“We're All
Adolescents Now”
.
From Here to Maturity:
Overcoming the Juvenilization of American
Christianity
by Dr. Thomas Bergler
Americans of all ages are
not sure they want to grow up. If you listen
carefully, you can sometimes hear thirty- or
forty-year-olds say things like “I guess I
have to start thinking of myself as an adult
now.” Greeting cards bear messages like
“Growing old is inevitable. Growing up is
optional.” A recent national study of the
sexual lives of eighteen- to
twenty-three-year-olds found that most want to
get married and have children – eventually. But they think of
settling down as the end of the good part of
their lives. One young woman spoke for many in
the study when she said that having children
will be “what makes your life, like, full,
after like, you are done with your life, I
guess.”1
Try this experiment. Ask
a group of college students to raise their
hands if they think they are adults. They
won’t know what to do. You can be sure they
won’t all raise their hands.
The problem goes deeper
than just a fear of growing old. Early in my
teaching career, I asked a group of
undergraduate students, “What does a mature
Christian look like? Let’s list some traits of
spiritual maturity.” The question made my
students uncomfortable, so they pushed back
with responses like these: “I don’t think we
ever arrive in our spiritual growth”; “We’re
not supposed to judge one another”; “No one is
perfect”; and “We can’t be holy in this life.”
Sadly, these students who had been raised in
church and were attending a Christian college
did not think of spiritual maturity as
attainable or perhaps even desirable. They
wrongly equated it with an unattainable
perfection.
Where did this problem of
low expectations originate? Beginning in the
1930s and 1940s, three factors combined to
create the juvenilization of American
Christianity. First, new and more powerful
youth cultures created distance between adults
and adolescents. Second, in an attempt to
convert, mobilize, or just hang on to their
teenage children, Christian adults adapted the
faith to adolescent tastes. As a result of
these first two factors, the stereotypical
youth group that combines fun and games with a
brief, entertaining religious message was
born. In the years since, this model of youth
ministry has become a taken-for-granted part
of church life. Finally, the journey to
adulthood became longer and more confusing,
with maturity now just one among many options.
The result was juvenilization: the process by
which the religious beliefs, practices, and
developmental characteristics of adolescents
become accepted – or even celebrated – as appropriate for Christians
of all ages.
This dynamic of
juvenilization leaped out at me when I
realized that there was nothing happening in
the seeker-friendly ministry of Willow Creek
Community Church in the 1990s that had not
already been done in the Youth for Christ
rallies of the 1950s. The only difference was
that the pioneers of Youth for Christ believed
that what they were doing was not suitable for
Sunday morning worship, but should only be
done in an evangelistic rally outside the four
walls of the church.2
Other branches of
American Christianity – I examined Mainline
Protestants, Roman Catholics, and African
Americans – either were latecomers to
juvenilization or picked the wrong elements of
youth culture to imitate. As a result, the
white Evangelical model of youth ministry came
to dominate not just the church basement, but
increasingly, the adult worship service as
well.3 To be sure, not all churches look like
white Evangelical ones in their worship
practices or other activities. But all
churches compete for customer loyalty in a
religious marketplace in which many people of
all ages share similar adolescent preferences
for an emotionally comforting, self-focused,
and intellectually shallow faith.
It is important to
realize that many benefits have come from
injecting more youthfulness into American
Christianity. Church growth, mission trips,
and racial reconciliation all received a big
boost from the youth ministries of the past
seventy-five years. Churches that made
compromises with youth culture sometimes
managed to inspire long-term loyalty in their
young people and even make church more
attractive to adults. In contrast, churches
that ignored the preferences of young people
tended to decline in numbers and in
effectiveness. For example, conservative
Protestant churches have grown relative to
liberal Protestant ones over the past forty
years because conservative church members have
had more children and conservative churches
have done better at retaining those children
through juvenilized youth ministries.4 Big
churches are not necessarily more faithful to
Christ than small churches, but churches
without members have a hard time fulfilling
their missions.
Youth ministries are
laboratories of innovation that at their best
keep churches vibrant and help them adapt to
the unique challenges of each generation. One
of the few studies we have that asked the same
questions about religion in the same town over
a long period of time showed that between the
1920s and the 1970s the top reason people
reported for going to church changed from
“habit” to “enjoyment.” Because youth culture
put teenagers especially at risk for
abandoning their faith, youth ministers were
the first to learn how to make church more
enjoyable. And what they learned along the way
has kept people of all ages coming to
church.5
But this attempt to make
Christianity as pleasurable as youth culture
had some dangers. In the 1950s, one teenage
girl who was a member of Youth for Christ had
this to say about Elvis Presley: “The fact of
the matter is, I’ve found something else that
has given me more of a thrill than a hundred
Presley’s ever could! It’s a new friendship
with the most wonderful Person I’ve ever met,
a Man who has given me happiness and thrills
and something worth living for.”6 In other
words, Jesus is just like a teen idol, only
better. Juvenilization kept Christianity
popular, but did little to promote spiritual
maturity.
It is important to
realize that because of juvenilization, the
problem of immaturity is no longer just a
youth problem to be solved by adolescents,
parents, or youth ministers. One pastor told
me that the concept of juvenilization helped
him understand some of the struggles he is
having with congregants in their sixties.
These Baby Boomers raised in the founding era
of juvenilization want church to revolve
around their preferences. But the problem is
not just the old oppressing the young. The
young leaders of a church that targets
twenty-somethings asked a middle-aged woman to
leave the music team because she did not
“project the right image.” That is, she looked
too old. Not only is it easy to find people of
all ages who are immature, it is now the whole
life course – the normal pattern of moving
from childhood to adulthood – that has been
compromised as a path to spiritual maturity.
Growing up isn’t what it
used to be
There have always been
immature people, and there always will be.
When I was young, if someone pulled a selfish
prank, a classmate or sibling might yell “Grow
up!” or “That’s really mature!” To be sure,
growing up was typically something that other
irritating kids should do, rather than
something to which we all aspired. Yet this
admittedly immature form of exhortation
implied a shared notion that growing up
included something called “maturity.” Today,
there is less shared understanding of what
“growing up” should include. In recent decades
important changes in the patterns of human
development have made immaturity easier and
maturity harder. Both the journey to adulthood
and the destination have changed.
Also see
> Guest
Author
Interview - Five Questions with Tomas
Bergler
This excerpt
is from the book, From
Here
to Maturity: Overcoming the
Juvenilization of American Christianity,
Chapter 1, (c) 2014 Thomas E. Bergler,
published 2014 by William B. Eerdmans
Publishing Company, Grand Rapids,
Michigan / Cambridge, U.K.
Thomas
Bergler is professor of ministry and
missions at Huntington University,
Huntington, Indiana, U.S.A. He is a
frequent speaker for Kairos and Sword of
the Spirit conferences.
His 2012
book The
Juvenilization
of American Christianity was
featured in Christianity
Today and Preaching
and won an award of merit from Christianity
Today.
>
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