15 October 2014 A.D. Same-old Narrative: Episcopal Church Shrinks & Shreds Members
15
October 2014 A.D. Same-old
Narrative: Episcopal Church Shrinks & Shreds Members
Walter, Jeffrey.
“Episcopal Church Continues Shedding Members.” 14 Oct 2014.
http://juicyecumenism.com/2014/10/14/episcopal-church-continues-shedding-members/. Accessed 15 Oct 2014.
Episcopal Church Continues Shedding Members
A U.S. denomination that prides itself on inclusivity is
including significantly fewer people in its 2013 membership and attendance
figures.
Episcopalians have been captivated in recent weeks by an unfolding meltdown at the denomination’s General Theological Seminary, but statistics
released this week by the Episcopal Church’s Office of Research reveal that the wider denomination is also struggling to find its footing.
The church has faced steep losses since the early 2000s with a perfect storm of
changing demographics, low fertility and departures by traditionalists.
The 2013 reporting year saw a continuation of the
downward trend, with a membership drop of 27,423 to 1,866,758 (1.4 percent) while
attendance dropped 16,451 to 623,691 (2.6 percent). A net 45 parishes were
closed, and the denomination has largely ceased to plant new
congregations.
The new numbers do not factor in the departure of the
Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina, of which the church continues to report
over 28,000 members and over 12,000 attendees, despite the majority of South
Carolina congregations severing their relationship with the Episcopal Church at
the end of 2012. If South Carolina departures were factored in, the membership
loss would be closer to 50,000 persons.
The decline offers contrast with the Anglican Church in
North America (ACNA), which reported growth in membership, attendance and number of congregations in its 2013
statistics this June. ACNA was formed in 2009 by departing Episcopalians who
disagreed with the liberalizing direction of the U.S.-based Episcopal Church.
While the Episcopal Church has established a continued
pattern of steady decline since the early 2000s, the unbroken trend is
relatively recent: the church lost only 18,000 members in the 1990s, a plateau
that dropped off about the time Gene Robinson of New Hampshire was consecrated
the church’s first openly partnered gay bishop. Overall, the church has
declined from a high of 3.6 million members in the mid-1960s to 1.8 million
today, even as the U.S. population has more than doubled. The church has lost a quarter of
its attendance since 2003.
The size of the average Episcopal parish has now dropped
to 61 persons from 64 in 2012, while 69 percent of congregations now report
less than 100 attendees. Only 4 percent of parishes report attendance of over
300 persons. Fifty-Three percent of Episcopal congregations report that they are
in decline.
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