|


Mainline Protestants
This
term refers to a group of moderate-to-liberal Protestant denominations:
the United Methodist Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America, the Episcopal Church, the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.),
the American Baptist Churches in the U.S.A., the United Church of
Christ and the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). Predominantly
African-American Methodist denominations are also sometimes associated
with this grouping: the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the
AME Zion Church and the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church. The
term mainline harks back to a time when this mostly
white group was tied to the political and cultural establishment.
Since the 1960s, membership in most mainline denominations has fallen
precipitously, as has their influence.
SCRIPTURE
The New Revised Standard Version of the Bible is generally preferred.
MAJOR
ORGANIZATIONS
The National
Council of Churches USA encourages ecumenical cooperation among
a wide spectrum of Protestant, Anglican, Orthodox, historic African-American
and Peace churches. It represents 45 million people in more than
100,000 local congregations.
Church
World Service is the relief, development and refugee assistance
ministry of 35 Protestant, Orthodox and Anglican denominations.
Individual denominations have extensive Web sites with background
and contact information.
ISSUES
Nationally, mainline denominations are mired in bitter battles
over homosexuality; several have considered splitting after years
of annual conventions dominated by votes on the issue.Only a few
officially allow the blessing of same-sex marriages or ordain noncelibate
homosexuals; some clergy have been defrocked for performing same-sex
marriages or acknowledging their same-sex partner.
Mainline denominations remain predominantly white but are
working to reach out to immigrants and other races and ethnicities,with
mixed success.
Clergy shortages are increasing and, in some denominations,
severe.Most pastors are olderonly 5 percent are younger than
age 35and many are on the brink of retirement.Many seminary
graduates are not interested in pastoring churches,where pay can
be comparatively low.
The mainline denominations all ordain women and were among
the first to do so.Women account for about half of seminary students.
Still,male clergy far outnumber women, particularly in senior pastor
and regional and national ministry positions.Many female clergy
complain of unequal treatment, pay and opportunities and leave church
work for other fields.
Mainline denominations continue their longtime advocacy of
social justice issues, often by combining forces with other religions
and sometimes secular groups. Common causes include poverty, civil
rights, interfaith understanding, environment and church/state separation
issues.
RESOURCES
The
Christian Century is the major magazine, aimed mostly at clergy
and scholars.
Several centers offer research and resources pertaining to
mainline denominations. They include Pulpit
& Pew, Duke University's Center on Pastoral Research; the Alban
Institute: Resources
for Congregations in Herndon,Va.; the Indianapolis
Center for Congregations; and the Wabash
Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion at
Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Ind.
These denominations are active in ecumenical (among Christians)
and interfaith groups on local, national and international levels
and have long-standing relationships with Jews,Muslims and other
faiths as well as an openness to working with most Christian denominations.
These groups include Churches
Uniting in Christ, whose nine member denominations have pledged
to show unity by coordinating more closely, and the Interfaith
Alliance.
|