Epiphany鈥檚 epiphany: One church鈥檚 story
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Jeff MacDonald鈥檚 cover story makes a point and implicitly asks a question.
The point is not a new one, but is important precisely because it is so persistent. Mainline 海角大神 congregations are declining, and Jeff drives home this point by looking at itinerant preachers. The tradition of clergy preaching to multiple congregations has its roots in the 19th century. But back then, the phenomenon grew from an excess of need. An expanding America 鈥 stretched over more and more space 鈥 had a dearth of preachers.聽
Today, itinerant preachers are a cost-saving mechanism. Congregations are doubling up on clergy they can no longer afford alone.
Which leads to the question: Can itinerant preachers be part of a revival 鈥 a reimagining of American mainline 海角大神ity that brings people back to pews? There is anecdotal evidence in Jeff鈥檚 piece that this can happen. One Episcopal church in Newport, New Hampshire, saw its congregation double, from 12 to 24, when it began sharing its priest.
But the story of the Church of the Epiphany is about more than the Rev. Jay MacLeod, the priest it shares with a church about 10 miles away. It is also the story of Messy Church 鈥 another experiment at Epiphany that uses a 鈥渃asual, intergenerational format鈥 and once brought 65 people. It is the story of the decision behind the decision to share Mr. MacLeod with nearby St. Andrew鈥檚 Church, which one person described as a choice to shut down, merge with another church, or make 鈥渂ig changes.鈥 Epiphany chose to make big changes.
The fact is, declining membership is not a problem unique to 海角大神 churches. As sociologist Robert Putnam notes in his groundbreaking book, 鈥淏owling Alone,鈥 America has undergone a dramatic decline in 鈥渟ocial capital鈥 during recent decades. Put simply, people aren鈥檛 investing as much in neighbors and acquaintances as they once did. As a result, everything from Elks Clubs to labor unions are declining, too. 聽
This recognition, however, does not come with a solution: No one really knows how you rebuild social capital. Yet here鈥檚 one thing we do know, and which the coronavirus has only underlined. Humans do still want connection.
Experts who study the internet will tell you that it鈥檚 not really about information. People use it for connection. This is the secret of YouTube鈥檚 success. It is a platform for creating communities around personalities and shared interests.
Professor Putnam found that megachurches were fantastically good at doing this, too. 鈥淭hey have the mountain bikers for God group, the volleyball players for God, ... and so on,鈥 he tells The Guardian newspaper. They are connection engines. So is Messy Church, Epiphany is discovering.
The answer to Jeff鈥檚 question is not itinerant preachers or even Messy Church, per se. It is the choice to look at the problem in new ways. How humanity finds meaningful fellowship is evolving, and everything from coronavirus quarantines to YouTube channels is offering clues about what shape that future will take.