đ˛ The Giant Religion Trend That Should Be Bigger News đ
Weekend Plug-in đ
Editorâs note: Every Friday, âWeekend Plug-inâ features analysis, fact checking and top headlines from the world of faith. Subscribe now to get this newsletter delivered straight to your inbox. Got feedback or ideas? Email Bobby Ross Jr. at therossnews@gmail.com.
(ANALYSIS) Weâre baaa-aaack!
Todayâs newsletter marks the return of Weekend Plug-in after two weeks of vacation. Did you miss me?
Iâm still catching up on the headlines I missed while watching a whole lot of Texas Rangers games.
But I know the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on two important religious freedom cases â one on religious accommodation at work and the other involving free speech and free exercise protections for people of faith who are creative professionals.
Click the preceding links, by the way, to read excellent coverage of the decisions by the Washington Timesâ Mark A. Kellner.
In more recent news, the gunman who killed 11 people in a Pittsburgh synagogue is eligible for the death penalty, a federal jury announced Thursday. The decision clears the way, as The Associated Pressâ Peter Smith reports, âfor further evidence and testimony on whether he should be sentenced to death or life in prison.â
In case you need a reminder, this is our weekly roundup of the top headlines and best reads in the world of faith. We start with the giant religion trend that should be bigger news.
What To Know: The Big Story
Houses of worship closing: âEverybody is caught up with fighting over sexuality or politics on Twitter â and almost no one is paying attention (to) the collapse of congregational life in America.â
Religion News Service national writer Bob Smietana made that prescient observation on social media this week.
Smietana, of course, wrote a book on the subject called âReorganized Religion: The Reshaping of the American Church and Why It Matters.â
A case study: An outstanding story by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinelâs Sophie Carson inspired Smietanaâs tweet.
Carson goes inside a historic downtown church that closed its doors.
Hereâs how she sets the scene:
With the weeks winding down to Summerfield United Methodist Churchâs final Sunday service, longtime member Bob Sarsfield unlocked a safe in the basement and pulled out a book of marriage records.
They dated to 1874.
There, in tiny cursive script, were dozens of names of people married at Summerfield a century and a half ago, their addresses and occupations and wedding dates detailed in neat columns.
âThis is the stuff they want us to turn in,â Sarsfield said.
The United Methodist Church had made the all-but-inevitable decision to close Summerfieldâs doors for good. Sarsfield and another dedicated member, Marcia Tremaine, were cleaning out cabinets ahead of the final day in late June. The book was a peek at the long history of a once-vibrant congregation that in recent years had lost steam.
Itâs a scene that has become familiar around the country. Researchers estimate that before the COVID pandemic, 75 to 100 houses of worship closed each week in the U.S., facing the same headwinds as Summerfield: aging and dwindling congregations saddled with insurmountable upkeep costs.
Churches that are thriving today tend to offer modern services and programming.
Summerfield, the oldest Methodist congregation in Wisconsin, had shrunk to only 11 members, none under 65 years old. The historic building at North Cass Street and East Juneau Avenue, constructed in 1904 as the successor to Summerfieldâs first church, needed extensive repairs.
âWe could continue going on a little bit longer, but youâre looking down this dark hole and itâs just getting deeper and deeper,â said Sarsfield, chairman of the churchâs trustees committee.
Perseverance and prayers: The Milwaukee story follows recent reporting (about the time of my vacation) by the Minneapolis Star Tribuneâs Erica Pearson.
Pearson profiles a rural Minnesota church in need of a savior:
The unincorporated village of Rosen in far western Minnesotaâs Lac qui Parle County boasts a beautiful old Catholic church, a well-kept ballfield thatâs home to an amateur baseball team â and not much else.
Thereâs not a single store, no restaurant or town hall. Not even a bar. Just St. Josephâs, whose first pastor, the Rev. Peter Rosen, gave the village its name in 1895.
Thatâs one of the reasons parishioners are so upset that the church â the only community space they have â is slated to be merged with another parish in July, then potentially closed and demolished as part of the Diocese of New Ulmâs strategic plan to deal with priest shortages and shrinking congregations.
The villagers are fighting to save their church by filing an appeal with Bishop Chad Zielinski and raising money in what supporters call a David-and-Goliath battle. They hope to be among the few parishes in Minnesota and other states that have managed to stave off closure and keep their church buildings.
More on the subject: Interested in additional insight?
NPRâs Scott Neuman and The Guardianâs Adam Gabbatt both have covered the trend in recent months.
And my Christian Chronicle colleague Cheryl Mann Bacon did an entire series on âWhere have all the churches gone?â
Power Up: The Weekâs Best Reads
1. Independent churches surge: âThe city some dismiss as âThe Swampâ is fertile ground for evangelicals.â
Hereâs another trend that probably doesnât receive as much attention as it should: Christianity Todayâs Daniel Silliman highlights the growth of nondenominational churches â specifically in Washington, D.C.
âIf nondenominational were a denomination, it would even be larger than the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest denomination in the US,â Silliman notes.
2. Faith of the candidates: Vivek Ramaswamy is leaning into his Hindu faith to court Christian voters.
So reports the New York Timesâ Ruth Graham, whose story notes, âThe Republican candidate for president makes a pitch that the faiths have much in common, but for many religious conservatives, the difference is a hurdle.â
In other campaign news, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis âis hoping Iowa evangelicals can make his campaign born again,â according to Politicoâs Sally Goldenberg.
And South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott looks to swing Iowa evangelical voters with a new $6 million ad buy, Bloombergâs Christian Hall reports.
3. More Southern Baptist debate: âMany African American SBC churches have women pastors on staff. Will they be expelled next?â
Thatâs the intriguing question posed by Religion News Serviceâs Bob Smietana.
See related coverage by The Tennesseanâs Liam Adams and the Washington Timesâ Mark A. Kellner.
More Top Reads
United Methodists have lost more than 6,000 congregations in a schism driven by growing defiance of LGBTQ bans, The Associated Pressâ Peter Smith explains. ⌠The Methodist splits are âheartbreakingâ to Missouri pastors, the St. Louis Post-Dispatchâs Ethan Colbert notes. ⌠The Vanderbilt Divinity School is challenging the religious status quo, The Tennesseanâs Liam Adams writes. ⌠At a British brewery, monksâ blessings are as important as barley and hops, according to the New York Timesâ Stephen Castle. ⌠Colorado Springsâ new Christian mayor wants to âdisruptâ politics with unity, Rachel Pfeiffer reports for Christianity Today. ⌠In case I havenât mentioned Religion News Serviceâs Bob Smietana enough this week, check out his insightful recent reporting â here and here â on church worship trends. ⌠And finally, in a piece on religious liberty and political power, New York Times columnist David French asks, âWho truly threatens the church?â
Inside The Godbeat
Every few years, the Houston Chronicle names a religion reporter, pays attention to the Godbeat for a little while ⌠and then lets the important coverage area fade away.
That great newspaper has done some powerful reporting on subjects such as the Southern Baptist Conventionâs sex abuse scandal, but itâs shown far less devotion to reporting on religion news in general.
I mention this because the Houston newspaper is taking applications for a reporter to cover religion in cultural life in Houston. Hereâs hoping that this opening marks a renewed â and long-term â commitment to faith news.
Charging Station: ICYMI
Here is where you can catch up on recent news and opinions from ReligionUnplugged.com.
ââSound Of Freedomâ is a preachy action film that will put you to sleep (if youâre lucky).â
Thatâs Joseph Holmesâ viral take.
Another piece you shouldnât miss: Ryan Burge makes the case for why he believes âReligion has become a luxury good for the middle class, married college graduate with children.â
The Final Plug
âJesus said the gates of hell will not prevail against His church, but sleet and hail will keep many churchgoers out of the pew on a Sunday. In fact, some may even skip to get a little extra sleep or watch their favorite team.â
I loved that lede on Aaron Earlsâ story this week on a new Lifeway Research study. Check out the full report.
Happy Friday, everyone! Enjoy the weekend.
Bobby Ross Jr. writes the Weekend Plug-in column for ReligionUnplugged.com and serves as editor-in-chief of The Christian Chronicle. A former religion writer for The Associated Press and The Oklahoman, Ross has reported from all 50 states and 18 nations. He has covered religion since 1999.