BY : Michael Foust | ChristianHeadlines.com Contributor
Half of Protestant churchgoers say their church needs to be more ethnically diverse, according to new Lifeway Research data that also shows pastors are investing more time on the issue than they were six years ago.
Churchgoers under 50 (63 percent) are more likely to agree with the statement than those ages 50-64 (46 percent) and 65-plus (33 percent). Among ethnic groups, African American churchgoers are the most likely to agree (60 percent).
Nearly 7 in 10 Protestant churchgoers (69 percent) say their church “is doing enough to be ethnically diverse.”
At the same time, Protestant pastors say they are putting forth more effort on the issue than they were in 2016.
A poll of 1,000 Protestant pastors found that 63 percent say they have discussed the issue of racial reconciliation with church leadership in the past three months compared to 51 percent who answered that way in 2016. Pastors also are more likely to say in the past three months, they have met regularly with pastors of other ethnicities (46 percent today, 40 percent in 2016), spent time socializing with neighbors of other ethnicities (70 percent today, 57 percent in 2016) and “invested church funds in changing local economic inequalities (44 percent today, 31 percent in 2016).
“When a church is largely one ethnicity, making progress toward ethnic diversity is not easy. Yet that doesn’t mean many of these churches are not trying,” said Scott McConnell, executive director of Lifeway Research.
The surveys indicate progress, he added.
“It’s encouraging to see pastors increasingly engaged in many activities that foster racial reconciliation,” McConnell said. “Perhaps the most surprising is the growth in the number of churches engaged financially in righting economic inequalities.”
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