Keeping Members a Challenge for the LDS
Church
By Peggy Fletcher Stack
The claim that Mormonism is the fastest-growing faith in the world has been
repeated so routinely by sociologists, anthropologists, journalists and proud
Latter-day Saints as to be perceived as unassailable fact.
The trouble
is, it isn't true.
Today, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints has more than 12 million members on its rolls, more than doubling its
numbers in the past quarter-century. But since 1990, other faiths - Seventh-day
Adventists, Assemblies of God and Pentecostal groups - have grown much faster
and in more places around the globe.
And most telling, the number of
Latter-day Saints who are considered active churchgoers is only about a third of
the total, or 4 million in the pews every Sunday, researchers say.
For a
church with such a large, dedicated missionary corps constantly seeking to
spread its word, conversion numbers in recent years tell an unexpected story.
According to LDS-published statistics, the annual number of LDS converts
declined from a high of 321,385 in 1996 to 241,239 in 2004. In the 1990s, the
church's growth rate went from 5 percent a year to 3 percent.
By
comparison, the Seventh-day Adventist Church reports it has added more than
900,000 adult converts each year since 2000 (an average growth of about 5
percent), bringing the total membership to 14.3 million. The Assemblies of God
now claims more than 50 million members worldwide, adding 10,000 new members
every day.
Russia provides a dramatic example of different religious
growth rates. After more than 15 years of proselyting there, LDS membership has
risen to 17,000. During
the same period, Jehovah's Witnesses membership has
increased to more than 140,000, with some 300,000 individuals attending
conferences.
Graphing activity: When the Graduate Center of the
City University of New York conducted an American Religious Identification
Survey in 2001, it discovered that about the same number of people said they had
joined the LDS Church as said they had left it. The CUNY survey reported the
church's net growth was zero percent. By contrast, the study showed both
Jehovah's Witnesses and Seventh-Day Adventists with an increase of 11 percent.
"Because membership statistics are prepared and reported differently by
various religious groups, the LDS Church does not publish comparisons of total
membership to other faiths," said LDS spokesman Dale Bills on Friday.
On
the question of how many Mormons are actively participating, Brigham Young
University demographer Tim Heaton noted in the Encyclopedia of Mormonism
that attendance at weekly sacrament meetings in the early 1990s was between 40
percent and 50 percent in Canada, the South Pacific, and the United States. In
Europe and Africa, the average was 35 percent. Attendance in Asia and Latin
America hovered around 25 percent.
By multiplying the number of members
in each area by these fractions, David G. Stewart Jr. estimates worldwide
activity at about 35 percent - which would give the church about 4 million
active members.
Stewart, an active Mormon who served a mission to Russia
in the early 1990s, has been conducting research on LDS missionary work in 20
countries for 13 years, examining census figures, and analyzing published data.
Take Brazil. In its 2000 Census, 199,645 residents identified themselves
as LDS, while the church listed 743,182 on its rolls.
"There may be any
number of reasons for the discrepancy," Bills said, "including personal
preferences of some citizens regarding disclosure of their religious
affiliation."
Retaining members: Stewart says Mormons need to be
aware of such statistics to be more effective missionaries. To that end, he is
publishing his research, along with a description of what he calls "tested
principles to improve growth and retention," in a forthcoming book, The Law
of the Harvest: Practical Principles of Effective Missionary Work.
"It is a matter of grave concern that the areas with the most rapid numerical
membership increase, Latin America and the Philippines, are also the areas with
extremely low convert retention," says Stewart, a California physician. "Many
other groups, including the Adventists and Jehovah's Witnesses, have
consistently achieved excellent convert retention rates in those cultures and
societies. Latter-day Saints lose 70 to 80 percent of their converts, while
Adventists retain 70 to 80 percent of theirs."
Perhaps the best measure
of LDS Church growth is the rate of new church units, such as wards
(congregations) and stakes (like a diocese). Because they are staffed by
volunteers, such units cannot function without enough active members.
In
1980, The Ensign, the LDS Church's official magazine, predicted that
membership would grow from 4.6 million members at that time to 11.1 million
members in 2000, and from 1,190 stakes to
3,600 in 2000. While the number of members came very close to the projected
value, there were 2,602 stakes worldwide at the end of 2002.
"You can use
these trends to say that the percentage is slowing, the numbers have leveled off
or they are dropping. They tell us what is happening right now," Heaton says.
"But to try and tell us about the future is risky business. What if all of a
sudden China or India lets us in and the [missionary] work takes off?"
Predicting the future: In 1984, University of Washington sociologist
Rodney Stark was astonished to discover that the LDS Church's growth rate from
1940 through 1980 was 53 percent. He estimated that if it continued to grow at a
more modest 30 percent, there would be 60 million Mormons by the year 2080; if
50 percent, the figure would explode to 265 million.
He famously
predicted that the LDS Church "will soon achieve a worldwide following
comparable to that of Islam, Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, and the other
dominant world faiths."
Latter-day Saints were on the threshold of
becoming "the first major faith to appear on earth since the Prophet Mohammed
rode out of the desert," Stark wrote.
Many people, especially Mormons,
eagerly embraced Stark's assessment. In recent years, though, some scholars have
challenged his assumptions.
For one thing, True Pure Land Buddhism, Sokka
Gakkai, Baha'i and Sufism are all of comparable or greater size and have arisen
since Islam in the 7th century, said Gerald McDermott, a religious studies
professor at Virginia's Roanoke College who gave a paper at a Library of
Congress symposium on Mormonism in April.
One key to Mormonism
becoming a world religion, McDermott says, is how well it can transcend its
founding culture to become universal. Catholicism, for example, began in
Jerusalem but found a home in many other places, where it easily assimilated
into local cultures.
The LDS message has found a ready audience in Latin
America and the South Pacific, where Mormon missionaries can tell people God did
not neglect them. The Book of Mormon is the story of a Hebrew family that
migrated from Jerusalem to the New World and tells of a visit to their
descendants by Jesus Christ after his resurrection.
Still, the church
may not fare as well as other Christian religions in Africa and China, since it
has no such reassurance for them, he says.
American faith:
Mormonism is "so thoroughly American," McDermott said in a recent phone
interview. "God visited [Mormon founder] Joseph Smith in upstate New York. Eden
began in Missouri and the millennium will end there. The new exodus took place
in North America."
None of these critiques bother Stark, who now teaches
at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. He is amused by the reactions.
"The
church liked the results and people who are against the church are desperate to
figure out why it won't happen," he said last week. "Everyone takes the thing
too seriously. I've tried to make clear all along that I was just trying to
bring a little discipline to a lot of crazy conversations."
It was a
game of "let's pretend," Stark says, when he applied the compound interest
formula and saw huge numbers of Mormons.
He says he never meant his
projections to dictate the future of Mormonism. Others may have more complex
models that challenge his findings.
"They may be right," he says. "But
again, if [Mormon growth] has slowed a little, it can always speed up again."
Stark, whose work will be republished this fall in a new volume, The
Rise of a New World Faith: Rodney Stark on Mormonism, doesn't see any reason
to apologize for his claims.
"Already there are more Mormons than Jews,"
he says, "and we want to consider Judaism a major world religion."
The Salt Lake Tribune, July 26, 2005
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