From Adria Gulitzia, in Autopsy of a Deceased Church: Quaker Edition:
Think about that: since 2010, nearly one in four Quaker meetings or churches has closed its doors. The topic of dying congregations, and how to save them, feels urgent to me, and I’ve been unable to write much of anything since I read these devastating numbers.
These are preliminary U.S. number from Friends World Committee for Consultation, which does a periodic census. We need the usual disclaimer that membership numbers are always more a little dodgy (which FWCC readily admits) and that the picture is different outside the United States, especially in Evangelical Africa. But, however you slice it, these are concerning numbers.
Adria promises a whole series of posts. I’ll be tuned in.
Update: a new post has dropped, Worshiping the Past, Abandoning the Future:
When congregations die, it’s usually after a slow erosion rather than a cataclysmic event. During that process, there are several points when they could change directions. The decline is seldom irreversible. But instead of facing reality and responding accordingly, people use some high point in their past to justify why they should not change now. And so they die.
I like Adria’s questions at the end about focusing on the peripheries of our community. It was something of a personal revelation for me many years ago when I realized I should focus my outreach efforts on the people who would be Quaker if only they knew about us (and if only we were accommodating and welcoming) rather than the folks already on the benches.
Originally published 1/3, updated 1/6
I didn’t realize the decline is as steep as the numbers indicate, but I’m not surprised.
Most young Americans have nothing but contempt for religion and see no need for it.
Friends need to rebuild from the ground up, as a movement, rather than try to renew the existing structure. In many ways, we’re trapped in our committees.
Other denominations, we should add, are also in trouble.