It depends on what churches you go to. Baptist, Pentecostal, non-denominational churches tend to have them fairly often. It’s more of an “evangelical” phenomenon. Not all Protestants do this.
This is difficult to explain without going into the long and sordid history of American Protestantism. Methodists would have done it a lot in the 1800s. No longer today because many Methodists are no longer evangelical. Many of them are theologically liberal Protestants or more “higher church” conservative Protestants. The days of the campgrounds with shrieking Methodist women and Methodist men running to the altars to repent are long in the past.
By the 1900s, most Methodists who still wanted to do that had been forced out of the Methodist Church and had started new denominations, like the Church of the Nazarene or the Wesleyan Church.
Presbyterians are similar, however, they were never as “enthusiastic” or “charismatic” (I’m using this term retroactively) in their worship as Methodists were. Charles Finney, who is mentioned in the article, was a New School Presbyterian though.
There was a Fundamentalist/Modernist controversy in the Presbyterian Church in the 1900s. The Fundamentalists lost and the liberals won. I’m assuming that most of the revivalistic type Presbyterians would have left for Fundamentalist churches afterward.
It’s not just Catholic churches. Evangelicals seem to prefer to build “big box” churches that look like secular auditoriums or (even worse) warehouses. My new church building doesn’t have altar rails but we still pray at the steps of the platform though.