April 17
Young adults: Forget church, follow Jesus
By Christian PiattPage:
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Two recent articles grabbed my attention, partly because they resonate quite a bit with the pieces I’ve written about why young adults leave church, and sometimes come back. It’s also interesting to me that so many people seem to be talking about this topic right now. Rachel Held Evans and I came out with pieces at the same time, and then a similar story by Andrew Sullivan hit the cover of the April 9 issue of Newsweek. My wife, Amy, sent me an article by Adam J. Copeland from The Christian Century called “No Need For Church: Ministry With Young Adults In Flux.”
In the article, Copeland recounts three snapshot portraits of three “typical” young adults who are seeking to follow the way of Christ without church:
A young woman told me that she, too, had grown up in a loving Lutheran church but felt pushed out when she revealed her sexuality. She now prays regularly, attends spirituality retreats at a Catholic ministry center and volunteers in a variety of settings. But she is not connected to a congregation. A young man described how he had hoped to be a youth pastor in his conservative evangelical denomination, but then the rigid faith he was taught at Bible college sent him into a crisis of faith. Now his questions about the Bible, and about piety and certain theological doctrines, make him feel unwelcome in the church of his youth — and uninspired to try another church. A young woman explained that she planned to live in Fargo for only a year. She felt it wasn’t worth expending the time she’d need to get connected to a congregation but wished she had a place where she could ask faith-related questions, a place where she might grow in her love of God and neighbor.
Why is this happening? There are a number of reasons, many of which I’ve already discussed in the articles I wrote and linked to above. And there’s no need for me to rehash everything Copeland and Sullivan wrote in their own pieces. But there are a few themes that emerge wherever I look for clues about this trend:
The teachings of the church are seen as devalued. This doesn’t have so much to do with the inherent importance or validity of what is being said, but rather it’s a reflection of the value of information overall. It’s really a matter of supply and demand. Abraham Lincoln probably wouldn’t have walked so far to get a book from the only area library if he had Wikipedia and Google Books at his fingertips. Most anything being said, taught or preached about in a church on Sunday can be found somewhere else, wherever and whenever we want it. Why wait?
The institutions have outlasted their original purpose. Most of our churches were built when populations were static. People didn’t divorce, change jobs and move around like they do now. This mobility, combined with the diversification of networking opportunities, online and through other means, puts bricks-and-mortar institutions in an awkward spot of hoping people find them where they are. And much of the outreach efforts of church is still an attempt to get people “in the doors.” But the fact is that most young adults don’t particularly care.
Our understanding of community has changed. This builds on the previous point. Community used to imply a specific geographic focus, like a church, country club or lodge. All of these kinds of institutions, incidentally, are not what they used to be. Our understanding of relationship is different, and what we come to expect out of being connected to one another has evolved (or mutated, depending on your point of view) in both size and content. For example, I am still in contact with hundreds of folks from my past who are all around the world. A few years ago, we would never have heard from each other again. But I also don’t have many close friends. Everyone’s too “busy.” People are increasingly wary of investing their limited time and resources into anything new, including other people.
This all being said, there is still a significant interest in, and pursuit of, a life following the path lived out and described by Jesus. In some ways, we younger adults are starving for the very community we’re wary of, much like the young woman from Fargo described above. But we’re distracted, skeptical and even a little paranoid, especially when it comes to institutions.
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Comments
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Although I am an adult, I could hardly be described as young. I really value this discussion happening in many places, including our church, and our family. I recognize that the things that keep me in church are not as strongly present for my children:
--a sense of history in which I have seen people transformed over the years by their commitment to authentic faith
--a place to ask questions and explore the meaning of faith, and be surrounded by others who ask (and welcome) questions and seek respectful exploration of the meaning of faith
--inspiration from those willing to do hard things and take risks because of Jesus
--a community that has supported me through many difficult times, and who has accepted my support through their own difficult times.
These are only a few of the things that keep me in church. I believe that these things would be a drawing card for those who are young as well, but somehow aren't as present within the organized church structure. However, I believe they are necessary ingredients for a faithful life, and we must find a way inside or outside of the church building to offer these things to young adults.
I have to add that the church is a gathering of sinners, of which I am one, and we, and I have failed in many ways. Only one of those ways is to be stagnant, and to be rigid and maybe judging, as young adults ask the questions that they MUST ask.
Authentic faith is not handed down. It is grasped and wrestled with, and we must not only be patient with that, we must welcome it as necessary to the life of the church. The questions of the young are not to be tolerated patiently until they understand the truth. Their questions are to be seen as leading all of us to new understandings of the truth, that will be enriched by our history and wisdom. We need each other.
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