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Home/Churches and Ministries/Religion and the Bad News Bearers

Religion and the Bad News Bearers

Written by Rodney Stark and Byron Johnson, WSJ | Monday, August 29, 2011

The widely reported decline in women’s church attendance is implausible (or Why Barna’s Studies Aren’t All That Swift)

The national news media yawned over the Baylor Survey’s findings that the number of American atheists has remained steady at 4% since 1944, and that church membership has reached an all-time high. But when a study by the Barna Research Group claimed that young people under 30 are deserting the church in droves, it made headlines and newscasts across the nation—even though it was a false alarm.

Surveys always find that younger people are less likely to attend church, yet this has never resulted in the decline of the churches. It merely reflects the fact that, having left home, many single young adults choose to sleep in on Sunday mornings.

Once they marry, though, and especially once they have children, their attendance rates recover. Unfortunately, because the press tends not to publicize this correction, many church leaders continue unnecessarily fretting about regaining the lost young people.

In similar fashion, major media hailed another Barna report that young evangelicals are increasingly embracing liberal politics. But only religious periodicals carried the news that national surveys offer no support for this claim, and that younger evangelicals actually remain as conservative as their parents.

Given this track record, it was no surprise this month to see the prominent headlines announcing another finding from Barna that American women are rapidly falling away from religion. The basis for this was a comparison between a poll they conducted in 1991 and one they conducted in January of this year.

The reporters who ran with this story ought to have wondered why this change wasn’t picked up sooner if it was going on for 20 years. Many national surveys have been conducted during this period—in fact the Barna Group has been doing them all along.

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Messrs. Stark and Johnson are co-directors of the Institute for Studies of Religion at Baylor University.

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  • The Fields Are Ready
  • Drawing Gen Z Women Back to the Church
  • Gen Z Is Spiritually Hungry. Let’s Get Ready to Feed Them.
  • The Trouble with Watching Religious Trends

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