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Will UUism matter? 50/50 chance

12.16.04 | 5 Comments

Wise words for UUs from Phil Lung, author of Phil’s Little Blog on the Prairie:

We’re not at the point yet where we need to start talking like Bishop John Shelby Spong, whose most famous book is entitled Why Christianity Must Change or Die. No, if I were writing a similar book about our religious tradition today, I guess I’d call it, Why Unitarian Universalism Must Grow or Become Irrelevant, because that’s what’s at stake here, my friends. It’s not so much a matter of survival as it is a matter of relevance. We are rapidly becoming a footnote in the history of religion in America. While Muslims, Buddhists, and Hindus have see growth rates of 109%, 170%, and 237% in the United States over the last fifteen years or so, the number of Americans who say they are Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Evangelical or other varieties of Protestantism have dropped from 63 percent in 1993 to 52 percent in 2002. Our 150,000 adult members are barely a bump on this changing American religious landscape, which means our traditional growth strategy of waiting for a few stray liberal religious fellow travelers to stumble over us is going to become increasingly ineffective.

Truth is, folks, even if we continue to grow at the same rate we have over the last 10 to 15 years, that .08 percent [of US population] Larry Ladd spoke of will become smaller and smaller and smaller until we will be an all-but-negligible religious movement. The general population is getting larger, and our feeder system (the Baptists, Methodists, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Evangelicals or other varieties of Protestants) is shrinking. In that regard, I’d say we have less than a 50/50 chance of surviving as a force for good in the world. And that is something that I truly do not want to see happen.

It’s worth reading the whole article. Phil suggests we start with teen and child RE, retooling to grow them into lifelong UUs. (What’s the percentage on legacy UUs now—10%?) His suggestions are worth implementing yesterday.

I would add three things to his list. First, an aggressive (and fully funded) campus outreach program. (We’re working toward a five-year ramp-up for just that here in Atlanta.) Second, an aggressive (and fully funded) church planting program.

To pull numbers out of the air, these two programs should receive something on the order of 5% of the UUA budget. Each. If that mean’s laying off (or reassigning) Association bureaucrats or pruning our “social/political witness” programs, so be it. (Unless that’s not nice.)

Third, at the local level (or in the new church starts), moving toward a model of community-planned worship, probably along the “emergent worship” line. That’s probably just a high church UU speaking, but I think it would draw more people in and better reflect our principles.

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