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The faith of teenagers is a picture of contrasts. Teenagers are consistently among the most religiously active Americans, with nearly six out of every 10 teens engaged in some type of group spiritual activity in a typical week. Yet, the spirituality of teenagers is also remarkably diverse and fluid.

A new research study from the Barna Group explores the changing religious environment of teenagers, comparing their participation in personal and group forms of faith over the past dozen years. While most teenagers remain spiritually active in some way, it appears that six specific types of teen faith engagement are declining.

Changing Faith
In several ways, teenagers are much less inclined toward spirituality than were teens a dozen years ago. The study assessed nine different forms of teenage involvement; six of those religious activities are at their lowest levels since Barna Group began tracking such teen behaviors. These included small group attendance, prayer, Sunday school participation, donations to churches, reading sacred texts other than the Bible, and evangelism by Christian teens (explaining their belief in Jesus Christ with others who have different faith views).

David Kinnaman, president of the Barna Group and the director of the research, pointed out that some of these changes may go unnoticed by church leaders because the most visible activities – teen church attendance and youth group involvement – have not changed much in recent years. Bible reading was also roughly on par with previous Barna tracking of teenagers, further confounding a clear picture of teen faith.

Kinnaman commented on the findings: “While there is still much vibrancy to teen spirituality, it seems to be ‘thinning out.’ Teenagers view religious involvement partly as a way to maintain their all-important relationships. Yet perhaps technology such as social networking is reconfiguring teens’ needs for relationships and continual connectivity, diminishing the role of certain spiritual forms of engagement in their lives. Talking to God may be losing out to Facebook.”

Ashamed of the Gospel?
The most striking change was the fact that teenagers today seem much less inclined to have spiritual conversations about their faith in Christ with non-believers. The survey question specifically asked if the survey respondent had “explained your religious beliefs to someone else who had different beliefs, in the hope that they might accept Jesus Christ as their savior.” Among born again Christian teenagers, the proportion who said they had explained their beliefs to someone else with different faith views in the last year had declined from nearly two-thirds of teenagers in 1997 (63%) to less than half of Christian teens in the December 2009 study (45%).

Kinnaman noted: “Christian teenagers are taking cues from a culture that has made it unpopular to make bold assertions about faith or be too aggressively evangelistic. Some of the Barna Group’s other research shows that the vast majority of these students agree with the statement it is ‘cool to be a Christian.’ Yet fewer young Christians apparently believe it is worthwhile to talk about their faith in Jesus with others.”

Other spiritual changes in teen lives were less dramatic, although statistically significant. Sunday school participation has declined from 35% of all teenagers in 1997 to 30% of teens in the current study; small group attendance was down from 30% to 21%; the proportion of teens who reported donating any of their own money to church has softened from 35% to 26% over the last dozen years; and even the typically ubiquitous practice of prayer has dropped from 81% to 71% among teens since 1997.

Denominational Changes
Within the larger shifts taking place in teen faith, there are some intriguing differences between Catholic and Protestant young people. In comparison to young Protestants, Catholic teenagers are more likely to show diminished religious activity.

However, even when compared to past behavior among self-identified Catholic teens, today’s young Catholics exhibit diminished religious engagement. The current data show that Catholic teens are less likely to attend Sunday school, small groups, and to donate than were Catholic teenagers 12 years ago.

Among 13- to 17-year-old Protestants, there are actually signs of increased religious activity: they are more likely to pray, go to worship services, read the Bible and attend youth group meetings than were Protestant-affiliated teens a dozen years ago. Given that religious participation is improving among this group, the drop in personal evangelism among born again Protestant teens is even more striking, dropping from 72% in 1997 to 53% in late 2009.

Much of the increased activity among Protestants seems to have come from among non-mainline teenagers. Mainline Protestant teens demonstrate increased youth group activity, but nothing else has improved among the religious practices examined. In fact, several areas show decline among mainline teens (i.e., small groups, Bible reading).

Meanwhile, non-mainline (often referred to as evangelical denominations) Protestant teenagers displayed higher involvement than did similar teens a dozen years ago. There was increased activity in prayer, church attendance, Bible reading, youth group attendance, and personal donations to churches.

A third group of teens – those who are unaffiliated with Christianity – show less participation with churches than the same type of students did a dozen years ago. In other words, Christian churches appear to have even fewer interactions among non-Christian teens than was the case in the late 1990s.

Source: Barna Group

Continue Reading: How Teenagers’ Faith Sharing Practices are Changing

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September
13
2010
7:30 pm
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Have you made sure to connect and spend an hour or more daily with your child, and show your interest in their interests, despite your dislike for what they are into? Do you crutch on the fact that you are single parent and have no time or it’s a two parent working family, and there is no time to spend daily? Make the time, and do what you can with the little time you may have to make it quality and special, because if you are not doing this, you definitely do no have the right to blame outside influences on why your youth is part of the lost generation.

Do you have an open door policy with regards to communication, meaning can your child speak to you openly about every topic they are faced with, and will they get your respect and genuine understanding? Or, do you shut the door on communication because the topics may go against your principles, your morals, your belief, so you shut out the conversation with a disassociated “NO” response?

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Psalm 127:1-3

“Unless the LORD builds the house,  its builders labor in vain.  Unless the LORD watches over the city,  the watchmen stand guard in vain. In vain you rise early  and stay up late,  toiling for food to eat—  for he grants sleep to [a] those he loves. Sons are a heritage from the LORD,  children a reward from him.”

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August
27
2010
5:39 pm
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Joseph Califano charges public officials with ‘child abuse’ by compelling teens to attend drug- and gang-infested public schools

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August
26
2010
3:28 pm
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Youth are being empowered in gangs and dying in the streets, yet Larry Acosta of Urban Youth Workers Institute finds many churches giving teens nothing more than the role of passing the offering plates every fifth Sunday.

“Are you kidding me?”

Acosta further challenged urban youth workers not to simply conduct the usual Vacation Bible School for a bunch of church kids this summer. Instead, he called them to send their youth to the projects – public housing areas – and to show communities what it looks like when Jesus shows up.

“We want you to know that we believe in you,” he told next generation leaders. “We need you … to rise up and lead the church into the future. You’re alive at this time in history at such a time as this. We need you to help us complete the Great Commission in the cities, in the … neighborhoods, in the projects, in the parks, in the places where too many from my generation are afraid to go.”

Source: Christian Post Read It here

Kids are waiting to lead serve.

@darellano thx im happy 2 b doing that i luv helping out w/ jesus stuff i luv 2 watch how the little kids accept jesus in2 there hearts. Tweet replies From my niece 12 year old niece. (a servant leader/kid) @kaylahmtz

@darellano thx 4inviding me 2the backpack driv and how u mad us pray 4them i was shy but than i wasnt thx 4letting me take a step 4ward 2God

“Awe fell upon the whole neighborhood (Barrio), and the news of what had happened spread throughout the Judean hills. Everyone who heard about it reflected on these events and asked, “What will this child turn out to be?” For the hand of the Lord was surely upon him in a special way.” Luke 1:65-66 (New Living Translation)

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"One generation shall commend Your works to another..." Ps. 145:4