From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Membership stable in ELCA last year


From FRANK_IMHOFF.parti@ecunet.org (FRANK IMHOFF)
Date 25 Aug 1998 08:51:25

Church attendance remains constant

CHICAGO, 20 August 1998 (lwi/elca) - With a total of 5,185,055 baptized
members in 10,889 congregations, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
(ELCA) membership numbers remained stable for 1997, according to the Rev.
Lowell G. Almen, ELCA secretary. That figure is down by 2,308 from
5,187,363 in 1996, showing a mere 0.04 percent drop in membership.

Confirmed membership in 1997 for ELCA congregations remained steady at
3,844,169, up 1,014 from 1996. Communing and contributing membership,
indicators of active participation, however, declined for the second
consecutive year to 2,516,006 in 1997 compared with 2,541,505 in 1996.
However, this drop might be due more to lack of reporting than decreased
participation, said Almen. "Fewer congregations are counting and recording
the exact number of persons who partake of the sacrament of Holy
Communion."

The average number of individuals at worship on Sunday, which is another
indicator of participation by members in the life of congregations,
remained constant in 1997. Some 1,580,961 or 30.49 percent of all baptized
members attend worship each week. For the past ten years, average worship
attendance has fluctuated slightly between 30 and 31 percent.

The number of congregations decreased by 47 from 10,936 in 1996 to 10,889
in 1997, largely as a result of the disbanding, merging, or consolidating
of existing congregations, said Almen.

The slight but steady decline in the number of baptisms of children over
the past eight years continued in 1997. From 1996 to 1997 the decrease was
1,844, down from 83,944 in 1996 to 82,100 in 1997. Almen pointed out that
this decline reflects the slowed birth rate in the population in general.

Congregations did report a slight increase in baptisms of adults 16 years
and older -- up 141 persons from 8,108 in 1996 to 8,249 in 1997. The number
of unconfirmed children partaking of the sacrament of Holy Communion
continued to grow in 1997 to 259,187 -- up from 248,340 in 1996 -- an
increase of 4.36 percent. However, the number of youth confirmed declined
219 from 1996 to 59,123 in 1997. This ended seven consecutive years of
increases.

Losses of baptized members attributable to "roll cleaning" by congregations
were up slightly from 165,866 in 1996 to 166,668 in 1997. The number of
losses due to death increased over 1996 by fewer than 1002 members --
50,482 in 1997 compared to 50,387 in 1996.

The average number of baptized members per congregation was 481, and the
average confirmed membership was 356. In 1997 the average number for
communing and contributing members per congregation was 236.

For 1997, 2.19 percent of ELCA baptized members were African American,
Black, Asian, Hispanic, American Indian or Alaska Native people. For 1996,
that percentage of the total ELCA membership was 2.14. Hispanic membership
increased the most with 1,561 members added to the baptized rolls of
congregations. The actual numbers were: African American or Black
membership, 49,438, down 274; Asian and Pacific Islander membership,
21,769, down 168; Hispanic membership, 30,988, up 1,561; and American
Indian and Alaska Native membership, 6,896, down 117. Some 7,044 members
declared their race or ethnic heritage as "other".

In the year of its start in 1988, the ELCA counted 98,166 African American,
Asian, Hispanic, and Native American members. By 1997 that number had
increased 18.3 percent to 116,135.

*       *       *
Lutheran World Information
Editorial Assistant: Janet Bond-Nash
E-mail: jbn@lutheranworld.org
http://www.lutheranworld.org/


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