G
Graceful_Lamb
Guest
Mormons are not Christians.Yes, I have noticed that too, Sy. Perhaps if we turn the question around, however, and ask what are faith traditions on the top of the list in terms of growth? I’ll have to look for some reputable data, but in every lecture or paper I come across, the top two have consistently been the Mormons and the Muslims. (And I am intentionally not looking at the rising numbers of the “Nones”.)
Catholic numbers stay about even, primarily due to immigration. Without the immigrant population, the RCC would probably be in the same downswing as the mainlines.
I wonder if the LDS church also counts all (living) baptized people as members, regardless of how active they are or not. It would be a good comparison with the way Catholics count their members - once baptized Catholic, always on the rolls.
But to go back to the topic at hand, I am interested in looking at the whole picture rather than saying, ‘Oh, the Episcopalians are having a meltdown. It must be the gays.’ or ‘Presbyterians are losing half their membership in the next five years. They are too liberal.’ There is a larger picture currently of religion in the West. We are all going through a huge shift. If you read Phyllis Tickle, it happens every 500 years and we are quite on time for the big shake up.
As for the decline in protestant denominations, that would seem to be true. There does seem to be a rise of people going to the Catholic church.