Home Pastors Articles for Pastors What Millennials Think When Christians FIGHT (It’s Not Good)

What Millennials Think When Christians FIGHT (It’s Not Good)

“I went to a business meeting at that church. I’m never going back.”

His name is Kevin. He is a 29-year-old man from Kentucky. Kevin, by his own admission, is not a Christian.

“Something made me visit that church,” he told me. “I’m not sure what it was, but I know now it was a big mistake.”

Kevin told me how he one day, on a whim, decided to go to a business meeting in the church he had visited for four weeks. He also told me how he was “blown away” by the petty disagreements and harsh language in the meeting. He was saddened to listen to one man speak in deep anger to someone else. That man was his small group leader.

“I felt like I was at a playground fight with six-year-olds,” he told us. “Boy did I make a mistake visiting a church.”

The Mediating Generation.

My son, Jess Rainer, and I did a massive research project interviewing 1,200 Millennials. We shared our research in a book called The Millennials. While the interviews were done by a large team, we did get to speak to many in this generation. And we did look at all the interview results.

Keep in mind that this generation is the largest in the history of the United States, almost 80 million in number. They were born between 1980 and 2000. Kevin is one of those Millennials.

But this generation is rejecting Christianity in large numbers. They are also rejecting churches in large numbers, particularly divisive and fighting churches. By our estimates based on this research, we approximate that only 15 percent of Millennials are Christians.

But many of them are walking away from our churches, and more of them are not attending at all, when they witness or hear about negativity and divisiveness in those churches. They want to see unity among Christians, and they are often disappointed.

Do We Compromise Doctrine?

The self-evident statement is that we should never compromise our doctrine to try to reach anyone.

Interestingly, the Millennials rarely expressed concern about churches and Christians that stayed true to their core convictions. They understood that, though they did not use these words, the atonement, the resurrection, the authority of Scripture and even the exclusivity of salvation through Christ are what defines who Christians are.