By Bobby Ross Jr. | Religion Unplugged
This is our weekly roundup of the top headlines and best reads in the world of faith. We start with the giant religion trend that should be bigger news.
What to know: The big story
Houses of worship closing: “Everybody is caught up with fighting over sexuality or politics on Twitter — and almost no one is paying attention (to) the collapse of congregational life in America.”
Religion News Service national writer Bob Smietana made that prescient observation on social media this week.
Smietana, of course, wrote a book on the subject called “Reorganized Religion: The Reshaping of the American Church and Why It Matters.”
A case study: An outstanding story by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel’s Sophie Carson inspired Smietana’s tweet.
Carson goes inside a historic downtown church that closed its doors.
Here’s how she sets the scene:
With the weeks winding down to Summerfield United Methodist Church’s final Sunday service, longtime member Bob Sarsfield unlocked a safe in the basement and pulled out a book of marriage records.
They dated to 1874.
There, in tiny cursive script, were dozens of names of people married at Summerfield a century and a half ago, their addresses and occupations and wedding dates detailed in neat columns.
“This is the stuff they want us to turn in,” Sarsfield said.
The United Methodist Church had made the all-but-inevitable decision to close Summerfield’s doors for good. Sarsfield and another dedicated member, Marcia Tremaine, were cleaning out cabinets ahead of the final day in late June. The book was a peek at the long history of a once-vibrant congregation that in recent years had lost steam.
It’s a scene that has become familiar around the country. Researchers estimate that before the COVID pandemic, 75 to 100 houses of worship closed each week in the U.S., facing the same headwinds as Summerfield: aging and dwindling congregations saddled with insurmountable upkeep costs.
Churches that are thriving today tend to offer modern services and programming.
Summerfield, the oldest Methodist congregation in Wisconsin, had shrunk to only 11 members, none under 65 years old. The historic building at North Cass Street and East Juneau Avenue, constructed in 1904 as the successor to Summerfield’s first church, needed extensive repairs.
“We could continue going on a little bit longer, but you’re looking down this dark hole and it’s just getting deeper and deeper,” said Sarsfield, chairman of the church’s trustees committee.
Perseverance and prayers: The Milwaukee story follows recent reporting (about the time of my vacation) by the Minneapolis Star Tribune’s Erica Pearson.
Pearson profiles a rural Minnesota church in need of a savior:
The unincorporated village of Rosen in far western Minnesota’s Lac qui Parle County boasts a beautiful old Catholic church, a well-kept ballfield that’s home to an amateur baseball team — and not much else.
There’s not a single store, no restaurant or town hall. Not even a bar. Just St. Joseph’s, whose first pastor, the Rev. Peter Rosen, gave the village its name in 1895.
That’s one of the reasons parishioners are so upset that the church — the only community space they have — is slated to be merged with another parish in July, then potentially closed and demolished as part of the Diocese of New Ulm’s strategic plan to deal with priest shortages and shrinking congregations.
The villagers are fighting to save their church by filing an appeal with Bishop Chad Zielinski and raising money in what supporters call a David-and-Goliath battle. They hope to be among the few parishes in Minnesota and other states that have managed to stave off closure and keep their church buildings.
More on the subject: Interested in additional insight?
NPR’s Scott Neuman and The Guardian’s Adam Gabbatt both have covered the trend in recent months.
And my Christian Chronicle colleague Cheryl Mann Bacon did an entire series on “Where have all the churches gone?”
Check out Bacon’s special project.
This column appears in the online magazine Religion Unplugged.
Featured photo via Shutterstock
