By now anyone and everyone knows the name Ryan Burge who is the guy with charts, stats, and commentary on religion in America. It is worth noting when he offers stats that would explain some of the things we see when we watch Christianity in America. How interesting in this data that shows that over time clergy within the Roman Catholic Church have grow increasingly more conservative while clergy in the mainline (so called seven sisters) have done just the opposite!

In this chart, he tracks the perspective of Roman Catholic priests by year of ordination and notes the dramatic shift since the early 1970s -- almost a complete reversal! While it might be easy to notice and speak of this anecdotally, Burge has given us real data to show that this is real. It might explain some of the drama and conflicts within American Roman Catholicism but it is worth noting. I suspect that it is also true across the world but that is only my opinion. Rome may be wrestling with a hierarchy that is rooted in another perspective while the future lies in a different direction. What might that suppose for the next 5-10 years as some of those older folks age out of influence?
On the other hand, the mainline denominations in America have done the complete opposite. Long ago we noted that their clergy were far ahead of the folks in the pews -- not exactly surprising -- but here it is documented that the conservative voices in pulpits across America in these seven sisters have turned around and headed in a very different direction from those in the pews. Look at the stats:
Finally, in the following graph is revealed the increasing theological liberalism within those same mainline churches.
It is no wonder that the pews are emptying, that there is no longer instinctive trust between the folks in the pews and those in the pulpits, and that the shape of the future for these churches is more and more defined along ideology that transcends both theological and political views.

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