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Mixed blessings in new U.S. church numbers

 
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6:00 P.M. ET Feb. 21, 2011 | NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UMNS)


Melissa Crutchfield of the United Methodist Committee on Relief helps distribute water-treatment supplies to people living in a makeshift camp in Gresier, Haiti, in January 2010.
UMNS file photos by Mike DuBose.
Melissa Crutchfield of the United Methodist Committee on Relief helps distribute water-treatment supplies to people living in a makeshift camp in Gresier, Haiti, in January 2010. UMNS file photos by Mike DuBose.
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United Methodist churches in the United States are weathering a declining membership trend and a difficult economy, which have combined to cause local church spending to decline. But recently released statistics for 2010 and 2011 also show:

  • Giving in 2010 to the Advance, which includes contributions to the United Methodist Committee on Relief, increased a whopping 146 percent from 2009 to more than $44.9 million, in large part because of contributions for Haiti.
  • Direct giving to United Methodist-related causes increased by more than 29 percent.
  • Seventeen annual (regional) conferences paid 100 percent of their general apportioned funds for 2011, up from 15 conferences in 2010.
  • The United Methodist Church remains the third-largest religious group in the United States, and its membership trends — decreases in the United States and increases in other countries — mirror those of other mainline denominations.

The report from the General Council on Finance and Administration found membership in the United States now at 7,570,980. Membership worldwide totals about 12 million, with most of the church growth in Africa and the Philippines. Membership statistics from episcopal areas outside the United States will be available by mid-March.

Statistics as reported by local churches and annual conferences indicate that professing membership in 2010 was down 1.4 percent from 2009, and average worship attendance was down 2.3 percent. In 2009, membership decreased 1.2 percent and attendance, 1.9 percent.

In 2005, The United Methodist Church established two categories of membership –– baptized and professing. A total of 140,295 persons were received in United Methodist congregations on “profession of faith” or “faith restored” in 2010, a 1.4 percent decline from 2009.

The 2010 report indicates only 54 percent of churches reported receiving any members by profession of faith or faith restored, down from slightly more than 58 percent in 2005.

“That figure is not as stark as it appears,” said Scott Brewer, staff executive for connectional services at the finance agency. “Some churches only conduct confirmation classes every other year. Twenty-one percent of churches haven’t received anyone by profession of faith in the last three years.”


Young volunteers from the Methodist Church in Haiti measure rice for humanitarian relief in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in January 2010.
Young volunteers from the Methodist Church in Haiti measure rice for humanitarian relief in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in January 2010.
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Brewer noted that churches report 73,000 young people in a confirmation class, which means nearly half of those joining by profession of faith are adults.

Brewer noted membership losses have occurred every year since the 1968 formation of The United Methodist Church, but percentage losses have increased since 2000.

Finances

Local U.S. church spending declined from 2009 to 2010 by 0.92 percent. Local church capital expenditures declined nearly 8 percent, while spending for all other categories increased by 0.67 percent. 

However, in spite of the difficult economy, United Methodists responded generously to the needs of earthquake victims in Haiti and to other disasters.

“In times of great need, such as the devastation caused by natural disasters, we have seen United Methodists respond with tremendous generosity,” said Laura Chambers, senior researcher at the council on finance and administration.

17 conferences pay full apportionments

The 17 annual conferences that paid 100 percent of their general apportioned funds for 2011 are Alaska, Baltimore-Washington, Central Texas, Desert Southwest, East Ohio, Greater New Jersey, Holston, Illinois Great Rivers, Iowa, New York, North Carolina, Northern Illinois, Oklahoma Indian Missionary, Peninsula Delaware, Red Bird Missionary, West Virginia and Western Pennsylvania. In 2010, 15 conferences gave 100 percent to all seven general apportioned funds

Holston was one of the conferences joining the 100-percent club by increasing its giving from 61 percent in 2010. “We have made a concentrated effort over the past several years to pay the general and jurisdictional apportionments which support connectional ministries at 100 percent,” said John Tate, director of financial services for the Holston Conference. “We felt it was important to make the adjustments in budgeting and ministry as an example to the churches that we are asking to pay 100 percent as well.”

Five annual conferences did not pay 100 percent of all apportionments but gave 100 percent to the World Service Fund, the largest apportioned fund, in 2011. Conferences that paid the full amount to the fund are Rio Grande, Texas, Upper New York, Western Michigan and Wisconsin. The World Service Fund supports the ministries of all general church program agencies. 

While the complete report on 2011 will not be available for a few months, it is clear that the natural disasters in 2011 resulted in fewer dollars to UMCOR compared with 2010, but giving in 2011 is up 30 percent from the total given in 2009.

Small groups and community outreach

The number of Christian formation participants in local churches increased 4 percent from 2009, while reported participation in covenant discipleship groups increased nearly 11 percent, and enrollees in Vacation Bible School increased almost 6 percent.

U.S. churches reported serving more than 1.1 million people through daycare and education ministries, and nearly 26.3 million through ministries of outreach, justice and mercy.

*Peck is a retired clergy member of New York Annual Conference. Sharon Dean, communications director for the General Council on Finance and Administration, contributed to this story.

News media contact: Heather Hahn, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.

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  • Ktodack 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand

    Can anyone provide data as to how the UMC membership trend compares with Evangelical & mega churches. My informal observation is that the traditional mainline churches are slowly losing their appeal to the less then 40 folks. At my own church we are slowly losing people at close to the overall UMC rates and we are a very traditional follow the lectionaries and stick mostly to the UM Hymnal. It essentially gets down to satisfying a worship style of a very graying congregation.

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  • UMNS editor 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand

    The Southern Baptist Convention, the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S. and undeniably evangelical, also is losing members. Southern Baptist membership dropped by .15 percent in 2010, the fourth straight year of decline. The year also saw the denomination's fewest baptisms since the 1950s. It may not be particularly fair to compare whole denominations to individual megachurches. Like the Southern Baptist Convention, we have plenty of United Methodist congregations that would qualify as growing megachurches with average worship attendance each week in the thousands. But you're correct that those super-sized churches do tend to offer a variety of worship styles....

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  • ColtsFan254 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand

    At the root is an even deeper question.  Why are we attempting to grow the UMC, when we should be growing the Kingdom of God?
       It seems that we are looking to expand an institutional entity, rather than to be faithful to where God is leading.  Our model seems to be more like businesses in the corporate world, than that of the historic Church.
    We are not called to be politically correct.  We are not called to be 'liberal' OR 'conservative' as the world sees those terms.  We are called to be in tune with the calling of God,...

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  • wpearsall 2 comments collapsed Collapse Expand

    As a life'-long Methodist who was an involved layperson, and a part-time pastor for 18 years, just a few observations and /or questions:
    Most church members have no idea what is in the Social Rules, and when some find out they are upset at the increasingly liberal tones they find, and wonder how such things could have passed.
    My experience with those who have left the Methodist church is not that they are upset with theology, i.e. the Methodist 'way of salvation', but with the top-down administrtative programs that they see once again as too liberal, and too compromising of...

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  • thuddvr 1 comment collapsed Collapse Expand

    I agree. I'm also a lifetime Methodist, but at the layman level. I sometimes wonder that the Church seems to promote increased membership over adherence to our values. That bothers me because it appears that membership, i.e. influence and money, is more important than adhereing to the values we have always held.

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