You may recall my blog two weeks ago; Ken Ham, whom many of you know is the president of Answers in Genesis and the Creation Museum and the Noah Encounter, wrote another blockbuster book, along with polling- and statistics-minded Britt Beemer, called Already Gone. I’m a little late on this scene as well, since the book and the poll were written 10 years ago—but it’s even more relevant now, since church attendance is going down at every age level. This survey in particular focuses on the youth scene. Let’s discuss the controversial results and conclusions he arrived at on some troubling aspects of teens and those who teach them.
He first points to a Barna 2006
survey (another great pollster) of 22,000 young adults who were involved in a
church during their teen years—but they are now spiritually disengaged. They
are no longer actively participating in the Christian faith in their 20s.
Specifically, he found that 61% of them no longer go to church, don’t study
their Bibles, give very little financially, do not volunteer, and do not order
Christian media. Only 20% of those who were spiritually active in high
school are maintaining their commitment at the same level. Further, Barna
found that only 6% of those in 20s and 30s can be called “evangelical.” A
pitifully how number.
Confirming this serious drop-off,
the Baptist Convention discovered that more than 2/3 of young Protestant
high-schoolers active in church later stopped attending at all for at least a
year between the ages of 18-22.
Mr. Ham wanted to study only kids
brought up in conservative and evangelical churches for this poll. His
co-author Beemer, with help, made 20,000 phone calls. The final study was
balanced according to population and gender, and included kids from public
schools, Christian schools, and home-schooled. He found that kids were
abandoning the church proportionately, no matter the kind of schooling. Teens
that went to Christian schools abandoned the church at the same high levels.
Here are some of the blockbuster
results he found:
Kids don’t wait till college to
“escape” the church: One survey took all those “dropouts”
who are now in their 20s, who have been evangelicals, who attended church
regularly but no longer do so. So these dropout rates will
add up to 100%. Please do not misconstrue what I am saying here; we are
not pointing out that all kids drop out. We are simply trying to assess when
all the drop-offs actually drop off. Here are the pollster data: 5% of
the dropouts do so before they finish elementary, 40% drop out in middle school
and 44% of them drop out in high school. Despite what you might think
about corrupt college destroying their minds, you’re wrong: 89% of all evangelicals
are already gone before college. So there isn’t much belief for college
to destroy; only 11% disappear during college. The problem is only
minimally helped by upholding young adults’ Christian views in college.
The main problem is earlier.
So, from the Baptists and the Barna
studies, we lose 61-67% of our kids,
who are detailed above. And they leave as soon as they are “bright” enough to
figure what is going on. So this is a serious, serious problem. We
need to pray about what’s really behind this horrible decline. Looking at
these young people as our church’s future, we have to conclude that our
evangelical churches are only a generation removed from being “ghost towns.” The erosion of the young continues into middle
age and beyond later. (Looking at population of liberal church declines, they
are getting there faster.)
Many parents who spend big bucks to
send their child to a Christian college to avoid corruption are simply too late
on the scene. They should have done something radically different for
their children in the 4th or 5th grade.
A precipitating cause of this sudden
apathy among children might be a finding
from the Beemer poll: He asked questions to determine those who “no longer
believe that all of the stories in the Bible are true.” He found that 40%
first had doubts in middle school, 44% first had doubts in high school, and 11%
first had doubts during college. You can see that these are the exact
same percentages as those who left church at each age group. That
tells us they tell their parents to just leave them alone on Sunday morning—and
parents just agree. So it seems that we should be focusing on “what makes them
turned off to the Bible,” not just asking a vaguer question “why they leave.”
For sure, they are not bound by tradition, and parents don’t push them to do
so..
- Beemer decided to explore Sunday School (which
institution is in a huge decline as well), and found an even more
shocking—even mind-blowing—result.
He asked the 20-somethings if they often attended Sunday School when
younger. 61% said “yes,” and 39% said “no.” Comparing how the
two groups felt about critical issues, he found the following shocking
facts:
- The 61% students who attended Sunday School were more
likely NOT to believe in the truth of Bible stories;
- The SS attenders were more likely to “doubt the
Bible because it was written by men.” (It doesn’t help that few heroes
are taught, and anti-masculinity is being subtly taught in schools).
- The SS attenders were more likely to doubt the
Bible because it was “not translated correctly.” (The many publishers
producing different versions doesn’t help).
- The SS attenders were more likely to defend
that abortion should continue to be legal (!)—perhaps we can blame the
fact that we haven’t achieved, in over 50 years, the necessary outrage
that people—including potential mothers-- are murdering a tiny innocent
person. We need to froth at the mouth to our teens that God has a millstone
for such people (Matthew 18:6),
- SS attenders believed more than the non-SSrs in many
of the evolution ideas; the earth is old, dinosaurs were before men,
animals changed from one kind to another.
- The SS attenders were more likely to defend premarital
sex (48% vs 41% of non-SSers).
- The SS attenders were more likely to view the church
as hypocritical.
- 25% of those who attended Sunday School believed that
“God used evolution to create human beings;” but only 19% of that false
belief is shared by non-SSers.
- For the question “Do you feel the Church is relevant
to your needs today?” 46% of SS attenders said “no,” but only 40% of
non-SSers felt the same rejection.
What is happening here? Is the
corrupting of the minds that I alluded to earlier caused by Sunday School
teachers? Upon further study, the answer is most likely No.
Remember, these are kids in conservative churches. Other data Beemer
shared do NOT show their teachers or pastors teaching corrupt Gospel. So this
alarming data still cries for an answer. The clear fact here is that
Sunday School really had no impact, apparently, on what children believed in
critical moral areas. It didn’t help them develop a Christian
worldview. Somehow it had a detrimental impact.
Was the problem HOW they were
taught? Such as, did the teachers unintentionally teach Bible stories as
fables? Or did the other kids in Sunday School, or their parents’ hypocrisy or pressure
trigger the kids’ rebellion, so they were worse off than if they had never
heard the Bible, and had to think it out on their own?
The problem could have been simply
the overwhelming secular system, with its 30-hours of teaching a week (vs. 30
minutes of teaching the Bible in Sunday School). But if that were the cause,
both Sunday School and non-Sunday School would have, at worst, similar
results. The problem is that SS attenders were worse. Perhaps the SS
teens resented the time spent, if the arents showed no proof of Christianity.
Mr. Ham and Mr. Beemer considered
what to do about this grave problem.
He asks: Should we eradicate
Sunday School? He does say that Deuteronomy 6:6-9 insist that fathers
and mothers teach their children the Gospel:
“And these words which I
command you today shall be in your heart. 7 You shall
teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in
your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise
up. 8 You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they
shall be as frontlets between your eyes. 9 You shall write
them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.
Likewise Ephesians 6:4:
And you, fathers, do not
provoke your children to wrath, but bring them up in the training and
admonition of the Lord.
It helps if both parents live a different lifestyle than
their secular friends.
He also acknowledges that Sunday
School is not a long tradition in the church; it only dates from the
1700s. Finally, he feels that Sunday School allows parents to shrug off
their responsibilities as the primary teachers of the children.
Nevertheless, he can’t bring himself
to the radical step to eradicate Sunday School. He proposes a second
idea:
Shall we renovate Sunday
School? He says Yes, by, among other things, teaching more apologetics.
Apologetics is defending every teaching of the Bible as the Word of God.
Now here’s my thought: Aren’t we supposed to be teaching the Bible to
these elementary, or middle schoolers, before they are overwhelmed by their
secular schools’ doctrines? But you may ask, how can we teach
apologetics, a conceptual and difficult process, to those so young? And,
keep in mind, few in the adult teachers have this capability. Also,
renovation has already been tried a thousand other ways, but we still get the
distressing results above. I personally don’t see this idea turning
things radically around like we need.
Then he writes about how some of
those who left church might return if they have children of their own.
Here is his quote about those who might return when they have children.
But what I see in this statement is that he might have stumbled upon possibly
the root problem for these “turned off” kids instead.
“What they object to, however, is
hypocrisy, legalism, and self-righteousness. The Bible is relevant to
them, but the church is not. This group needs to be convinced that
Christians in the church are living by God’s truth, and are living in a way
that is relevant to their lives.”
So let’s run with using this quote as maybe why kids are
turned off. Let’s consider each charge individually. Hypocrisy is
defined as living in a different way than your doctrine. Elementary kids pay
attention to what their parents say; so when their parents run down the
pastor’s salary, or the Sunday School teacher’s lazy lifestyle, they pick that
information up. Then when that teacher or that pastor preaches about how
they should live a holier life, when the child sees how they live (per their
parents), the child becomes familiar with hypocrisy. The kids then are
not interested in “holier” as is represented here.
Legalism is defined as judging
people based on surface criteria. Let’s say mom is fundamental enough to
send her kids to Sunday School. Mom also happens to mention about how
some teenage girl dresses like a slut in church. Her daughter knows that
girl, and knows how the girl took time to help her at her homework once, or how
she has a perpetually friendly personality (and how she wishes she had one
too). The daughter becomes familiar with legalism from her mother.
Self-righteousness shows in too many
families. A lot of kids get the general feeling that since their parents
have more money, the parents feel that God must love them and is rewarding them
with wealth for being good parents, having sent them to Sunday School and
all. But the kids know how their parents ignore them when they have real
needs, and don’t have time for them—work gets in the way. Getting more money,
to them, means work and cash are placed higher than the kids. Both
parents work, to achieve an acceptable lifestyle. The parents’ view of God is
wrong, they conclude, so Christianity must have deeper flaws when it makes
their parents like that.
Brothers and sisters, what do we
learn from this? For one thing, speak carefully about other people when
your kids are around. Avoid picking on a child or adult that you know
little about. Avoid speaking critically about other people, knowing that
we each have sins of our own to wrestle with. Never sacrifice your kids,
putting work or money on a higher plane. And certainly avoid thinking
that God’s love for you can be measured by how much money you have. Explain to
kids that money is simply a gift from God, and we seek His approval other ways
instead. Sadly, as Jesus pointed out, many rich people are living the best life
that will be available to them—they will go to hell when they die. Many
poor people will have an eternity in heaven. So riches are not a measure of
God’s approval.
Maybe this idea of renovating the
parents is not the solution that will work. We’re asking parents to sacrifice
and change habits and somehow focus on what their child really needs—is that
asking too much? Jesus taught sacrifice.
I wish the Sunday School problem
could be solved by making an astounding curriculum. But the truth is,
Satan is temporarily the god of the earth, and targets the young children to
win them over to the world and never live for God. Parents should make it
the FIRST desire of their heart to prepare their kids to face up to all of
Satan’s tricks, by reading and learning His Word. Don’t forget, when
Jesus was tempted, He answered Satan with Scripture.
The book covers a lot of other
topics, but this one is the one that touches my heart. This is not meant
to be a summary of the book, but just about certain eye-popping data and
thoughts around it.
Acknowledgement: Already
Gone, by Ken Ham and Britt Beemer.
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