Teenagers Mix Churches for Faith That Fits
By NEELA
BANERJEE NYTimes: December 30, 2005
COLORADO SPRINGS - At 11 a.m. on a recent Sunday, Emily
Hoogenboom, 14, was at church, her second that morning.
First, she had dutifully sat through a staid worship at Forest
Ridge Community Church, which she attends with her family. Now she
was with her 17-year-old friend and 4,000 other worshippers at an
evangelical megachurch listening to six singers, backed by a band
and a swaying choir of 250 people.
Like Emily, a number of Christians are regularly attending
different churches in the course of a week or a month, picking and
choosing among programs and services, to satisfy social and
spiritual needs. They are comfortable participating in multiple
churches.
The practice is particularly pronounced among young people,
sociologists of religion say. Everyone in a family may attend one
church for a service on Sunday, but the children then go their own
way to youth groups, for example.
In a survey of 13- to 17-year-olds conducted from 2002 through
2003, the National Study of Youth and Religion found that 16 percent
of respondents participated in more than one religious congregation.
Four percent attend youth groups outside their congregations.
Some critics, particularly conservative evangelicals and the
ministers of various denominations, decry such practices as a
consumerist approach to faith.
But sociologists say it is a growing practice, a reflection of
how Americans today are less attached to a historical, family
denomination.
Parents also want their children to have an "authentic"
relationship to faith, and "if you don't choose it, it's not
authentic for you," said Christian Smith, a professor of sociology
at the University of North Carolina and director of the survey on
youth and religion.
Emily and her parents, who are evangelical Christians, say her
decision to attend the megachurch, New Life, reveals the strength of
her faith and the profoundly
individual spiritual course each believer follows.
"I saw that my parents' relationship to Christ and my
relationship to Jesus Christ were different, and my kids aren't
going to relate to Jesus Christ the same way we do," said Emily's
mother, Tracy Hoogenboom, 49. "And that's to be expected because
Jesus Christ is your own personal lord and savior."
It remains unclear how many Christians attend several churches
regularly. Most young people who go outside their family church
are Protestants, from mainline denominations and evangelical
churches alike. Some are from mixed-religion marriages, Mr.
Smith said, but many go simply because a second church appeals to
them.
"We see it all the time, everywhere," said Jose Zayas, director
of teenage evangelism for Focus on the Family, a conservative
Christian group based in Colorado Springs. "They gravitate to where
they feel a connection. They're more pragmatic than their parents'
generation. They look at what works for them. I think it's healthy."
At New Life, led by Ted Haggard, president of the National
Association of Evangelicals, the youth group sessions feel like rock
concerts: T-shirts are on sale outside and bands are onstage,
grinding their way through screaming songs of praise for Christ
while teenagers dance before them. Friends often lead other
teenagers to new churches, sociologists and adolescents themselves
said.
Though Emily's family had attended New Life when she was in grade
school, she visited the church again in junior high at the
invitation of a friend, largely because, Emily said, she was unhappy
with the popular but catty girl she had become. She stayed because
the youth pastor's sermons made sense to her.
"That was just the biggest thing for me: that you don't have to
be perfect, that God loves you not for what you do and for this body
that we have only for a short time, but for your heart and soul and
who you are inside," Emily said of what she had heard.
"Every time I went to church," she continued, "I felt God loved
me, that I don't have to worry about sin because he forgives me. So
I looked forward to going back. I don't really understand all of it.
But I have the passion to learn more."
Many children in evangelical families also see the example
their parents have set, leaving the denominations they grew up in to
embrace evangelical Christianity as young adults.
"I left the church of my upbringing to find Christ on my own,"
said Chad Wight, whose 15-year-old daughter, Hannah, attends Pulpit
Rock Church here with her family but also goes to a youth group at
Woodmen Valley Chapel, both nondenominational evangelical churches.
Mr. Wight said his family looked for a church that would nourish
his children.
"Their spiritual health is really important right now," Mr. Wight
said, "and if they continue their walk with the Lord, that's
crucial."
Parents largely accept their children's choices, as long as the
other churches espouse a similar theology, said Nancy L. Eiesland,
associate professor of sociology of religion at the Candler School
of Theology at Emory University. "Many of them are happy their kids
will go to anything in their teenage years," Ms. Eiesland said.
As a hub of evangelical Christianity, Colorado Springs offers
many churches that preach similar doctrines, like the inerrancy of
the Bible and the need for a personal relationship with Christ.
But here and elsewhere, many Christians, especially members of the
clergy, take commitment to a particular church seriously.
"If families spread their loyalties around, it's been my
experience that they don't benefit as well as they could," said
Peter Beringer, a youth pastor at Pulpit Rock Church, which has
about 1,000 adults in attendance every Sunday. "They don't seem to
have relationships in the church that are as deep. From what I have
seen of students who have done this, they find it easier to
disengage and be the kid on the fringes."
Hannah Wight, a soft-spoken girl who deliberates over her words,
stands by her choice. She said she felt more connected to Woodmen
Valley after attending a series there that helped young people
discern their "spiritual gifts," like the desire to serve.
"The message spoke to me a lot," Hannah said. As for attending
two churches, she said, "It's not hard for me at all because I feel
like my needs are being fulfilled."
Still, her parents said, people note Hannah's less-than-regular
appearances at the family's primary church, Pulpit Rock. And her
13-year-old brother, Brian, does not understand her decision.
"I will defend her when necessary, but over all I'm on their
side," Brian said, referring to how others at Pulpit Rock have
reacted to Hannah's choice. "I don't know why she has to make things
inconvenient for the rest of us or why she picked that church when
she has been going to Pulpit Rock as long as the rest of us."
Emily Hoogenboom said she went to Forest Ridge largely out of
respect for her parents, whose friends founded it about five years
ago. But when Emily steps into New Life, she embraces a second
family. Other youths come and hug her. They hug all the time, boys
and girls showing affection for one another without risking trouble.
One Wednesday evening, boys in thrift-store jackets and
porkpie hats, pale Goth devotees, and petite girls with the same
mascara, lip gloss and tight, flared jeans, about 250 teenagers in
all, streamed into New Life for their youth group. By the hall
entrance, Chad Fritzsche, 17, and Esther Saforo, 15, two of Emily's
friends who also attend New Life on their own, were playing guitar
and singing songs they had written.
The youth pastor, Brent Parsley, entered on a sleigh dressed
as a hip-hop Santa. "I'm going to break it down for you, Clarence,"
Mr. Parsley told an actor in the Christmas play. "Christmas ain't
about presents, yo! The true meaning of Christmas is my main man:
J.C."
The crowd shrieked. At this unbuttoned church, teenagers channel
the roiling passions typical of their age into devotion. And Mr.
Parsley egged them on. He told them in an overcaffeinated tempo that
God had much in store for them. Reading Biblical excerpts on his
P.D.A., he reminded them that David was young when he slew Goliath
and that Mary was probably quite young when she bore Jesus. He said:
"God loves to use young people. I want all of us to live our lives
as if God had something extraordinary planned for us."
The music began again. The young people ran toward the stage, but
Emily went by herself to the aisle behind her seat. In the darkened
hall, she was freer than she had been on Sunday. The band played a
simple rock song, and everybody shouted the lyrics over and over:
"Bless the Lord with all that's in me. Bless the Lord. May kingdoms
fall and rulers crawl before your throne."
Emily threw her head back and sang and sang. Then she fell to her
knees. Bent forward at the waist, rocking, she sang into her curled
body what others shouted to the rafters: "I want to give you all of
me. I'm giving you all of me."
- - - -
Emily Hoogenboom, 14,
center, attending her parents' church.
Emily Hoogenboom hugging a friend at New Life, where services are
less staid.
Teenagers singing and praying at a worship service at New
Life, a megachurch in Colorado Springs.
Many teenagers from evangelical families are participating in more
than one congregation, sociologists say.
Brent Parsley, the youth pastor at New Life church in
Colorado Springs, dressed as a rapper for a skit at a recent service
intended for teenagers
Song leaders sing hymns
during a Sunday service at the New Life megachurch in Colorado
Springs, Colorado.
The New Life Church's Taking and Giving program features live
rock and roll bands, theatrical effects on an elevated stage, and
youthful ministers. The program is a hit in the heavily-evangelical
community of Colorado Springs.
[Pictures by Kevin Meloney for the NY Times]