Table of Contents
Is the Protestant church growing?
The decline is attributed mainly to the dropping membership of the Mainline Protestant churches, while Evangelical Protestant and Black churches are relatively stable or continue to grow. By 2050, Protestantism is projected to rise to slightly more than half of the world’s total Christian population.
Do Protestant churches still exist?
Today, Protestantism constitutes the second-largest form of Christianity (after Catholicism), with a total of 800 million to 1 billion adherents worldwide or about 37\% of all Christians.
Is mainline Protestantism dying?
Protestant churches as a whole have slowly declined in total membership since the 1960s. As the national population has grown these churches have shrunk from 63\% of the population in 1970 to 54\% by 2000, and 48\% in 2012, ceasing to be the religious category for the majority of Americans.
Are mainline churches declining in membership?
Mainline, liberal, Protestant churches have posted declining membership and attendance records for decades. This latest update to 2017 and 2018 numbers shows that the trend continues.
Is the mainline or Evangelical Religion Losing members?
In raw numbers, for every two evangelicals who became a mainline Protestant, about three mainline Protestants became evangelical. It’s fair to say that both the mainline and evangelical traditions in the United States are losing members. But that seems to be happening a bit asymmetrically.
Are Mainline Protestant denominations shrinking?
Some argue they still represent typical American Protestantism; others counter with the prevalence of evangelicalism, broadly speaking (contrasting the usually more liberal view of these mainline churches). What is not up for debate is the rapid shrinking of these once robust seven denominations.
What happened to mainline Protestantism in America?
America’s so-called mainline Protestant churches aren’t what they used to be. For generations on end, the Methodists, Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Episcopalians, and kindred denominations reported net annual membership gains. As recently as the 1950s their growth rate equaled or exceeded that of the United States as a whole.