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Jim Eisenbraun's avatar

John, one other factor in the last 40? or maybe even 50? years was the growth of the CCM music scene, which added significantly to the homogenization of "Christian evangelical culture." I once heard a major "artist" say in a small group something to the effect of, "Yeah, we've learned not stray far from a very generic [i.e., not at all denominational!! or distinctively group-oriented] message in our song-writing. The road to success is to be generic." That is both disturbing and also symptomatic of much of what happened with CCM and also, I'd say, with the "worship music" genre. Music has power.

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Matt Marlowe's avatar

I’ve been thinking this sort of thing for a while, though I called it theological levelling rather than theological homogenisation (both terms are good think). I think this is partly just a part of being in a much more interconnected world with greater reach of media and greater interaction between people of different backgrounds. Because, especially historically but still today, churches are not just theologically situated but also geographically and culturally situated. But if those boundaries blur with increased interconnection then theology may also blur. I also wonder if it’s in response to the rise of the nones. In a culture, as it was more so in the past (at least nominally), where most people are Christian on some level, differences between Christians and denominations are more relevant. But as the proportion of people who are non-religious rises, the difference between, say, a Southern Baptist and a Methodist are less than between them and a non-religious person, such that if you want to bring more nones back to religion, you’re gonna play down the differences between denominations.

I also think social change can be a major factor. I’m British and I grew up in an evangelical Anglican Church, before going to a Baptist church for a couple of years as a teenager before returning to my home Anglican Church. And whilst I think I recognised differences between my Anglican and Baptist church, partly in culture (e.g: style of worship) and structure, I don’t think I saw them as that different. In contrast however, my grandparents were Methodists, and they always saw themselves as distinctly “non-conformist” - a term used to describe (largely evangelical) non-Anglican Protestant groups in the UK. But no one really says “non-conformist” anymore. And I don’t think this has just been a matter of theological levelling. Though that’s defo a part of it (as both a cause and a symptom), I think a big part of it has been the decreased social dominance of Anglicanism in the UK, largely as a result of the increase of the nones, and in tandem with theological levelling.

What I also find interesting though is that I think whilst theology has become much less of a dividing line between evangelical groups, I think social issues has become much more of a dividing line. Many denominational splits in the last couple of decades have been in response not to differences of theology (though they’re often theological issues aswell in a sense), but on social issues, like LGBT issues, and women’s ordination. I think that reflects broader polarisation in our society.

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