Ellison
Research - 11 December 2002
Posted 11 December 2002 on Religioscope
A
nationwide study of Protestant church ministers explored whether
pastors tend to hold the same political and theological positions
as the official positions of their denominations. Theologically,
19% of pastors are more liberal than their denomination, 23%
are more conservative, and 59% say their own views fall right
in line with their denomination's teachings. Politically,
16% are more liberal than their denomination, while 27% are
more conservative, and 58% mostly hold the same beliefs as
their denomination's official political positions.
The
results of a study just released by Ellison Research of Phoenix,
Arizona, explored how the personal convictions of Protestant
ministers match up with the official political and theological
positions of their denomination. A nationally representative
sample of 475 churches with a denominational connection provided
input to the study. The study included every Protestant denomination
in proportion to the number of churches it has nationally
(even churches in very small denominations were sampled in
the research).
The
research demonstrated that about four out of every ten senior
pastors in Protestant churches have some significant differences
with the political and/or theological positions taken by their
denomination. Pastors who differ with their denomination theologically
tend to be split almost evenly between those who feel the
denomination is too liberal and those who believe it is too
conservative. Politically it is more common for ministers
to complain that their denomination is too liberal.
When
asked to compare the official theological positions of their
denomination with their own theology, 59% of all ministers
say the two are "pretty much in line."
Those
who do not feel their theology matches up with the official
positions of their denomination are divided over whether the
denomination is too conservative or too liberal. Sixteen percent
say their denomination is a little more liberal theologically
than they are, and 7% call it much more liberal. Conversely,
16% say their denomination is a little too conservative, and
3% say it is much more conservative than they are.
Interestingly,
while mainline denominations tend to be more theologically
liberal and evangelical denominations tend to be more theologically
conservative, how pastors from each group perceive the denominations
they're in does not differ much between the two groups. Among
self-described evangelicals, 17% consider their denomination
to be too theologically conservative, and 24% say it is too
liberal. Among mainline ministers, 20% say their denomination
is too conservative, and 28% feel it is too liberal.
Because
the denominational world is so fragmented, it is not possible
to analyze how ministers from every individual denomination
answered these questions. A denomination with 5,000 churches
nationwide represents a tiny fragment of all Protestant churches,
and therefore also represents just a few respondents in this
study.
However,
four major denominational groups did have enough individual
respondents in this study to be able to evaluate them separately:
Baptists, Pentecostals, Lutherans, and Methodists. (Again,
note that other groups such as Presbyterians, Nazarenes, and
Episcopalians are included in the study, but the sample sizes
for these groups are not large enough to allow them to be
viewed separately.) Also note that each of these four groups
contains numerous individual denominations ("Baptist" includes American Baptist, National Baptist, Southern Baptist,
Free Will Baptist, and all other Baptist groups, for instance).
Of
these four denominational groups, Methodist ministers are
the ones least likely to think along the same lines as their
denomination. Just 33% feel their own theological positions
are pretty much in line with the official positions of their
denomination. Twenty-five percent say they are more theologically
liberal than their denomination, while 42% say they are more
theologically conservative.
Two-thirds
of Lutherans find themselves on the same line of theological
thought as their denomination, while 17% believe their denomination
is too conservative, and 17% find it too liberal. Among Baptists,
59% are pretty much in agreement with their denomination's
theological positions; 26% feel their denomination is too
conservative, and 15% believe it is too liberal.
Pentecostal
and charismatic ministers are the ones most likely to see
things the same way their own denomination does; 82% say their
theology is pretty much in line with their denomination's.
Fourteen percent feel their denomination is too conservative,
and 4% say it is too theologically liberal.
When
the subject changes from theology to politics, pastors tend
to shift a bit to the right. Overall, 58% say their own political
beliefs are "pretty much in line" with the official
political positions of their denomination. However, while
16% say their denomination is more conservative politically
than they are, 27% consider their denomination more liberal
than they are.
This
is true among both evangelical and mainline churches. Mainline
Protestant pastors, particularly, don't see eye to eye with
the official political positions of their denominations. Among
mainline ministers, 45% say their own political positions
and their denomination's positions are similar, while 18%
consider their denomination too politically conservative,
and 36% believe it is too liberal. Among evangelicals, 60%
have political beliefs that match their denomination's official
position, while 13% see their denomination as too conservative,
and 26% believe their denomination is too liberal politically.
Pastors
who are politically conservative are especially likely to
agree with their denomination's views. Among ministers who
identify themselves as political conservatives, 69% believe
their denomination's political positions are right where they
should be (9% say the denomination is too conservative, and
22% consider it too liberal). Among politically liberal ministers,
14% think their denomination is even more liberal than they
are, while 37% feel it is too conservative, and 50% feel it
mostly holds the correct positions. Among political moderates,
46% agree with their denomination's politics, while 12% consider
them too conservative, and 42% believe their denomination
is too liberal politically.
Again,
the perspectives of ministers from four major denominational
groups can be examined individually. Many Methodist ministers
feel their denomination takes political positions that are
too liberal. Just 29% of Methodists feel their own political
beliefs match those of their denomination, while 20% report
their denomination is too conservative, and 51% say it is
too liberal.
Fifty-seven
percent of Lutherans are on the same political track as their
denomination, while 14% feel the denomination is more conservative
than they are, and 29% believe it is more liberal. Among Baptists,
66% feel their political positions match those of their denomination,
while 22% feel the denomination is too conservative, and 11%
say their denomination is too liberal. Once again, it is the
Pentecostal and charismatic ministers who are most likely
to be in line with their denomination's positions (82%); 11%
feel their denomination is too conservative, and 7% call their
denomination too liberal politically.
Ron
Sellers, president of Ellison Research and director of this
study, noted that theologically, it would be hard for denominations
as a whole to fit their member ministers better. "Theologically,
about as many pastors feel their denomination is too conservative
as feel it is too liberal. With almost an equal proportion
coming down on each side of the fence, any shift by denominations
could create an imbalance. And while we can't say that every
denomination is a good theological match with the ministers
serving in that denomination, when viewed in the big picture,
it's hard to see where a change could improve things. It would
seem to be more up to individual ministers to consider whether
they are a good fit in their current denomination if they
strongly differ from the denomination's theological positions."
However,
Sellers also pointed out that politically, it is more common
for ministers to complain about liberalism than about denominations
being too conservative. "Denominational leaders need
to understand when they espouse a position on something political
that pastors serving in their denomination may not view things
the same way. And since pastors are often respected opinion
leaders in local congregations, this means the laity also
may not agree with that position. And it can be hard to maintain
an official position if popular support for that position
is lacking."