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Mainline Protestant

The mainline Protestant churches (sometimes also known as oldline Protestants)[1][2][3] are a group of Protestant denominations in the United States and in some cases in Canada largely of the theologically liberal or theologically progressive persuasion that contrast in history and practice with the largely theologically conservative Evangelical, Fundamentalist, Charismatic, Confessional, Confessing Movement, historically Black church, and Global South Protestant denominations and congregations.[4][5][6][7][8] Some make a distinction between "mainline" and "oldline", with the former referring only to denominational ties and the latter referring to church lineage, prestige and influence.[9] However, this distinction has largely been lost to history and the terms are now nearly synonymous.

Eucharist observed by a congregation of the United Methodist Church, a typical mainline Protestant denomination and one of the "Seven Sisters of American Protestantism".

Mainline Protestant churches have stressed social justice and personal salvation, and both politically and theologically, tend to be more liberal than non-mainline Protestant churches. Mainline Protestant churches share a common approach that often leads to collaboration in organizations such as the National Council of Churches, and because of their involvement with the ecumenical movement, they are sometimes given the alternative label of "ecumenical Protestantism" (especially outside the United States). While in 1970 the mainline Protestant churches claimed most Protestants and more than 30 percent of the American population as members, as of 2009 they are a minority among American Protestants, claiming approximately 15 percent of American adults. Some have criticized the term mainline for its alleged White Anglo-Saxon Protestant ethnocentric and elitist assumptions, and its erroneous association with the term "mainstream", since the term mainline almost exclusively described White, non-fundamentalist and non-evangelical Protestant Americans from its origin to the late twentieth century.[7][8][4]

History edit

Mainline Protestants were a majority of Protestants in the United States until the mid-20th century. A dip in membership across all Christian denominations was more pronounced among mainline groups, with the result that mainline groups no longer comprise the majority.[10] In 2020, Public Religion Research Institute conducted a religious census, based on self-identification, finding that an estimated 16% of U.S. Americans identified as non-Hispanic white mainline Protestants, slightly outnumbering non-Hispanic white evangelical Protestants who were 14% of the American population.[11][12] In 2014, Pew Research completed and published the Religious Landscape Survey in which it was estimated that 14.7% of Americans identified as mainline Protestant, excluding historically Black and African American denominations, while 25.4% identified as evangelical Protestants, also excluding membership in historically Black denominations.[13]

Mainline churches share an active approach to social issues that often leads to cooperation in organizations such as the National Council of Churches.[14] Because of their involvement with the ecumenical movement, mainline churches are sometimes (especially outside the United States) given the alternative label of ecumenical Protestantism.[15] These churches played a leading role in the Social Gospel movement and were active in social causes such as the civil rights movement and the women's movement.[16] As a group, the mainline churches have maintained religious doctrine that stresses social justice and personal salvation.[17] Members of mainline denominations have played leadership roles in politics, business, science, the arts, and education. They were involved in the founding of leading institutes of higher education.[18] Marsden argues that in the 1950s, "Mainline Protestant leaders were part of the liberal-moderate cultural mainstream, and their leading spokespersons were respected participants in the national conversation."[19]

Some mainline Protestant denominations have the highest proportion of graduate and post-graduate degrees of any other denomination in the United States.[20] Some also include the highest proportion of those with some college education, such as the Episcopal Church (76%),[20] the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) (64%),[20] and the United Church of Christ (46%),[21] as well as the most of the American upper class.[20] compared with the nationwide average of 50%.[20] Episcopalians and Presbyterians also tend to be considerably wealthier[22] and better educated than most other religious groups,[23] and they were disproportionately represented in the upper reaches of US business and law until the 1950s.[24]

In the 1990s four of the US Supreme Court Justices were Mainline Protestants: Sandra Day O'Connor, John Paul Stevens, William Rehnquist and David Souter.

From 1854 until at least 1964, Mainline Protestants and their descendants were heavily Republican.[25] In recent decades, Republicans slightly outnumber Democrats.[26]

From 1965 to 1988, mainline church membership declined from 31 million to 25 million, then fell to 21 million in 2005.[27] While in 1970 the mainline churches claimed most Protestants and more than 30 percent of the population as members,[28] today they are a minority among Protestants; in 2009, only 15 percent of Americans were adherents.[29] A Pew Forum statistic revealed the same share in 2014.[30]

Terminology edit

The term mainline Protestant was coined during debates between modernists and fundamentalists in the 1920s.[31] Several sources claim that the term is derived from the Philadelphia Main Line, a group of affluent suburbs of Philadelphia; most residents belonged to mainline denominations.[32] Today, most mainline Protestants remain rooted in the Northeastern and Midwestern United States. C. Kirk Hadaway and Penny Long Marler define the term as follows: "the term 'mainline Protestant' is used along with 'mainstream Protestant' and 'oldline Protestant' to categorize denominations that are affiliated with the National Council of Churches and have deep historical roots in and long-standing influence on American society."[33]

In the US, Protestantism is generally divided between mainline denominations and evangelical or theologically conservative denominations. In other parts of the world, the term mainline Protestant is not used. Instead, the term "ecumenical" is used to distinguish similar churches from evangelical denominations.[34] Some have criticized the term mainline for its alleged White Anglo-Saxon Protestant ethnocentric and elitist assumptions, and its erroneous association with the term "mainstream" since it almost exclusively described White American, non-fundamentalist and non-evangelical Protestant Americans from its origin to the late twentieth century.[7][8][4][6]

Mainline vs. mainstream edit

The term mainstream Christian in academic usage is not equivalent to mainline Protestant and is often used as an attempt to find impartial sociological vocabulary in distinguishing orthodoxy and heresy.[35] Hence in Christological and doctrinal reference mainstream Christianity is often equivalent to Trinitarianism. Mainline Protestantism should not be confused with Nicene Christianity which is more widely accepted as having the "mainstream Christianity" designation that also includes Catholics, Eastern and Oriental Orthodox believers, and non-Mainline Protestants such as Evangelical, Fundamentalist, Charismatic, Confessional, Confessing Movement, the historically Black church, and Global South Protestants.[4][5][6][7][8] In the United Kingdom and Australia, the term mainline Protestant is not used, and mainstream does not mean progressive Protestant. Although some supporters and adherents, do claim that Mainline Protestant is synonymous with Mainstream Protestant.[36][37]

Denominations edit

 
Washington National Cathedral, an Episcopal cathedral in Washington, D.C.
 
A Congregational church of the United Church of Christ denomination in Farmington, Connecticut
 
Augustana Lutheran Church in Washington, D.C belonging to the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

The largest mainline churches are sometimes referred to as the "Seven Sisters of American Protestantism,"[38] a term apparently coined by William Hutchison.[39] The "Seven Sisters" are:

The term 'mainline' has also been applied to Canadian Protestant churches that share common origins with their US counterparts[48][49] such as the:

The Association of Religion Data Archives, Pew Research, and other sources also consider these denominations, listed with adherents and members, to be mainline:[58][59]

These same sources also consider "Mainline" other denominations outside the US, including:

Historically African American denominations are usually categorized differently from evangelicals or mainline.[82] However, in 2014 the Christian Century identified a group that "fit the mainline description."[83]

While no longer exclusively Christian, the Unitarian Universalist Association, with 211,000 adherents, considers itself to be mainline.[87][88]

Some denominations with similar names and historical ties to mainline groups are not considered mainline: The Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) [13.2 million],[89] Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS) [1.8 million],[90] the Churches of Christ and Christian churches [1.1 million each],[91][92] the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA) [0.4 million],[93] and the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) [0.13 million].[94] Since these groups are too theologically conservative to be considered mainline, those strictly adhering to historical rules of faith are grouped as confessional, while those without are grouped as evangelical.

*The National Association of Congregational Christian Churches is considered to be evangelical by Pew Research[95] while the Association of Religion Data Archives considered it to be mainline.

Theology edit

Variation edit

Mainline Protestantism is characterized by theological and ideological pluralism. While doctrinal standards and confessional statements exist, these are not usually interpreted in ways to exclude people from membership. Richard Hutcheson Jr., chairman of the Office of Review and Evaluation of the Presbyterian Church in the United States, observed that clergy candidates were more likely to be rejected due to "excessive narrowness" than for violating confessional standards.[96]

Mainline churches hold a range of theological orientations—conservative, moderate and liberal.[97] About half of mainline Protestants describe themselves as liberal.[97] Mainline Christian groups are often more accepting of other beliefs and faiths, affirm the ordination of women, and have become increasingly affirming of gay ordination.[97] Nearly one-third of mainline Protestants call themselves conservative, and most local mainline congregations have a strong, active conservative element.[97] Mainline denominations are historically Trinitarian and proclaim Jesus Christ as Lord and Son of God.

In practice, mainline churches tend to be theologically moderate and influenced by higher criticism, an approach used by scholars to separate the Bible's earliest historical elements from perceived later additions and intentional distortions. Mainline denominations generally teach that the Bible is God's Word in function, but that it must be interpreted both through the lens of the cultures in which it was originally written, and examined using God-given reason. A 2008 survey conducted by the Pew Research Center found that only 22 percent of the 7,500 mainline Christians surveyed said the Bible is God's Word and is to be interpreted as literally true, word for word. Thirty-eight percent thought that the Bible is God's Word but is not to be taken literally, word for word. Twenty-eight percent said the Bible was not the Word of God but was of human origin.[98]

It has been noted, even by members of mainline churches, that the leadership of denominational agencies and bureaucracies has often been more theologically and socially liberal than the overall membership of the mainline churches. This gap has caused feelings of alienation among conservative mainline Protestants.[99] This dissatisfaction has led to the formation of various Confessing Movements or charismatic renewal movements which are more conservative in tone.

Social justice edit

The mainline denominations emphasize the biblical concept of justice, stressing the need for Christians to work for social justice, which usually involve politically liberal approaches to social and economic problems. Early in the 20th century, they actively supported the Social Gospel.

Mainline churches were basically pacifistic before 1940, but under the influence of people such as Reinhold Niebuhr they supported World War II and the Cold War.[100] They have been far from uniform in their reaction to issues of gender and sexuality, though they tend to be more accepting than the Catholic Church or the more conservative Protestant churches.[101]

Social issues edit

 
Harvard College, a favorite choice of American upper classes. Having a college degree is common among Episcopalians and Presbyterians.[102]

Many mainline denominations are active in voicing perspectives on social issues. Almost all mainline denominations are gender-inclusive and ordain women.[103] On abortion issues, the Episcopal Church (TEC), Presbyterian Church (USA) (PCUSA), Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA), and United Church of Christ (UCC) are members of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice.[104] The United Methodist Church (UMC) and Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) support exceptions, when abortion may be necessary, but do not endorse the procedure.[105][106] Other denominations, such as the Church of the Brethren and Mennonite Church USA, are against abortion.[107][108]

Regarding human sexuality, TEC, the ELCA, PC(USA), Society of Friends (Quaker), UUA, and UCC recognize same-gender marriages.[109] Also considered mainline, the Anglican Church of Canada,[110] Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada,[111] and United Church of Canada bless or marry same-gender couples.[112] In 2015, the Mennonite Church Canada saw its first same-gender marriage in one of its congregations.[113] The American Baptist Churches USA does not perform same-gender marriages, but allows each congregation the freedom to decide for itself.[114] Including the aforementioned denominations, the Mennonite Church USA, Metropolitan Community Church, and Moravian Church Northern Province license or ordain openly gay clergy.[115][116] While the UMC does not nationally ordain gay or lesbian clergy, the New York Annual Conference, a regional body of the UMC, has ordained the denomination's first openly gay and lesbian clergy.[117] The Western Jurisdiction of the UMC also elected the denomination's first openly gay bishop.[118] Some congregations of the Church of the Brethren have also voted to perform same-gender marriages although the national denomination opposes this practice.[119]

Most of the above denominations also ordain openly transgender clergy. While the national church has not approved of gay or lesbian clergy, the UMC has allowed transgender pastors.[120]

Politically, mainline churches are also active. While no particular candidate can be endorsed, mainline churches often invite political speakers. At the 2016 General Conference for the African Methodist Episcopal Church, a historically Black denomination but also identified as mainline, Hillary Clinton was invited to offer an address for the delegates and clergy.[121]

Statistical decline edit

The term "mainline" once implied a certain numerical majority or dominant presence in mainstream society, but that is no longer the case. Protestant churches as a whole have slowly declined in total membership since the 1960s. As the national population has grown these churches have shrunk from 63% of the population in 1970 to 54% by 2000, and 48% in 2012, ceasing to be the religious category for the majority of Americans. This statistic may be inaccurate due to the number of former or historically mainline Protestants who continue to espouse mainline Protestant values without active church attendance.[122] American affiliation with mainline denominations declined from 55% of all Protestants in 1973 to 46% in 1998.[123][28] The number of mainline congregations in the U. S. declined from more than 80,000 churches in the 1950s to about 72,000 in 2008.[29]

Various causes of mainline decline in population have been cited. Much analysis has taken place both from those within and outside mainline denominations. Key factors indicate that all types of churches can and do grow, regardless of hymnody or contemporary music, type of liturgy, average age of worshiper, or location[124] On average, however, churches in rural areas, churches with older congregants, and churches with fewer young people involved struggle most to add members and grow churches. For example, of all churches founded since 1993, 54% are experiencing growth, while that is true for only 28% of congregations founded prior to 1900.[125] As demographics change, the churches founded by earlier generations often struggle to adapt to changing conditions, including the declines or shifts in the age and ethnicity of local populations. Says David Roozen, Director of Hartford Seminary's Hartford Institute for Religion Research, "Location, Location, Location used to be the kind way that researchers described the extent to which the growth or decline of American congregations was captive to the demographic changes going on in their immediate neighborhoods."[126] Age demographics cannot be overlooked as a real factor in congregational decline, with the birthrate for mainline Protestants well below what is needed to maintain membership numbers.[127]

The Barna Group, an Evangelical surveyor, has noted, Protestant pastors who serve mainline churches serve on average half as long as Protestant pastors in non-mainline churches.[29] This may contribute to decline and may be influenced in part by the United Methodist Church practice of Itinerancy, where clergy are intentionally moved from one church to another as often as yearly in an effort to support and encourage the United Methodist tradition of strong lay ministry. Mainline churches have also had difficulty attracting minorities, particularly Hispanics. Hispanics comprise 6 percent of the mainline population but 16 percent of the US population. According to the Barna Group report, the failure of mainline Protestants to add substantial numbers of Hispanics is portent for the future, given both the rapid increase of the Hispanic population as well as the outflow of Hispanics from Catholicism to Protestant churches in the past decade, most of whom are selecting evangelical or Pentecostal Protestant churches.[29]

In general, however, decline can be a difficult thing to statistically quantify. Many older Protestant churches lived a vibrant lifetime and continue to evidence vital ministry and faith regardless of declining populations or birthrates. For example, giving and engagement with need and justice, both indicators of strong Christian faith, have increased despite the aging and loss of congregational members.[128]

Contrast with other Protestant denominations edit

While various Protestant denominations have experienced declining membership, the most pronounced changes have occurred among mainline churches. Demographic trends for evangelical and historically African-American churches have been more stable. According to the Pew Research Center, mainline churches could claim 14.7 percent of all US adults compared to 25.4 percent who belonged to evangelical churches in 2014.[129][130][17]

Demographers Hout, Greeley, and Wilde have attributed the long-term decline in mainline membership and the concomitant growth in the conservative Protestant denominations to four basic causes: birth rates; switching to conservative denominations; departure from Protestantism to "no religion" (i.e. secularization); and conversions from non-Protestant sources.[28] In their analysis, by far the main cause is birth rates—low for the mainline bodies, and high for the conservatives. The second most important factor is that fewer conservatives switch to mainline denominations than before. Despite speculation to the contrary, Hout, Greeley, and Wilde argue that switching from a mainline to a conservative denomination is not important in accounting for the trend, because it is fairly constant over the decades. Finally, conservative denominations have had a greater inflow of converts.[28] Their analysis gives no support for the notion that theological or social conservatism or liberalism has much impact on long-term growth trends.[131]

Evidence from the General Social Survey indicates that higher fertility and earlier childbearing among women from conservative denominations explains 76% of the observed trend: conservative denominations have grown their own. Mainline denomination members have the lowest birthrate among American Christian groups. Unless there is a surge of new members, rising death rates are predicted to diminish their ranks even further in the years ahead.[97]

Trends edit

 
Forest Hills, Queens in New York City area is an affluent area with a population of wealthy mainline Protestants

Some other findings of the Barna Group:

  • From 1958 to 2008, mainline church membership dropped by more than one-quarter to roughly 20 million people—15 percent of all American adults.
  • From 1998 to 2008, there was a 22 percent drop in the percentage of adults attending mainline congregations who have children under the age of 18 living in their home.
  • In 2009, nearly 40 percent of mainline church attendees were single. This increase has been driven higher by a rise in the number of divorced and widowed adherents.
  • From 1998 to 2008, volunteerism dropped 21 percent; adult Sunday school participation decreased 17 percent.
  • The average age of a mainline pastor in 1998 was 48 and increased to 55 by 2009.
  • Pastors on average remain with a congregation for four years compared to twice that length for non-mainline church leaders.[29]

Recent statistics from the Pew Forum provide additional explanations for the decline.

  • Evangelical church members are younger than those in mainline denominations. Fourteen percent of evangelical congregations are between 18 and 29 (compared to 2 percent), 36 percent between 30 and 49, 28 percent between 50 and 64, and 23 percent 65 or older.

Not paralleling the decline in membership is the household income of members of mainline denominations. Overall, it is higher than that of evangelicals:

  • 25% reported less than a $30,000 income per year.
  • 21% reported $30,000–$49,999 per year.
  • 18% reported $50,000–$74,999 per year.
  • 15% reported $75,000–$99,999 per year.
  • 21% reported an income of $100,000 per year or more, compared to only 13 percent of evangelicals.[98]

History edit

 
Old Ship Church, an old Puritan meetinghouse currently used by a Unitarian Universalist congregation

While the term "mainline" was not applied to churches until the 20th century, mainline churches trace their history to the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century. The largest and most influential Protestant denominations in Britain's Thirteen Colonies were the Anglicans (after the American Revolution called Episcopalians) and the Congregationalists (from which the Unitarians would later split).[132] These were later surpassed in size and influence by the evangelical denominations: the Baptists, Presbyterians and Methodists. Sharing a common Reformation heritage with Episcopal and Congregational churches, these denominations together created the mainline.[133] It was, according to historian Jason Lantzer, "the emerging evangelical movement that would help forge the Seven Sisters and which provides a core to the wide variety of theological and doctrinal differences, shaping them into a more coherent whole."[132]

The Great Awakening ignited controversy within Protestant churches between Old Lights and New Lights (or Old Side and New Side among Presbyterians). Led by figures such as the Congregationalist minister Charles Chauncy, Old Lights opposed the evangelical revivalism at the heart of the Awakening, while New Lights, led by fellow Congregationalist minister Jonathan Edwards, supported the revivals and argued for the importance of having a conversion experience. By the 1800s, Chauncy's followers had drifted toward forms of theological liberalism, such as Universalism, Unitarianism and Transcendentalism.[134]

 
Lady Chapel in Church of the Good Shepherd, a 19th-Century Anglo-Catholic Episcopal Church in Pennsylvania

The Second Great Awakening would inaugurate a period of evangelical dominance within American mainline Protestantism that would last over a century.[133] The Second Great Awakening was a catalyst for the reform of society. Efforts to improve the rights of women, reforming prisons, establishing free public schools, prohibiting alcohol, and (in the North) abolishing slavery were promoted by mainline churches.[135]

After the Civil War, however, tensions between evangelicals and non-evangelicals would re-emerge. As the practice of historical criticism spread to the United States, conflict over biblical inspiration erupted within Protestant churches. Conservative Protestants led by A. A. Hodge, B. B. Warfield and other Princeton theologians argued for biblical inerrancy, while liberal theologians such as Charles A. Briggs of Union Theological Seminary were open to using historical criticism to understand the Bible.[136]

As 19th–century evangelicals embraced dispensational premillennialism and retreated from society in the face of mounting social problems caused by industrialization, urbanization and immigration, liberal Protestants embraced the Social Gospel, which worked for the "regeneration of society" rather than only the conversion of individuals.[137]

The Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy of the 1920s widened the division between evangelical and non-evangelical Protestants as the two sides fought for control over the mainline denominations. The fundamentalists lost these battles for control to the modernists or liberals.[136] Since the 1920s, mainline churches have been associated with liberal Protestantism.[137]

Episcopalians and Presbyterian WASPs tend to be considerably wealthier[138] and better educated than most other religious groups in America,[139] and are disproportionately represented in the upper reaches of American business,[24] law and politics, and for many years were especially dominant in the Republican Party.[25] Numbers of the wealthiest and most affluent American families, such as the Vanderbilts and Astors, Rockefeller, who were Baptists,[140] Du Pont, Roosevelt, Forbes, Fords,[140] Mellons,[140] Whitneys, the Morgans and Harrimans are Episcopalian and Presbyterian families.[138]

Through the 1940s and 1950s, neo-orthodoxy had become the prevailing theological approach within the mainline churches. This neo-orthodox consensus, however, gave way to resurgent liberal theologies in the 1960s and to liberation theology during the 1970s.[99]

See also edit

  • Nicene Creed, sometimes called the "mainstream Christianity"

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Allen, Irving Lewis (1975). "WASP—From Sociological Concept to Epithet". Ethnicity. 2 (2): 153–162. ISSN 0095-6139.
  • Balmer, Randall H.; Winner, Lauren F. (2002). Protestantism in America. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-11130-0.
  • Baltzell, E. Digby (1964). The Protestant Establishment.
  • Coalter, Milton J.; Mulder, John M.; Weeks, Louis (1990). The Mainstream Protestant "Decline": The Presbyterian Pattern. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-25150-5.
  • Dorrien, Gary (2006). The Making of American Liberal Theology. Volume 3: Crisis, Irony, and Postmodernity. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-22356-4.
  • Dunderberg, Ismo (2008). Beyond Gnosticism: Myth, Lifestyle, and Society in the School of Valentinus. New York: Columbia University Press. doi:10.7312/dund14172. ISBN 978-0-231-51259-6. JSTOR 10.7312/dund14172.
  • Fallding, Harold (1978). "Mainline Protestantism in Canada and the United States of America: An Overview". Canadian Journal of Sociology. 3 (2): 141–160. doi:10.2307/3340276. JSTOR 3340276.
  • Hacker, Andrew (1957). "Liberal Democracy and Social Control". American Political Science Review. 51 (4): 1009–1026. doi:10.2307/1952449. JSTOR 1952449. S2CID 146933599.
  • Hadaway, C. Kirk (2011). (PDF). Hartford, Connecticut: Hartford Institute for Religion Research. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 30, 2014. Retrieved May 15, 2015.
  • Hadaway, C. Kirk; Marler, Penny Long (2006). "Growth and Decline in the Mainline". In Lippy, Charles H. (ed.). Faith in America: Changes, Challenges, New Directions. Volume 1: Organized Religion Today. Praeger Perspectives. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers. pp. 1–24. ISBN 978-0-275-98606-3.
  • Hout, Michael; Greeley, Andrew; Wilde, Melissa J. (2001). "The Demographic Imperative in Religious Change in the United States". American Journal of Sociology. 107 (2): 468–500. doi:10.1086/324189. JSTOR 3081357. S2CID 143419130.
  • Hutcheson, Richard G Jr. (1981). Mainline Churches and the Evangelicals: A Challenging Crisis?. Atlanta, Georgia: John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-8042-1502-2.
  • Hutchison, William R., ed. (1989). Between the Times: The Travail of the Protestant Establishment in America, 1900–1960. Cambridge Studies in Religion and American Public Life. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-40601-7.
  • Lantzer, Jason S. (2012). Mainline Christianity: The Past and Future of America's Majority Faith. New York: NYU Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-5330-9.
  • Linder, Ellen W., ed. (2009). Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches 2009. Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press. ISBN 978-0-687-65880-0. ISSN 0195-9034.
  • Marsden, George (2014). The Twilight of the American Enlightenment: The 1950s and the Crisis of Liberal Belief. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-03010-1.
  • Marty, Martin E. (1980). A Nation of Behavers. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-50892-4.
  • McKinney, William (1998). "Mainline Protestantism 2000". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 558: 57–66. doi:10.1177/0002716298558001006. JSTOR 1049104. S2CID 144644587.
  • Moorhead, James H. (1999). World Without End: Mainstream American Protestant Visions of the Last Things, 1880–1925. Religion in North America. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-33580-7.
  • Noll, Mark A. (1992). A History of Christianity in the United States and Canada. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-8028-0651-2.
  • Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life (2008a). (PDF). Washington, DC: Pew Research Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 17, 2017. Retrieved May 22, 2016.
  •  ———  (2008b). U.S. Religious Landscape Survey: Religious Beliefs and Practices: Diverse and Politically Relevant (PDF). Washington, DC: Pew Research Center. Retrieved September 27, 2009.
  • Pew Research Center (2015a). A Deep Dive Into Party Affiliation: Sharp Differences by Race, Gender, Generation, Education. Washington, DC: Pew Research Center. Retrieved May 24, 2016.
  •  ———  (2015b). America's Changing Religious Landscape: Christians Decline Sharply as Share of Population; Unaffiliated and Other Faiths Continue to Grow. Washington, DC: Pew Research Center. Retrieved May 22, 2016.
  • Roozen, David A. (2004). Oldline Protestantism: Pockets of Vitality Within a Continuing Stream of Decline. Hartford Institute for Religion Research Working Paper. Hartford, Connecticut: Hartford Institute for Religion Research. 1104.1. Retrieved January 9, 2012.
  • Thompson, Michael G. (2007). "An Exception to Exceptionalism: A Reflection on Reinhold Niebuhr's Vision of 'Prophetic' Christianity and the Problem of Religion and U.S. Foreign Policy". American Quarterly. 59 (3): 833–855. doi:10.1353/aq.2007.0070. JSTOR 40068452. S2CID 145379028.
  • Walsh, Andrew D. (2000). Religion, Economics, and Public Policy: Ironies, Tragedies, and Absurdities of the Contemporary Culture Wars. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-96611-9.
  • Wuthnow, Robert; Evans, John H. (2002). The Quiet Hand of God: Faith-Based Activism and the Public Role of Mainline Protestantism. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-23313-3.

Further reading edit

  • Ahlstrom, Sydney E. (1972). A Religious History of the American People. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-01762-5.
  • Balmer, Randall (1996). Grant Us Courage: Travels along the Mainline of American Protestantism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-510086-0. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  • Balmer, Randall; Fitzmier, John R. (1993). The Presbyterians. Denominations in America. Vol. 5. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-26084-1.
  • Bendroth, Margaret (2015). The Last Puritans: Mainline Protestants and the Power of the Past. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-4696-2400-6.
  • Billingsley, K. L. (1990). From Mainline to Sideline: The Social Witness of the National Council of Churches. Washington, DC: Ethics and Public Policy Center. ISBN 978-0-89633-141-9.
  • Coffman, Elesha J. (2013). The Christian Century and the Rise of Mainline Protestantism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-993859-9.
  • Dorrien, Gary (2001). The Making of American Liberal Theology. Volume 1: Imagining Progressive Religion, 1805–1900. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-22354-0.
  •  ———  (2003). The Making of American Liberal Theology. Volume 2: Idealism, Realism, and Modernity. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-22355-7.
  • Edwards, Mark (2012). The Right of the Protestant Left: God's Totalitarianism. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-01989-9.
  • Hollinger, David A. (2013). After Cloven Tongues of Fire: Protestant Liberalism in Modern American History. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-15842-6.
  • Hollinger, David A. Protestants Abroad: How Missionaries Tried to Change the World but Changed America (2017) excerpt
  • Marty, Martin E. (1989). . The Christian Century. Vol. 106, no. 34. pp. 1045–1047. Archived from the original on October 3, 2016. Retrieved October 3, 2016.Hudnut-Beumler, James (2018). The Future of Mainline Protestantism in America. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-18361-1.
  •  ———  (1999). Modern American Religion. Volume 3: Under God, Indivisible, 1941–1960. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-50899-3.
  • Murchison, William (2009). Mortal Follies: Episcopalians and the Crisis of Mainline Christianity. New York: Encounter Books. ISBN 978-1-59403-230-1.
  • Roof, Wade Clark; McKinney, William (1990). American Mainline Religion: Its Changing Shape and Future. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-1216-7.
  • Tipton, Steven M. (2008). Public Pulpits: Methodists and Mainline Churches in the Moral Argument of Public Life. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-80474-3.
  • Utter, Glenn H. (2007). Mainline Christians and U.S. Public Policy: A Reference Handbook. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-59884-000-1.

mainline, protestant, confused, with, mainstream, christianity, mainline, protestant, churches, sometimes, also, known, oldline, protestants, group, protestant, denominations, united, states, some, cases, canada, largely, theologically, liberal, theologically,. Not to be confused with Mainstream Christianity The mainline Protestant churches sometimes also known as oldline Protestants 1 2 3 are a group of Protestant denominations in the United States and in some cases in Canada largely of the theologically liberal or theologically progressive persuasion that contrast in history and practice with the largely theologically conservative Evangelical Fundamentalist Charismatic Confessional Confessing Movement historically Black church and Global South Protestant denominations and congregations 4 5 6 7 8 Some make a distinction between mainline and oldline with the former referring only to denominational ties and the latter referring to church lineage prestige and influence 9 However this distinction has largely been lost to history and the terms are now nearly synonymous Eucharist observed by a congregation of the United Methodist Church a typical mainline Protestant denomination and one of the Seven Sisters of American Protestantism Mainline Protestant churches have stressed social justice and personal salvation and both politically and theologically tend to be more liberal than non mainline Protestant churches Mainline Protestant churches share a common approach that often leads to collaboration in organizations such as the National Council of Churches and because of their involvement with the ecumenical movement they are sometimes given the alternative label of ecumenical Protestantism especially outside the United States While in 1970 the mainline Protestant churches claimed most Protestants and more than 30 percent of the American population as members as of 2009 update they are a minority among American Protestants claiming approximately 15 percent of American adults Some have criticized the term mainline for its alleged White Anglo Saxon Protestant ethnocentric and elitist assumptions and its erroneous association with the term mainstream since the term mainline almost exclusively described White non fundamentalist and non evangelical Protestant Americans from its origin to the late twentieth century 7 8 4 Contents 1 History 2 Terminology 2 1 Mainline vs mainstream 3 Denominations 4 Theology 4 1 Variation 4 2 Social justice 5 Social issues 6 Statistical decline 6 1 Contrast with other Protestant denominations 6 1 1 Trends 7 History 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further readingHistory editMainline Protestants were a majority of Protestants in the United States until the mid 20th century A dip in membership across all Christian denominations was more pronounced among mainline groups with the result that mainline groups no longer comprise the majority 10 In 2020 Public Religion Research Institute conducted a religious census based on self identification finding that an estimated 16 of U S Americans identified as non Hispanic white mainline Protestants slightly outnumbering non Hispanic white evangelical Protestants who were 14 of the American population 11 12 In 2014 Pew Research completed and published the Religious Landscape Survey in which it was estimated that 14 7 of Americans identified as mainline Protestant excluding historically Black and African American denominations while 25 4 identified as evangelical Protestants also excluding membership in historically Black denominations 13 Mainline churches share an active approach to social issues that often leads to cooperation in organizations such as the National Council of Churches 14 Because of their involvement with the ecumenical movement mainline churches are sometimes especially outside the United States given the alternative label of ecumenical Protestantism 15 These churches played a leading role in the Social Gospel movement and were active in social causes such as the civil rights movement and the women s movement 16 As a group the mainline churches have maintained religious doctrine that stresses social justice and personal salvation 17 Members of mainline denominations have played leadership roles in politics business science the arts and education They were involved in the founding of leading institutes of higher education 18 Marsden argues that in the 1950s Mainline Protestant leaders were part of the liberal moderate cultural mainstream and their leading spokespersons were respected participants in the national conversation 19 Some mainline Protestant denominations have the highest proportion of graduate and post graduate degrees of any other denomination in the United States 20 Some also include the highest proportion of those with some college education such as the Episcopal Church 76 20 the Presbyterian Church U S A 64 20 and the United Church of Christ 46 21 as well as the most of the American upper class 20 compared with the nationwide average of 50 20 Episcopalians and Presbyterians also tend to be considerably wealthier 22 and better educated than most other religious groups 23 and they were disproportionately represented in the upper reaches of US business and law until the 1950s 24 In the 1990s four of the US Supreme Court Justices were Mainline Protestants Sandra Day O Connor John Paul Stevens William Rehnquist and David Souter From 1854 until at least 1964 Mainline Protestants and their descendants were heavily Republican 25 In recent decades Republicans slightly outnumber Democrats 26 From 1965 to 1988 mainline church membership declined from 31 million to 25 million then fell to 21 million in 2005 27 While in 1970 the mainline churches claimed most Protestants and more than 30 percent of the population as members 28 today they are a minority among Protestants in 2009 only 15 percent of Americans were adherents 29 A Pew Forum statistic revealed the same share in 2014 30 Terminology editThe term mainline Protestant was coined during debates between modernists and fundamentalists in the 1920s 31 Several sources claim that the term is derived from the Philadelphia Main Line a group of affluent suburbs of Philadelphia most residents belonged to mainline denominations 32 Today most mainline Protestants remain rooted in the Northeastern and Midwestern United States C Kirk Hadaway and Penny Long Marler define the term as follows the term mainline Protestant is used along with mainstream Protestant and oldline Protestant to categorize denominations that are affiliated with the National Council of Churches and have deep historical roots in and long standing influence on American society 33 In the US Protestantism is generally divided between mainline denominations and evangelical or theologically conservative denominations In other parts of the world the term mainline Protestant is not used Instead the term ecumenical is used to distinguish similar churches from evangelical denominations 34 Some have criticized the term mainline for its alleged White Anglo Saxon Protestant ethnocentric and elitist assumptions and its erroneous association with the term mainstream since it almost exclusively described White American non fundamentalist and non evangelical Protestant Americans from its origin to the late twentieth century 7 8 4 6 Mainline vs mainstream edit The term mainstream Christian in academic usage is not equivalent to mainline Protestant and is often used as an attempt to find impartial sociological vocabulary in distinguishing orthodoxy and heresy 35 Hence in Christological and doctrinal reference mainstream Christianity is often equivalent to Trinitarianism Mainline Protestantism should not be confused with Nicene Christianity which is more widely accepted as having the mainstream Christianity designation that also includes Catholics Eastern and Oriental Orthodox believers and non Mainline Protestants such as Evangelical Fundamentalist Charismatic Confessional Confessing Movement the historically Black church and Global South Protestants 4 5 6 7 8 In the United Kingdom and Australia the term mainline Protestant is not used and mainstream does not mean progressive Protestant Although some supporters and adherents do claim that Mainline Protestant is synonymous with Mainstream Protestant 36 37 Denominations edit nbsp Washington National Cathedral an Episcopal cathedral in Washington D C nbsp A Congregational church of the United Church of Christ denomination in Farmington Connecticut nbsp Augustana Lutheran Church in Washington D C belonging to the Evangelical Lutheran Church in AmericaThe largest mainline churches are sometimes referred to as the Seven Sisters of American Protestantism 38 a term apparently coined by William Hutchison 39 The Seven Sisters are United Methodist Church UMC is the largest mainline Protestant denomination among the Seven Sisters with 5 7 million members in the United States in 2021 40 Evangelical Lutheran Church in America ELCA is the second largest mainline denomination with approximately 2 9 million members and 8 600 congregations at the end of 2022 41 Episcopal Church TEC is third largest with 1 6 million active baptized members 42 of whom 1 4 million members are located in the United States in 2022 43 Presbyterian Church USA PC USA is the fourth largest mainline denomination with 1 1 million active members in 8 700 congregations 2021 44 American Baptist Churches USA ABC USA is fifth in size with approximately 1 1 million members 2017 45 United Church of Christ UCC is the sixth and has about 710 000 members in 2022 46 Christian Church Disciples of Christ DOC is the seventh and has about 278 000 members as of 2022 47 The term mainline has also been applied to Canadian Protestant churches that share common origins with their US counterparts 48 49 such as the United Church of Canada 388 363 members 2018 50 2 million adherents according to 2011 Canadian Census 51 Anglican Church of Canada 359 030 members 2017 52 1 6 million adherents according to 2011 Canadian Census 53 Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada 111 570 members 2015 54 Canadian Baptist Ministries 81 685 members 55 Presbyterian Church in Canada 79 961 members 2019 56 Christian Church Disciples of Christ in Canada 2 606 members 57 The Association of Religion Data Archives Pew Research and other sources also consider these denominations listed with adherents and members to be mainline 58 59 Cooperative Baptist Fellowship 700 000 members 60 Religious Society of Friends Quakers 350 000 members Reformed Church in America 104 921 members 2022 61 Mennonite Church USA 100 000 members 62 63 Church of the Brethren 87 181 members 2021 64 International Council of Community Churches 69 276 members 2009 65 National Association of Congregational Christian Churches 65 392 members 2002 66 Alliance of Baptists 65 000 members 67 Moravian Church in North America 60 000 members 68 Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches 15 666 members 2006 69 Latvian Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 12 000 members 2007 Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church Abroad 8 000 members 70 Hungarian Reformed Church in America 6 080 members 71 These same sources also consider Mainline other denominations outside the US including Anglican Church of Mexico 100 000 members 72 73 74 75 Mennonite Church Canada 31 000 members 76 77 The term is also occasionally used to refer to historic Protestant churches in Europe Latin America and South Africa 78 79 80 81 Historically African American denominations are usually categorized differently from evangelicals or mainline 82 However in 2014 the Christian Century identified a group that fit the mainline description 83 African Methodist Episcopal Church 2 5 million 84 African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church 1 4 million 85 Christian Methodist Episcopal Church 858 670 members 86 While no longer exclusively Christian the Unitarian Universalist Association with 211 000 adherents considers itself to be mainline 87 88 Some denominations with similar names and historical ties to mainline groups are not considered mainline The Southern Baptist Convention SBC 13 2 million 89 Lutheran Church Missouri Synod LCMS 1 8 million 90 the Churches of Christ and Christian churches 1 1 million each 91 92 the Presbyterian Church in America PCA 0 4 million 93 and the Anglican Church in North America ACNA 0 13 million 94 Since these groups are too theologically conservative to be considered mainline those strictly adhering to historical rules of faith are grouped as confessional while those without are grouped as evangelical The National Association of Congregational Christian Churches is considered to be evangelical by Pew Research 95 while the Association of Religion Data Archives considered it to be mainline Theology editVariation edit Mainline Protestantism is characterized by theological and ideological pluralism While doctrinal standards and confessional statements exist these are not usually interpreted in ways to exclude people from membership Richard Hutcheson Jr chairman of the Office of Review and Evaluation of the Presbyterian Church in the United States observed that clergy candidates were more likely to be rejected due to excessive narrowness than for violating confessional standards 96 Mainline churches hold a range of theological orientations conservative moderate and liberal 97 About half of mainline Protestants describe themselves as liberal 97 Mainline Christian groups are often more accepting of other beliefs and faiths affirm the ordination of women and have become increasingly affirming of gay ordination 97 Nearly one third of mainline Protestants call themselves conservative and most local mainline congregations have a strong active conservative element 97 Mainline denominations are historically Trinitarian and proclaim Jesus Christ as Lord and Son of God In practice mainline churches tend to be theologically moderate and influenced by higher criticism an approach used by scholars to separate the Bible s earliest historical elements from perceived later additions and intentional distortions Mainline denominations generally teach that the Bible is God s Word in function but that it must be interpreted both through the lens of the cultures in which it was originally written and examined using God given reason A 2008 survey conducted by the Pew Research Center found that only 22 percent of the 7 500 mainline Christians surveyed said the Bible is God s Word and is to be interpreted as literally true word for word Thirty eight percent thought that the Bible is God s Word but is not to be taken literally word for word Twenty eight percent said the Bible was not the Word of God but was of human origin 98 It has been noted even by members of mainline churches that the leadership of denominational agencies and bureaucracies has often been more theologically and socially liberal than the overall membership of the mainline churches This gap has caused feelings of alienation among conservative mainline Protestants 99 This dissatisfaction has led to the formation of various Confessing Movements or charismatic renewal movements which are more conservative in tone Social justice edit The mainline denominations emphasize the biblical concept of justice stressing the need for Christians to work for social justice which usually involve politically liberal approaches to social and economic problems Early in the 20th century they actively supported the Social Gospel Mainline churches were basically pacifistic before 1940 but under the influence of people such as Reinhold Niebuhr they supported World War II and the Cold War 100 They have been far from uniform in their reaction to issues of gender and sexuality though they tend to be more accepting than the Catholic Church or the more conservative Protestant churches 101 Social issues edit nbsp Harvard College a favorite choice of American upper classes Having a college degree is common among Episcopalians and Presbyterians 102 Many mainline denominations are active in voicing perspectives on social issues Almost all mainline denominations are gender inclusive and ordain women 103 On abortion issues the Episcopal Church TEC Presbyterian Church USA PCUSA Unitarian Universalist Association UUA and United Church of Christ UCC are members of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice 104 The United Methodist Church UMC and Evangelical Lutheran Church in America ELCA support exceptions when abortion may be necessary but do not endorse the procedure 105 106 Other denominations such as the Church of the Brethren and Mennonite Church USA are against abortion 107 108 Regarding human sexuality TEC the ELCA PC USA Society of Friends Quaker UUA and UCC recognize same gender marriages 109 Also considered mainline the Anglican Church of Canada 110 Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada 111 and United Church of Canada bless or marry same gender couples 112 In 2015 the Mennonite Church Canada saw its first same gender marriage in one of its congregations 113 The American Baptist Churches USA does not perform same gender marriages but allows each congregation the freedom to decide for itself 114 Including the aforementioned denominations the Mennonite Church USA Metropolitan Community Church and Moravian Church Northern Province license or ordain openly gay clergy 115 116 While the UMC does not nationally ordain gay or lesbian clergy the New York Annual Conference a regional body of the UMC has ordained the denomination s first openly gay and lesbian clergy 117 The Western Jurisdiction of the UMC also elected the denomination s first openly gay bishop 118 Some congregations of the Church of the Brethren have also voted to perform same gender marriages although the national denomination opposes this practice 119 Most of the above denominations also ordain openly transgender clergy While the national church has not approved of gay or lesbian clergy the UMC has allowed transgender pastors 120 Politically mainline churches are also active While no particular candidate can be endorsed mainline churches often invite political speakers At the 2016 General Conference for the African Methodist Episcopal Church a historically Black denomination but also identified as mainline Hillary Clinton was invited to offer an address for the delegates and clergy 121 Statistical decline editThe term mainline once implied a certain numerical majority or dominant presence in mainstream society but that is no longer the case Protestant churches as a whole have slowly declined in total membership since the 1960s As the national population has grown these churches have shrunk from 63 of the population in 1970 to 54 by 2000 and 48 in 2012 ceasing to be the religious category for the majority of Americans This statistic may be inaccurate due to the number of former or historically mainline Protestants who continue to espouse mainline Protestant values without active church attendance 122 American affiliation with mainline denominations declined from 55 of all Protestants in 1973 to 46 in 1998 123 28 The number of mainline congregations in the U S declined from more than 80 000 churches in the 1950s to about 72 000 in 2008 29 Various causes of mainline decline in population have been cited Much analysis has taken place both from those within and outside mainline denominations Key factors indicate that all types of churches can and do grow regardless of hymnody or contemporary music type of liturgy average age of worshiper or location 124 On average however churches in rural areas churches with older congregants and churches with fewer young people involved struggle most to add members and grow churches For example of all churches founded since 1993 54 are experiencing growth while that is true for only 28 of congregations founded prior to 1900 125 As demographics change the churches founded by earlier generations often struggle to adapt to changing conditions including the declines or shifts in the age and ethnicity of local populations Says David Roozen Director of Hartford Seminary s Hartford Institute for Religion Research Location Location Location used to be the kind way that researchers described the extent to which the growth or decline of American congregations was captive to the demographic changes going on in their immediate neighborhoods 126 Age demographics cannot be overlooked as a real factor in congregational decline with the birthrate for mainline Protestants well below what is needed to maintain membership numbers 127 The Barna Group an Evangelical surveyor has noted Protestant pastors who serve mainline churches serve on average half as long as Protestant pastors in non mainline churches 29 This may contribute to decline and may be influenced in part by the United Methodist Church practice of Itinerancy where clergy are intentionally moved from one church to another as often as yearly in an effort to support and encourage the United Methodist tradition of strong lay ministry Mainline churches have also had difficulty attracting minorities particularly Hispanics Hispanics comprise 6 percent of the mainline population but 16 percent of the US population According to the Barna Group report the failure of mainline Protestants to add substantial numbers of Hispanics is portent for the future given both the rapid increase of the Hispanic population as well as the outflow of Hispanics from Catholicism to Protestant churches in the past decade most of whom are selecting evangelical or Pentecostal Protestant churches 29 In general however decline can be a difficult thing to statistically quantify Many older Protestant churches lived a vibrant lifetime and continue to evidence vital ministry and faith regardless of declining populations or birthrates For example giving and engagement with need and justice both indicators of strong Christian faith have increased despite the aging and loss of congregational members 128 Contrast with other Protestant denominations edit While various Protestant denominations have experienced declining membership the most pronounced changes have occurred among mainline churches Demographic trends for evangelical and historically African American churches have been more stable According to the Pew Research Center mainline churches could claim 14 7 percent of all US adults compared to 25 4 percent who belonged to evangelical churches in 2014 129 130 17 Demographers Hout Greeley and Wilde have attributed the long term decline in mainline membership and the concomitant growth in the conservative Protestant denominations to four basic causes birth rates switching to conservative denominations departure from Protestantism to no religion i e secularization and conversions from non Protestant sources 28 In their analysis by far the main cause is birth rates low for the mainline bodies and high for the conservatives The second most important factor is that fewer conservatives switch to mainline denominations than before Despite speculation to the contrary Hout Greeley and Wilde argue that switching from a mainline to a conservative denomination is not important in accounting for the trend because it is fairly constant over the decades Finally conservative denominations have had a greater inflow of converts 28 Their analysis gives no support for the notion that theological or social conservatism or liberalism has much impact on long term growth trends 131 Evidence from the General Social Survey indicates that higher fertility and earlier childbearing among women from conservative denominations explains 76 of the observed trend conservative denominations have grown their own Mainline denomination members have the lowest birthrate among American Christian groups Unless there is a surge of new members rising death rates are predicted to diminish their ranks even further in the years ahead 97 Trends edit See also Protestant work ethic nbsp Forest Hills Queens in New York City area is an affluent area with a population of wealthy mainline ProtestantsSome other findings of the Barna Group From 1958 to 2008 mainline church membership dropped by more than one quarter to roughly 20 million people 15 percent of all American adults From 1998 to 2008 there was a 22 percent drop in the percentage of adults attending mainline congregations who have children under the age of 18 living in their home In 2009 nearly 40 percent of mainline church attendees were single This increase has been driven higher by a rise in the number of divorced and widowed adherents From 1998 to 2008 volunteerism dropped 21 percent adult Sunday school participation decreased 17 percent The average age of a mainline pastor in 1998 was 48 and increased to 55 by 2009 Pastors on average remain with a congregation for four years compared to twice that length for non mainline church leaders 29 Recent statistics from the Pew Forum provide additional explanations for the decline Evangelical church members are younger than those in mainline denominations Fourteen percent of evangelical congregations are between 18 and 29 compared to 2 percent 36 percent between 30 and 49 28 percent between 50 and 64 and 23 percent 65 or older Not paralleling the decline in membership is the household income of members of mainline denominations Overall it is higher than that of evangelicals 25 reported less than a 30 000 income per year 21 reported 30 000 49 999 per year 18 reported 50 000 74 999 per year 15 reported 75 000 99 999 per year 21 reported an income of 100 000 per year or more compared to only 13 percent of evangelicals 98 History editSee also History of Protestantism in the United States nbsp Old Ship Church an old Puritan meetinghouse currently used by a Unitarian Universalist congregationWhile the term mainline was not applied to churches until the 20th century mainline churches trace their history to the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century The largest and most influential Protestant denominations in Britain s Thirteen Colonies were the Anglicans after the American Revolution called Episcopalians and the Congregationalists from which the Unitarians would later split 132 These were later surpassed in size and influence by the evangelical denominations the Baptists Presbyterians and Methodists Sharing a common Reformation heritage with Episcopal and Congregational churches these denominations together created the mainline 133 It was according to historian Jason Lantzer the emerging evangelical movement that would help forge the Seven Sisters and which provides a core to the wide variety of theological and doctrinal differences shaping them into a more coherent whole 132 The Great Awakening ignited controversy within Protestant churches between Old Lights and New Lights or Old Side and New Side among Presbyterians Led by figures such as the Congregationalist minister Charles Chauncy Old Lights opposed the evangelical revivalism at the heart of the Awakening while New Lights led by fellow Congregationalist minister Jonathan Edwards supported the revivals and argued for the importance of having a conversion experience By the 1800s Chauncy s followers had drifted toward forms of theological liberalism such as Universalism Unitarianism and Transcendentalism 134 nbsp Lady Chapel in Church of the Good Shepherd a 19th Century Anglo Catholic Episcopal Church in PennsylvaniaThe Second Great Awakening would inaugurate a period of evangelical dominance within American mainline Protestantism that would last over a century 133 The Second Great Awakening was a catalyst for the reform of society Efforts to improve the rights of women reforming prisons establishing free public schools prohibiting alcohol and in the North abolishing slavery were promoted by mainline churches 135 After the Civil War however tensions between evangelicals and non evangelicals would re emerge As the practice of historical criticism spread to the United States conflict over biblical inspiration erupted within Protestant churches Conservative Protestants led by A A Hodge B B Warfield and other Princeton theologians argued for biblical inerrancy while liberal theologians such as Charles A Briggs of Union Theological Seminary were open to using historical criticism to understand the Bible 136 As 19th century evangelicals embraced dispensational premillennialism and retreated from society in the face of mounting social problems caused by industrialization urbanization and immigration liberal Protestants embraced the Social Gospel which worked for the regeneration of society rather than only the conversion of individuals 137 The Fundamentalist Modernist Controversy of the 1920s widened the division between evangelical and non evangelical Protestants as the two sides fought for control over the mainline denominations The fundamentalists lost these battles for control to the modernists or liberals 136 Since the 1920s mainline churches have been associated with liberal Protestantism 137 Episcopalians and Presbyterian WASPs tend to be considerably wealthier 138 and better educated than most other religious groups in America 139 and are disproportionately represented in the upper reaches of American business 24 law and politics and for many years were especially dominant in the Republican Party 25 Numbers of the wealthiest and most affluent American families such as the Vanderbilts and Astors Rockefeller who were Baptists 140 Du Pont Roosevelt Forbes Fords 140 Mellons 140 Whitneys the Morgans and Harrimans are Episcopalian and Presbyterian families 138 Through the 1940s and 1950s neo orthodoxy had become the prevailing theological approach within the mainline churches This neo orthodox consensus however gave way to resurgent liberal theologies in the 1960s and to liberation theology during the 1970s 99 See also editNicene Creed sometimes called the mainstream Christianity References edit Hadaway amp Marler 2006 pp 3 4 Roozen 2004 Barrick Audrey March 12 2010 Survey Tracks Trends in Evangelical Oldline Congregations The Christian Post Retrieved October 3 2016 McKinney William November 8 1989 Revisioning the Future of Oldline Protestantism The Christian Century Vol 106 no 33 pp 1014 1016 Archived from the original on January 18 2017 Retrieved October 3 2016 a b c d World Encyclopaedia of Interfaith Studies World religions Jnanada Prakashan 2009 ISBN 978 81 7139 280 3 In the most common sense mainstream refers to Nicene Christianity or rather the traditions which continue to claim adherence to the Nicene Creed a b Seitz Christopher R 2001 Nicene Christianity The Future for a New Ecumenism Brazos Press ISBN 978 1 84227 154 4 a b c Burton Tara Isabella 2018 11 05 Why this shrinking religious group might be among America s last swing voters Vox Retrieved 2023 01 28 a b c d Marty 1980 pp 8 the term Mainline may be as unfortunate as the pejorative sounding WASP but it is no more likely to fall into disuse and may as well be Mainline religion had meant simply white Protestant until well into the twentieth century a b c d Coalter Mulder amp Weeks 1990 Some would say the term mainstream or mainline is itself suspect and embodies ethnocentric and elitist assumptions be dropped in favor of talking about liberal Protestantism but such a change presents additional problems Bradshaw William B October 11 2013 Mainline Churches Past Present Future The Huffington Post Retrieved October 3 2016 Pew Research Center 2014 Religious Landscape Survey pewforum org 2014 Retrieved May 11 2018 The 2020 Census of American Religion PRRI 8 July 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 08 Mainline Protestantism is America s phantom limb news yahoo com 16 July 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 19 Religion in America U S Religious Data Demographics and Statistics Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project Retrieved 2021 07 08 Wuthnow amp Evans 2002 p 4 Hutcheson 1981 pp 36 7 Thomas Oliver 2010 Where have all the Protestants gone USA Today p 17A Retrieved October 3 2016 a b Chang Perry Recent Changes in Membership and Attendance Presbyterian Church U S A Nov 2006 Web Presbyterian Church U S A Archived 2010 02 02 at the Wayback Machine McKinney 1998 pp 57 66 Marsden 2014 p 99 a b c d e Leonhardt David May 13 2011 Faith Education and Income Economix The New York Times Retrieved May 24 2016 Pew Forum on Religion amp Public Life 2008a p 85 Pew Research Center 2015b p 133 Ayres B Drummond Jr April 28 1981 The Episcopalians An American Elite with Roots Going Back to Jamestown The New York Times Retrieved May 21 2016 Allen 1975 a b Hacker 1957 p 1011 a b Baltzell 1964 p 9 Pew Research Center 2015a p 11 Linder 2009 Noll 1992 p 465 a b c d Hout Greeley amp Wilde 2001 a b c d e Report Examines the State of Mainline Protestant Churches Archived 2011 11 06 at the Wayback Machine The Barna Group December 7 2009 Web 12 Dec 2009 America s Changing Religious Landscape Pew Research Center Religion amp Public Life May 12 2015 Walsh 2000 pp 40 The term mainline Protestant was coined during the modernist fundamentalist debates of the 1920s Lindsay D Michael Faith in the Halls of Power Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Hadaway amp Marler 2006 pp 3 4 Hutcheson 1981 p 27 Dunderberg 2008 pp 18 19 with theological meaning such as replacing orthodoxy with mainstream Christianity and heresy with terms like sect splinter group or something similar These designations may create the impression of greater neutrality and Moorhead 1999 pp xxii 241 Carter Joe 17 July 2021 9 Things You Should Know About Mainline Protestantism The Gospel Coalition Retrieved 2023 01 03 Protestant Establishment I Craigville Conference Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved 2006 09 22 Hutchison 1989 UMData umdata org Summary of Congregational Statistics as of 12 31 2022 PDF elca org Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Retrieved December 21 2023 Baptized Members by Province and Diocese 2013 2022 pdf The Episcopal Church retrieved 23 December 2023 FAST FACTS From Parochial Report Data 2022 The Episcopal Church retrieved 23 December 2023 Jones Rick May 1 2023 PC USA church membership still in decline Presbyterian Church U S A Summary of Denominational Statistics Regional Giving and Church Statistics Reported for the Year Ending December 31 2017 PDF ABC USA December 2014 Retrieved 2017 07 09 A statistical profile 2023 United Church of Christ Walton Jeffrey 2023 09 14 Disciples Suffer Massive Membership Drop Post 2019 Juicy Ecumenism Retrieved 2023 12 22 Fallding 1978 Pew Research Center 2015b p 108 Mainline Denominational Switching in Canada Comparing the Religious Trajectories of Growing and Declining Church Attendees Free Online Library Retrieved 2023 01 29 United Church Statistics PDF Retrieved 2021 01 12 United Church Statistics PDF united church ca June 2017 Archived from the original PDF on December 29 2019 Retrieved November 6 2017 Number of Canadian Anglicans Parishes and Congregations Anglican Church of Canada Anglican Church of Canada Retrieved 2017 11 07 2011 National Household Survey Data tables Religion 108 Immigrant Status and Period of Immigration 11 Age Groups 10 and Sex 3 for the Population in Private Households of Canada Provinces Territories Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations 2011 National Household Survey 2 statcan gc ca 8 May 2013 Retrieved 2016 11 27 SUMMARY OF THE ELCIC CONGREGATION REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31 2015 PDF elcic ca Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 01 Retrieved 2017 07 09 Baptist World Alliance Members baptistworld org USA retrieved May 5 2023 The presbyterian church in Canada records and statistics 2020 PDF presbyterian ca Retrieved 2021 04 14 Christian Church Disciples of Christ in Canada World Council of Churches oikoumene org January 1948 Retrieved 2016 06 06 Mainline protestant denominations Thearda com Archived from the original on 2014 10 21 Retrieved 2014 05 10 Pew Research Center 2015b p 108 CBF lists churches represented at assembly declines to name partner churches Baptist Press 28 June 2007 Retrieved 2016 05 02 Church Statistical Data Reformed Church in America Church Structure Mennonite Church USA Mennonite Church USA Retrieved 2016 05 02 Reporting on Protestant Christianity ReligionLink 2012 05 25 Retrieved 2016 05 02 Church of the Brethren membership below 90 000 Retrieved 2023 12 23 ICCC membership Thearda com Archived from the original on 2012 11 15 Retrieved 2014 05 10 NACCC membership Thearda com Archived from the original on 2012 05 31 Retrieved 2014 05 10 UCC religious freedom lawsuit adds additional plaintiffs defendants request stay United Church of Christ Archived from the original on 2016 08 10 Retrieved 2016 05 02 A Brief History of the Moravian Church The Moravian Church Moravian Church of North America moravian org Retrieved 2016 05 02 UFMCC membership Thearda com Retrieved 2014 05 10 Lau David Mayhew Nathanael A Brief History of the Lutheran Churches in America PDF atlanta clclutheran org Retrieved May 1 2016 Hungarian Reformed Church in America World Council of Churches oikoumene org January 1958 Retrieved 2016 05 02 Quienes Somos About Us in Spanish Anglican Church of Mexico Archived from the original on October 8 2016 Retrieved June 20 2016 Anglicanos mexicanos rechazan unirse a la Iglesia catolica cronica com mx Archived from the original on 2020 12 19 Retrieved 2016 06 20 The Church claims this number of adherents or members though it is most likely a much smaller percentage of this total according to data provided by the Mexican Institute for Statistics and Geography INEGI which includes them among other Protestants in the traditional Protestant and Reformed church category This is an umbrella category and includes a wide variety of churches and as a category has as adherents or members only slightly over 50 000 persons The Anglican Church of Mexico has had a long history of overreporting its number of adherents or members as it received subsidies from the Episcopal Church in the U S now TEC depending on growth Panorama de las religiones en Mexico 2010 Consejo About Mennonite Church Canada Mennonite Church Canada home mennonitechurch ca Retrieved 2016 06 06 In Search of an Amish Church beliefnet com Retrieved 2016 06 06 Turner John March 22 2013 The Rise of Liberal Religion The Anxious Bench Patheos Retrieved June 28 2016 Masci David November 14 2014 Why has Pentecostalism grown so dramatically in Latin America Fact Tank Pew Research Center Retrieved June 28 2016 Mainline Protestantism in South Africa and modernity 2008 09 05 Retrieved 2016 06 28 Christians are a minority now but that helps us start new conversations Evangelical Focus Retrieved 2021 07 20 Mainline churches are emptying The political effects could be huge Vox Retrieved 2017 11 07 Glory days The myth of the mainline The Christian Century 2014 07 02 Retrieved 2017 11 07 African Methodist Episcopal Church World Council of Churches oikoumene org January 1948 Retrieved 2017 11 07 African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church World Council of Churches oikoumene org January 1948 Retrieved 2017 11 07 Christian Methodist Episcopal Church World Council of Churches oikoumene org January 1948 Retrieved 2016 05 02 Unitarian faith growing nationwide USA Today Retrieved 2016 06 03 Unitarian Universalist Affirmation of Gay Lesbian Bisexual and Transgender People UUA org UUA org 2012 08 21 Retrieved 2016 06 03 Aaron Earls Southern Baptists grow in attendance and baptisms decline in membership baptistpress com USA May 9 2023 LCMS Inc Annual Report 2021 Retrieved 20 June 2022 Royster Carl H June 2020 Churches of Christ in the United States PDF 21st Century Christian Archived from the original PDF on July 29 2020 Retrieved August 26 2020 Ron Rhodes The Complete Guide to Christian Denominations Harvest House 2007 PCA Statistics Five Year Summary Pcaac org Archived from the original on 27 October 2014 Retrieved 26 October 2014 Anglican Church in North America PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 5 June 2016 Pew Research Center 2015b p 106 Hutcheson 1981 p 21 a b c d e Struckmeyer Kurt Mainline Christianity Following Jesus Web 13 Dec 2009 a b Pew Forum on Religion amp Public Life 2008b a b Hutcheson 1981 p 20 Thompson 2007 Dorrien 2006 Jerome Karabel 2006 The Chosen The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard Yale and Princeton p 23 ISBN 978 0 618 77355 8 The divide over ordaining women Pew Research Center 2014 09 09 Retrieved 2016 06 03 Coalition Members Religious Coalition For Reproductive Choice rcrc org Archived from the original on 2016 05 24 Retrieved 2016 06 03 Communications United Methodist What is the United Methodist position on abortion The United Methodist Church The United Methodist Church Archived from the original on 2018 03 31 Retrieved 2016 06 03 Abortion ELCA org Retrieved 2016 06 03 1984 Abortion brethren org Archived from the original on 2016 08 07 Retrieved 2016 06 15 Services Times Wire 2003 07 12 Mennonites Approve Dual Policy on Abortion Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved 2016 06 15 Where Christian churches other religions stand on gay marriage Pew Research Center 2015 12 21 Retrieved 2016 06 03 Same Sex Blessings Homosexuality Anglican Church of Canada Anglican Church of Canada Retrieved 2016 06 03 Suderman Brenda 23 July 2011 Evangelical Lutherans back same sex marriage Winnipeg Free Press Retrieved 2016 06 03 United Church endorses gay marriage cbc ca Retrieved 2016 06 03 First MC Canada officiated same sex marriage The Mennonite A Publication of Mennonite Church USA Providing Anabaptist Content Archived from the original on 2020 08 03 Retrieved 2016 06 06 Gay marriage mainline denominations affirm SCOTUS Baptist Press 20 July 2015 Retrieved 2016 06 03 Another conference to license gay pastor Mennonite World Review 2014 10 27 Retrieved 2016 06 03 Moravian Church Northern Province Synod approves ordination of gay and lesbian pastors Northern Province Synod 2014 Moravian Church of North America moravian org Archived from the original on 2018 06 03 Retrieved 2016 06 03 33 Ordained Commissioned in Historic Service nyac com Retrieved 2016 06 13 Communications United Methodist Western Jurisdiction elects openly gay United Methodist bishop The United Methodist Church The United Methodist Church Archived from the original on 2016 07 18 Retrieved 2016 07 19 VAN ARSDALL SHERRY 22 May 2016 Goshen church votes Sunday to allow same sex marriages Goshen News Retrieved 2016 06 15 Religious groups policies on transgender members vary widely Pew Research Center 2015 12 02 Retrieved 2016 06 03 Hillary Clinton to Address AME Church Conference in Philadelphia 7 July 2016 Retrieved 2016 07 08 Pew Research Center 2014 Religious Landscape Survey 12 May 2015 Roozen 2004 MYTHS AND FACTS ABOUT EVANGELISM AND CHURCH GROWTH USCLS U S Congregational Life Survey 17 February 2014 Retrieved May 15 2015 Hadaway 2011 Facts on Growth 2010 If Congregations Can Change They Can Grow Faith Communities Today Cooperative Congregations Studies Partnership Retrieved May 15 2015 Gryboski Michael 3 August 2012 United Methodist Church Continues to Decline in America but Gains in Africa Christian Post The Christian Post Retrieved May 15 2015 Mixed blessings in new U S church numbers United Methodist Church Retrieved May 15 2015 Pew Research Center 2015b p 20 21 Hout Greeley amp Wilde 2001 p 469 Hout Greeley amp Wilde 2001 p 494 5 a b Lantzer 2012 p 19 a b Lantzer 2012 p 29 Balmer amp Winner 2002 pp 14 5 Lantzer 2012 p 31 a b Balmer amp Winner 2002 p 19 a b Balmer amp Winner 2002 p 15 a b B DRUMMOND AYRES Jr 2011 12 19 THE EPISCOPALIANS AN AMERICAN ELITE WITH ROOTS GOING BACK TO JAMESTOWN The New York Times Retrieved 2012 08 17 Irving Lewis Allen WASP From Sociological Concept to Epithet Ethnicity 1975 154 a b c W Williams Peter 2016 Religion Art and Money Episcopalians and American Culture from the Civil War to the Great Depression University of North Carolina Press p 176 ISBN 978 1 4696 2698 7 The names of fashionable families who were already Episcopalian like the Morgans or those like the Fricks who now became so goes on interminably Aldrich Astor Biddle Booth Brown Du Pont Firestone Ford Gardner Mellon Morgan Procter the Vanderbilt Whitney Episcopalians branches of the Baptist Rockefellers and Jewish Guggenheims even appeared on these family trees Bibliography editAllen Irving Lewis 1975 WASP From Sociological Concept to Epithet Ethnicity 2 2 153 162 ISSN 0095 6139 Balmer Randall H Winner Lauren F 2002 Protestantism in America New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 11130 0 Baltzell E Digby 1964 The Protestant Establishment Coalter Milton J Mulder John M Weeks Louis 1990 The Mainstream Protestant Decline The Presbyterian Pattern Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 25150 5 Dorrien Gary 2006 The Making of American Liberal Theology Volume 3 Crisis Irony and Postmodernity Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22356 4 Dunderberg Ismo 2008 Beyond Gnosticism Myth Lifestyle and Society in the School of Valentinus New York Columbia University Press doi 10 7312 dund14172 ISBN 978 0 231 51259 6 JSTOR 10 7312 dund14172 Fallding Harold 1978 Mainline Protestantism in Canada and the United States of America An Overview Canadian Journal of Sociology 3 2 141 160 doi 10 2307 3340276 JSTOR 3340276 Hacker Andrew 1957 Liberal Democracy and Social Control American Political Science Review 51 4 1009 1026 doi 10 2307 1952449 JSTOR 1952449 S2CID 146933599 Hadaway C Kirk 2011 FACTs On Growth 2010 PDF Hartford Connecticut Hartford Institute for Religion Research Archived from the original PDF on June 30 2014 Retrieved May 15 2015 Hadaway C Kirk Marler Penny Long 2006 Growth and Decline in the Mainline In Lippy Charles H ed Faith in America Changes Challenges New Directions Volume 1 Organized Religion Today Praeger Perspectives Westport Connecticut Praeger Publishers pp 1 24 ISBN 978 0 275 98606 3 Hout Michael Greeley Andrew Wilde Melissa J 2001 The Demographic Imperative in Religious Change in the United States American Journal of Sociology 107 2 468 500 doi 10 1086 324189 JSTOR 3081357 S2CID 143419130 Hutcheson Richard G Jr 1981 Mainline Churches and the Evangelicals A Challenging Crisis Atlanta Georgia John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 8042 1502 2 Hutchison William R ed 1989 Between the Times The Travail of the Protestant Establishment in America 1900 1960 Cambridge Studies in Religion and American Public Life Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 40601 7 Lantzer Jason S 2012 Mainline Christianity The Past and Future of America s Majority Faith New York NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 5330 9 Linder Ellen W ed 2009 Yearbook of American amp Canadian Churches 2009 Nashville Tennessee Abingdon Press ISBN 978 0 687 65880 0 ISSN 0195 9034 Marsden George 2014 The Twilight of the American Enlightenment The 1950s and the Crisis of Liberal Belief New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 03010 1 Marty Martin E 1980 A Nation of Behavers University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 50892 4 McKinney William 1998 Mainline Protestantism 2000 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 558 57 66 doi 10 1177 0002716298558001006 JSTOR 1049104 S2CID 144644587 Moorhead James H 1999 World Without End Mainstream American Protestant Visions of the Last Things 1880 1925 Religion in North America Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33580 7 Noll Mark A 1992 A History of Christianity in the United States and Canada Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8028 0651 2 Pew Forum on Religion amp Public Life 2008a U S Religious Landscape Survey Religious Affiliation Diverse and Dynamic PDF Washington DC Pew Research Center Archived from the original PDF on April 17 2017 Retrieved May 22 2016 2008b U S Religious Landscape Survey Religious Beliefs and Practices Diverse and Politically Relevant PDF Washington DC Pew Research Center Retrieved September 27 2009 Pew Research Center 2015a A Deep Dive Into Party Affiliation Sharp Differences by Race Gender Generation Education Washington DC Pew Research Center Retrieved May 24 2016 2015b America s Changing Religious Landscape Christians Decline Sharply as Share of Population Unaffiliated and Other Faiths Continue to Grow Washington DC Pew Research Center Retrieved May 22 2016 Roozen David A 2004 Oldline Protestantism Pockets of Vitality Within a Continuing Stream of Decline Hartford Institute for Religion Research Working Paper Hartford Connecticut Hartford Institute for Religion Research 1104 1 Retrieved January 9 2012 Thompson Michael G 2007 An Exception to Exceptionalism A Reflection on Reinhold Niebuhr s Vision of Prophetic Christianity and the Problem of Religion and U S Foreign Policy American Quarterly 59 3 833 855 doi 10 1353 aq 2007 0070 JSTOR 40068452 S2CID 145379028 Walsh Andrew D 2000 Religion Economics and Public Policy Ironies Tragedies and Absurdities of the Contemporary Culture Wars Westport Connecticut Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 275 96611 9 Wuthnow Robert Evans John H 2002 The Quiet Hand of God Faith Based Activism and the Public Role of Mainline Protestantism Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 23313 3 Further reading editAhlstrom Sydney E 1972 A Religious History of the American People New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 01762 5 Balmer Randall 1996 Grant Us Courage Travels along the Mainline of American Protestantism New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 510086 0 Retrieved October 3 2016 Balmer Randall Fitzmier John R 1993 The Presbyterians Denominations in America Vol 5 Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 26084 1 Bendroth Margaret 2015 The Last Puritans Mainline Protestants and the Power of the Past Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 4696 2400 6 Billingsley K L 1990 From Mainline to Sideline The Social Witness of the National Council of Churches Washington DC Ethics and Public Policy Center ISBN 978 0 89633 141 9 Coffman Elesha J 2013 The Christian Century and the Rise of Mainline Protestantism New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 993859 9 Dorrien Gary 2001 The Making of American Liberal Theology Volume 1 Imagining Progressive Religion 1805 1900 Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22354 0 2003 The Making of American Liberal Theology Volume 2 Idealism Realism and Modernity Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22355 7 Edwards Mark 2012 The Right of the Protestant Left God s Totalitarianism New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 01989 9 Hollinger David A 2013 After Cloven Tongues of Fire Protestant Liberalism in Modern American History Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 15842 6 Hollinger David A Protestants Abroad How Missionaries Tried to Change the World but Changed America 2017 excerpt Marty Martin E 1989 The Establishment That Was The Christian Century Vol 106 no 34 pp 1045 1047 Archived from the original on October 3 2016 Retrieved October 3 2016 Hudnut Beumler James 2018 The Future of Mainline Protestantism in America Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 18361 1 1999 Modern American Religion Volume 3 Under God Indivisible 1941 1960 University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 50899 3 Murchison William 2009 Mortal Follies Episcopalians and the Crisis of Mainline Christianity New York Encounter Books ISBN 978 1 59403 230 1 Roof Wade Clark McKinney William 1990 American Mainline Religion Its Changing Shape and Future New Brunswick New Jersey Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 1216 7 Tipton Steven M 2008 Public Pulpits Methodists and Mainline Churches in the Moral Argument of Public Life University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 80474 3 Utter Glenn H 2007 Mainline Christians and U S Public Policy A Reference Handbook Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 000 1 Portal nbsp Christianity Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mainline Protestant amp oldid 1203243957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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