Tuesday, January 09, 2018

Missing Churches in Low Income neighborhoods - Why?

This Atlantic article on churches in poor neighborhoods is an interesting read if you look past the find one emotional example that the author thinks proves his point that characterizes a lot of writing in the Atlantic.  The main point is that half of new church plants opened in wealthier areas and church attendance is on the decline among the poor.  And perhaps that is because it takes a lot of money to run a church and a church in a poor neighborhood might have more financial needs to help out the needy.  But has he really found the reason, finances that churches are down in low income neighborhoods?  Did he miss a very plausible explanation?

I think he did.  I will grant that low income neighborhoods might be less likely to receive church plants than in the past.  The rise in non-denominational churches probably effects this as they have no connections to help fund them from afar that a denomination would provide.  But I still think he has the causes reversed.  Churches are not being planted in low income neighborhoods because church attendance is down in low-income neighborhoods.  The author gives no proof for saying fewer churches leads to fewer attending when fewer attending can very well lead to fewer churches. 

And I think there is ample reason to think the low-income flight from church is a product of a highly anti-Christian culture.  Sociologically speaking, the poor or lower economic classes are quicker to take on the traits of the super-rich, or the culture makers of society.  This is true in almost every category.  Francis Schaeffer noted this in his books on culture.  You can see it in things like baby name trends.  The rich pick unique names, the poor then take up those names and they finally filter into the middle class, but by then the name has become common and the rich have abandoned it looking for unique names again (see Freakonomics). 

And what are the elite and culture makers saying about Christianity?  Christianity is the enemy more often than not.  Whether it is Christian bakers on the news as the backwater bigots or the evil group that empowered Trump, the enemy is evangelicalism.  Maybe they get it from movies like Dogma (1999) where the descendent of Jesus is an abortion worker and the entire thing is an attack on Christians, or more popular and subtle fair like Footloose (1984 remade in 2011), or in award winners like Brokeback Mountain (2005) with its positive portrayal of homosexuality.  Maybe it is from TV in the always award winning Handmaid’s Tale (2017-ongoing) or Modern Family (2009-ongoing).  Maybe it is from books like Da Vinci Code (2003).  The message is the same, church is not good, Christianity is the problem, not the solution.  So, the lower classes are responding and they are leaving church resulting in fewer in attendance and thus fewer church plants. 

The Atlantic Article laments the fact that Christianity could help these people out physically and materially, yet the churches are not there.  But the lack of awareness of the real importance of Christianity and its message of Jesus Christ is striking.  For the author Christianity helps with “positive outcomes” and “assistance for struggling families”, but fails to realize such things are the by-product of the love of Christ manifested in the church.  It is by living out the faith that the Atlantic and Hollywood and many others have spent so much time tearing down. 


In the end, the article provides a beautiful picture into a mind that sees nothing beyond the material and understands little to nothing about the faith.  But it does see the damage caused when people begin to abandon that faith.

0 Comments: