Okay by my personal experience Episcopalian churches are always empty and some are closed down in my area .So for my personal expierence case closed it is dying…
Right. That’s your experience in one area. What is that area? I’m sure there are areas where that is the case. My experience in North Carolina, New Jersey, Indiana, and Kentucky is that while numerical growth is static or declining, new people are finding God in Episcopal parishes and that’s ultimately what matters. A church is not dying as long as people are encountering God there.
The only fallacy here is that you think “In my experience” disproves general membership trends so I don’t get what you are trying to say. Membership and worship is down thats pretty measurable and not subjective no matter how its spun.
Sure. But you take a leap from “numerically declining” to “dying.” That’s where you fall into worldliness, frankly. What matters in church terms is not whether a church is gaining or losing numbers, but whether it is functioning as a means of grace.
This article encapsulates how many folks (many of them young) have come to feel about the Episcopal Church. These are folks who have been bruised and wounded in evangelical churches and have recovered faith through the Episcopal Church. Tell me that a church where that’s happening is dying, and I will laugh in your face.
- Yeah but where is it shrinking the most, the liberal denominations are drying up far quicker then conservative denominations who are usually treading water and not free falling like all the liberal churches, coincidence?
No. The old mainline really is dying. I agree with that. But something new is growing amid the ruins. As tends to happen. God works like that. One of the reasons I have trouble giving up on Protestantism is that the continual resurgence of new life that so impresses me about Catholicism (which is always dying and always being reborn) turns out to happen in Protestantism too. As long as Scripture is read and bread and wine are broken in Jesus’ name, Jesus seems to have this weird habit of showing up.
Pentecostals by the way are mostly conservative (at least the growing ones).
Agreed that they are “conservative” on cultural/social issues for the most part, and even more so in their frank supernaturalism and their belief in Scripture as a means of revelation. Not so much if we define conservatism in terms of tradition, formal liturgy, creedal orthodoxy, etc. In those ways I am far too conservative to be a Pentecostal, as are most Episcopalians
- Care to name those churches
I named one: Union Church in Berea. Another very liberal example (which I have not visited, other than going to a concert there once) is Church of the Redeemer in Morristown. Another would be Reconciliation United Methodist Church in Durham, NC. I’m sticking to churches that I have some experience of (in the last two cases because people I know belong to them). I think that Grace Episcopal Church in Fort Wayne would be another example but I know less about them.
and what do you mean by liberal and stand for something. What far left church movement that makes Episcopalians look moderate have I missed that is attracting such a large amount of principled people.
Not a movement. A specific congregation. And it doesn’t make all Epioscopalians look moderate, just the ones in Madison County, KY. You keep trying to speak in general terms. I’m keeping it local, because that’s reality. (This is, in fact, one of the fundamental reasons I have trouble becoming Catholic. Catholics keep inviting me to ignore the local church and just keep my eye on the Big Truth. And I can’t do that.) Statistics are abstractions. If elevated above real experiences of real people, they are demonic lies.
Uhm I’m not beating it over the head
Yes, you are
but they are declining or dying really quickly.
You keep confusing those two things. No dispute on the numerical decline. Dispute on the spiritual decline and the “dying.”
As to that uber liberal parish you mention, Okay I guess I mean you can find outliers everywhere but again socially liberal youth tend to abandon religion altogether far more then they become spiritually hungry liberals.
What statistics are you relying on now? Care to cite them? Do they speak specifically of social liberalism? Because again, what I’m experiencing is that a lot of younger folks want creedal orthodoxy and social liberalism. Now maybe that’s their problem. But if you want to note social trends, this seems to me to be a trend.
Those young church going far left liberals don’t have the numbers to replace the older members of the church which also explains the decline.
Absolutely. You keep speaking as if I’m disputing that part of it. Of course I’m not.
A certain eminent person, not generally regarded as a liberal, said something once about a smaller and purer Church, I think

. This is going to be the reality for everyone in the Western world for the foreseeable future–and probably that’s a good thing.
Edwin