Without millennials, I wouldn’t be a Christian... I started following Jesus in college largely because of the influence of millennial Christians. After my conversion, I was welcomed into a vibrant community of young people who committed themselves to Jesus in surprising ways.
They served impoverished children in the name of Jesus. They spent their weekends at high school football games building relationships with high schoolers to share Jesus. They excelled in academics so they could share Jesus winsomely with sophisticated thinkers like professors and grad students. They rejected hookup culture in its infancy and committed themselves to sex inside of marriage
They sacrificed time, money, pleasure, and self-expression, all because they loved Jesus.
Then everything changed.
Over the last ten years I've watched countless millennial friends give up on Jesus and the church. And now I find myself asking: are we living through the first Great Un-awakening?
Recent studies give a clear answer. Yes.
The Pew Research Center found that the number of people who identify as Christian is dropping precipitously: from 85 percent in 1990 to 65 percent in 2020. A recent Barna study found that 22 percent of millennials who once identified as Christians no longer do. A further 30 percent still identify as Christians but aren’t connected to a faith community anymore.
And just 10 percent of Christian millennials are resilient disciples.
Stop and let that set in. Only 10 percent of millennials who currently or once identified themselves as Christians have the practices and beliefs of Jesus followers. The total proportion of millennials authentically following Jesus is much smaller.
In her novel Murder on the Orient Express, Agatha Christie tells the ultimate murder mystery: a murder is discovered on a train stopped by snow. A detective looks into all the evidence and concludes that either someone secretly snuck onto the train and committed the murder or else everyone on the train did it collectively.
In my interview with John Mark Comer, he referenced this story and suggested that attempts to pin the decline of millennial faith on one sneaky factor ultimately fall short. Many things are working together to make following Jesus less attractive in the 21st century. You can hear more on this below.
In his new book, Live No Lies, John Mark proposes three cultural tectonic shifts that play a role:
Jesus warned his followers that persecution, relational strife, and suffering were expected stops on the path of discipleship (Mark 13:9-13). But it seems that American Christians, having enjoyed a long period of cultural ascendency, never developed the necessary muscles to resist these cultural headwinds.
The levees in Louisiana that crumbled under Katrina’s wrath did so because they weren’t built to withstand strong hurricanes. Is it possible the parents of millennials built a generation of Christians in much the same way? They personally never encountered gale-force winds, so they didn’t prepare their children to face them either. And, being equally unprepared, how could they know how to do this?
Even though the winds blow floodwaters over the drowning Christianity of millennials, this group hasn’t actually lost religion. In place of Jesus, they’ve largely turned to two new belief systems, bolstered by massive media organizations whose profitability hinges on millennial worship.
If anything, I have seen millennials grow more religious over the last five years. They are fervently committed to their cult. It’s a bespoke brand of media narcotics combined with a high on outrage.
And yet…
Among the resilient followers of Jesus, I am seeing something new. Something beautiful. Something fledgling. It’s a flower that can only grow after being crushed. It’s a faith that has counted the cost, picked up its cross, and marched forward.
By God’s grace, there are examples, ancient and modern, of disciples who formed their minds using the Bible’s story, and their bodies using the Bible’s practices. They understood culture, and took the challenge of translating the gospel into new contexts seriously. Millennials are looking to those examples to guide us through what’s next.
No plant grows without being pruned. Perhaps this pruning is God’s way of focusing fresh life into the vibrant parts of a dying plant. And perhaps what grows in this generation, or maybe the next (or the next), will be something far greater than we could have imagined.
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