South Carolina churches are shedding thousands of members a year, even as the state’s population grows by tens of thousands.
In the place we call the Bible Belt,
where generations have hung their hats on their church-going nature and
faithful traditions, an increasing trend of shrinking church attendance —
and increasing church closings — signals a fundamental culture shift in
South Carolina.
Many churches are dying slow deaths,
stuck in stagnation if not decline. And if they don’t do something,
anything, in their near future, they’ll share the fate of Cedar Creek
United Methodist, a 274-year-old Richland County congregation that
dissolved last year; Resurrection Lutheran, a church near downtown
Columbia that will hold its last service on Sept. 2; and the dozens of
churches that sit shuttered and empty around the state.
More here-
No comments:
Post a Comment