26 February 2015 A.D. What Makes Millenials Stay in Church
26 February 2015 A.D. What Makes Millenials Stay in Church
What
Makes Millennials Stay in Church
A new study
confirms the importance of parents in fostering kids’ adult faith.
Devine, Daniel James. “What
Makes Millenials Stay in Church.” Aquila
Report. 23 Feb 2015. http://theaquilareport.com/what-makes-millennials-stay-in-church/. Accessed 25 Feb 2015.
What
Makes Millennials Stay in Church
A new study
confirms the importance of parents in fostering kids’ adult faith.
Written by Daniel James Devine |
Monday, February 23, 2015
“If you had to ask for a mixture of things
that overall are correlated with strong Christian beliefs and strong Christian
orthopraxy, you’d be looking at making sure mom and dad developed a
relationship with their teens, … that they’re regular participants in a local
church, and they practice home-based, parent-led discipleship,” said Brian Ray,
the researcher behind the survey and the president of the National Home
Education Research Institute in Salem, Ore. “I don’t want to pretend it’s a
formula. I’m just saying, statistically, there’s a pattern.”
For
millennials who grew up attending church, having a strong Christian faith and
practice today is linked to the quality of their relationship with their
parents.
That’s a
conclusion from a new online survey of young adults between the ages of 18 and
38 who attended church as children or teenagers. The survey also found that
frequent church attendance and homeschooling were linked to stronger Christian
beliefs and behaviors as adults, including believing Jesus is divine and
avoiding co-habitation.
Young
adults who said their fathers explained “biblical principles” to them on a
daily or weekly basis growing up were significantly more likely to say they
lived by typical Christian behavior as adults by praying, volunteering, reading
the Bible, and attending church frequently and avoiding pornography, marijuana
use, abortion, and co-habitation.
“If you
had to ask for a mixture of things that overall are correlated with strong
Christian beliefs and strong Christian orthopraxy, you’d be looking at making
sure mom and dad developed a relationship with their teens, … that they’re
regular participants in a local church, and they practice home-based,
parent-led discipleship,” said Brian Ray, the researcher behind the survey and
the president of the National Home Education Research Institute in Salem, Ore.
“I don’t want to pretend it’s a formula. I’m just saying, statistically,
there’s a pattern.”
The
survey was an effort to shed light on a major problem recognized by
evangelicals in America: Many millennials aren’t staying in church. Americans
aged 30 and under are less likely to value church attendance than previous
generations, and 59 percent of millennials who grew up in church have dropped out
at some point, according to Barna Group. (Other
research has concluded many millennials have simply switched churches, and that
only 18 percent drop
out permanently.)
The new
survey results are preliminary and have not yet been published in a
peer-reviewed journal. Ray presented the results at the Gen2 Conference,
a Christian leadership summit in Petersburg, Ky., in late January.
Advertised
on Facebook, websites, blogs, a large Evangelical church, and a secular
university, the survey gathered responses from 9,396 participants between 2013
and 2014. Only adults under the age of 39 who attended church growing up were
allowed to participate. While this method of recruiting study participants is
considered “nonrandom” and may be less accurate than making random phone calls,
for example, researchers sometimes use the method to understand trends in
smaller segments of a large population.
Most
churched millennials who participated in the survey identified the faith of
their childhood as Protestant or Catholic, although 6 percent said they grew up
as Mormons, Jehovah’s Witnesses, or something else. As adults, more than 8
percent now identify themselves as atheist or agnostic.
A large
number of former homeschool students answered the survey. About 43 percent of
respondents said they had been home educated for seven years or more. Others
had used public, Christian, secular private schools, or some combination of
those. Ray used the results to compare differences based on educational
background.
For
example, the more years a person spent in public school, the more likely he or
she was later in life to lack Christian faith and behavior, to lack life
satisfaction, and to disagree with parent’s beliefs.
“And
these are people who were churched while growing up,” Ray said.
Compared
with those who mainly attended public school, Christian school students were 27
percent more likely to have strong Christian beliefs as adults. Homeschooled
students were nearly three times more likely than public school students to
have strong Christian beliefs. (For the purpose of the survey, Christian
beliefs included agreeing the Bible is inspired, Jesus is divine, Jesus rose
from the dead, moral absolutes exist, and God created biological life.)
The
survey revealed differing attitudes and behaviors regarding Christian sexual
ethics. Among homeschoolers, 16 percent said they supported same-sex marriage,
while 29 percent of those who attended Christian school and 33 percent of those
who attended public school said they supported such marriages. Perhaps
surprisingly, those who had attended secular private school were the most
likely to support same-sex marriage; 46 percent did so.
Churched
millennials who attended public school were the most likely to have cohabited
with a sexual partner later in life (34 percent). Of others, 28 percent of
private school students, 22 percent of Christian school students, and 9 percent
of homeschool students said they had engaged in co-habitation.
The
online questionnaire also gathered information about an issue for which little
data is available: Sexual abuse among homeschoolers. The survey asked, “Were
you ever sexually abused before age 18?” Respondents who had spent the majority
of their school years in a public school or Christian school were more than
twice as likely to answer “yes” than those who had been homeschooled seven
years or more.
The
survey asked about corporal punishment during childhood. Those who said their
parents spanked them “under loving control” were more likely to have strong
relationships with their fathers today and to hold to Christian beliefs,
compared with those who received no corporal punishment.
Comments
Post a Comment