Bishop Rimbo is getting creative. Leader of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America’s New
York diocese since 2008, Robert Alan Rimbo has seen 20 percent of his flock
depart over the last decade. Now, as the Wall
Street Journal reports, his
churches are advertising with giant crossword puzzles in the subway and touting
“interactive art projects involving dye-filled soap bubbles.” One
congregation “encourages churchgoers to use paint and clay to tell personal
stories and ‘unleash your theological imagination’ as part of a twice-monthly
art service.”
And, yes, Bishop Rimbo will conduct his first same-sex union in
June, although his “conversion” on the issue occurred long ago in the
1980s. The ELCA voted in 2009 to permit same-sex rites, and although the
article doesn’t mention it, ELCA membership losses thereafter accelerated.
“The younger demographic wants a religion that won’t divide,” he
explains, apparently believing that same-sex unions have been broadly unifying.
Over half of New Yorkers are immigrants or the children of
immigrants, and the city hosts many thriving immigrant churches, Orthodox,
Catholic, and Evangelical, Pentecostal, and charismatic, but Bishop Rimbo’s focus—at least in this profile—is on the white middle
class, the traditional constituency for mainline churches. (The bishop mentions
the 2009 vote on same-sex unions that persuaded several conservative Asian congregations to
quit the ELCA in New York.)
There are many urban churches in New York and elsewhere successful
with that group, especially the young professionals Rimbo thinks will approve
of his impending same-sex union. Tim Keller of the conservative Presbyterian
Church in America (PCA) is famous for his Redeemer Church in Manhattan, which
with its various church plants has attracted thousands of members. He remains
conservative on theology and sex while admitting that many of his urban church
attenders are socially liberal.
I have noticed this phenomenon in the vibrant churches of
Washington, DC that attract young people. The churches, most of them founded
over the last decade or so, are conservative, typically Anglican, PCA,
Assemblies of God, or Reformed. Many of their young congregants, mostly new to
the city and living in hip, newly gentrified neighborhoods, are socially
liberal. Yet these young social liberals are not attending the dozens of
theologically liberal old line Protestant churches in DC whose beautiful
sanctuaries are typically half or more empty with disproportionately old congregants
on Sunday morning. These churches tout their openness to same-sex marriage as
the supposed siren call for youngsters, largely without effect.
Why? I conjecture that even young social liberals desiring to
worship prefer churches with spiritual vitality that profess a transcendent
message challenging their own worldly preferences. In other words, these young
people aren’t that much different from other spiritual seekers almost
everywhere who, consciously or not, cleave to a faith that demands rather than
accommodates.
Reaching New Yorkers is far from impossible. In 2010 the Barna
Group polling firm found that 46 percent of New York area residents reported
attending worship services, up from 31 percent in 2000. Yet differences between
churches, in New York and nationally, matter. The Wall Street Journal glosses over this, saying “most Protestant
religions” are declining, citing “Anglicans, Baptists, Episcopalians,
Methodists, Lutherans, Pentecostals and Presbyterians,” which have dropped
“drastically since the 1980s.”
The statement is a muddle. Old line Protestants, like
Presbyterians, Methodists, Lutherans, and Episcopalians, have suffered steep
decline since the 1960s. Pentecostals, like the Assemblies of God, continue to
grow. “Anglicans,” having only emerged as a separate entity over the
last decade by quitting the Episcopal Church, are growing. Southern Baptists
were growing until the last decade.
So Bishop Rimbo’s crossword puzzles, dye-filled soap bubbles, and
paint and clay expressionism are unlikely to revive New York Lutheranism.
Ironically, there are some signs here and there that the sort of traditional
Protestant liturgicalism that Lutherans once exemplified is increasingly
attractive—especially to urban
Evangelicals searching for theological roots deeper than those often found in
generic Evangelicalism.
If Bishop Rimbo were willing to postpone his same-sex rite and
experiment instead with theological orthodoxy, he might be surprised by the
result. He might even preside over a Lutheran revival in New York.
Mark D. Tooley is president of the Institute on Religion & Democracy.
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