true for some of us.
Number of practicing Christians in the U.S. has decreased by about half since 2000 | Disrn
Church Engagement Down about Half Since 2000, Barna Group Reports - Tim Tune
[TR]
[TD]What
[/TD]
[TD]2000
[/TD]
[TD]2020
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Practicing Xian
[/TD]
[TD]45
[/TD]
[TD]27
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Non-Practicing Xian
[/TD]
[TD]35
[/TD]
[TD]43
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Non-Xian
[/TD]
[TD]20
[/TD]
[TD]30
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Atheist/Agnostic/None
[/TD]
[TD]11
[/TD]
[TD]21
[/TD]
[/TR]
[/TABLE]
Signs of Decline & Hope Among Key Metrics of Faith - Barna Group
Barna's numbers are very odd: approximately constant before 2009, then a big change over 2009-2012, then approximately constant to the present day. That is contrary to what others have found, a slow change in the numbers over the years.
Weekly church attendance they found to to be constant at about 45%, then declined to about 30%, and then stayed nearly constant. Looking across the generations, that decline happened after 2012 for all of them. Younger generations are less participating than older ones, even for the same ages.
That odd shift means something suspicious about Barna's numbers, even though they are broadly consistent with what ARIS and other studies have shown.
Number of practicing Christians in the U.S. has decreased by about half since 2000 | Disrn
A survey commissioned by the Barna Group indicates what the report calls a "dramatic change" in American Christianity. The Barna Group qualifies a "practicing Christian" by a respondent "calling oneself a Christian, strongly prioritizing faith and regular church attendance." By these measures, only 25 percent of respondents qualify as practicing, versus 45 percent in 2000.
Church Engagement Down about Half Since 2000, Barna Group Reports - Tim Tune
[TABLE="class: grid"]The decline of the practicing Christian segment, Barna suggests, is “perhaps the most significant change” the research has revealed thus far.
- Practicing Christians self-identify as Christian, attend church at least monthly, and consider faith very important.
- Non-practicing Christians self-identify as Christian but based on their observances don’t qualify as practicing.
- Non-Christians are U.S. adults who don’t identify as Christian.
Over the last two decades, Barna says, the decline among practicing Christians was about evenly distributed between the non-practicing and the non-Christian segments.
[TR]
[TD]What
[/TD]
[TD]2000
[/TD]
[TD]2020
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Practicing Xian
[/TD]
[TD]45
[/TD]
[TD]27
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Non-Practicing Xian
[/TD]
[TD]35
[/TD]
[TD]43
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Non-Xian
[/TD]
[TD]20
[/TD]
[TD]30
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Atheist/Agnostic/None
[/TD]
[TD]11
[/TD]
[TD]21
[/TD]
[/TR]
[/TABLE]
Signs of Decline & Hope Among Key Metrics of Faith - Barna Group
Barna's numbers are very odd: approximately constant before 2009, then a big change over 2009-2012, then approximately constant to the present day. That is contrary to what others have found, a slow change in the numbers over the years.
Weekly church attendance they found to to be constant at about 45%, then declined to about 30%, and then stayed nearly constant. Looking across the generations, that decline happened after 2012 for all of them. Younger generations are less participating than older ones, even for the same ages.
That odd shift means something suspicious about Barna's numbers, even though they are broadly consistent with what ARIS and other studies have shown.
Yeah, that's the ticket. Nothing to look at here but some methheads.