..and I would add that there are a good number of Christians who no longer go to church, because “organized religion” is beginning to get just as corrupt as “organized religion” was in Jesus’ day.
H’mmm, that ties in with the “home churches” concept that some of us in our congregation have talked about. Where, like first century Christians, we will only be able to worship in our homes; or in expansion for your idea, it is only in ‘home churches’ where one can preserve true tenants of Christianity as the mainline churches drift (rush?) into becoming secular humanist organizations with only a microscopically thin verneer of the teachings of our Lord and Savior, Jesus.
beginning? It’s been corrupt for a long time.
“..and I would add that there are a good number of Christians who no longer go to church, because organized religion is beginning to get just as corrupt as organized religion was in Jesus day.”
I would agree with this premise. The conclusion being reached here is based on how many identify with a Christian denomination. Going to a particular church or denomination does not make anyone “Christian” by itself. Too many denominations have become politicized and too many take on the attitude that you believe as we tell you to believe and live as we tell you to live or you will go to hell. Those who decline this type of affiliation are not necessarily instant agnostics or atheists. Most believe and follow Christian principles in their daily life but do not follow the political winds of some denominations and the strict dogma of others. This poll would have looked very similar from a Catholic church point of view during the reformation.