fbpx
×

Log into your account

We have changed software providers for our subscription database. Old login credentials will no longer work. Please click the "Register" link below to create a new account. If you do not know your new account number you can contact [email protected]
Interfaith worship doubled, but still low
Piet Levy, Religion News Service
September 19, 2011
3 MIN READ TIME

Interfaith worship doubled, but still low

Interfaith worship doubled, but still low
Piet Levy, Religion News Service
September 19, 2011

Interfaith worship services have doubled in the decade since

the 9/11 attacks, according to a new study released Sept. 7, even as more than

seven in 10 U.S. congregations do not associate with other faiths.

The survey by an interfaith group of researchers found that

about 14 percent of U.S. congregations surveyed in 2010 engaged in a joint religious

celebration with another faith tradition, up from 6.8 percent in 2000.

Interfaith community service grew nearly threefold, with

20.4 percent of congregations reporting participation in 2010, up from 7.7 percent

in 2000, according to the Cooperative Congregations Studies Partnership.

After the 9/11 attacks, “Islam and Islamics’ presence in the

United States (became) visible in a way that you couldn’t ignore,” said David A.

Roozen, one of the report’s authors and the director of the Hartford Institute

for Religion Research at Hartford Seminary in Connecticut.

National Muslim groups tried to build bridges to other

faiths, who in turn “reached out in new ways to be neighborly,” he said. Reform

Jewish congregations led the way, with two-thirds participating in interfaith worship

and three-quarters involved in interfaith community service.

The largest percentage of interfaith-worshipping

congregations (20.6 percent) was in the Northeast, which is home to a

disproportionate percentage of more liberal mainline Protestant churches. About

17 percent of interfaith-worshipping congregations are in a big city or older

suburb, where greater diversity makes interfaith activity more likely.

The study implies that the more liberal a congregation, the

greater likelihood for interfaith activity. Approximately half of Unitarian Universalist

congregations held interfaith worship services, and three in four participated

in interfaith community service.

By contrast, among more conservative Southern Baptist

churches, only 10 percent participated in interfaith community service, and 5

percent in interfaith worship.

The study shows most of the 11,077 congregations surveyed

reported no interfaith activity, a finding that troubled C. Welton Gaddy,

president of Washington-based Interfaith Alliance.

“The reality in our nation now is we have a major problem

with Islamophobia, and that fear is being fed by people in large enough numbers

that we need probably 10 times as many people involved in interfaith discussions

and actions,” Gaddy said.

Even so, the fact that interfaith services and community

projects have grown so much is something to celebrate, said Rabbi Marc

Schneier, founder and president of the New York-based Foundation for Ethnic Understanding.

“I’m not saying we are where we’d like to be, but the good

news is the process has begun,” Schneier said. “Outreach to the Muslim

community from a Jewish perspective is now becoming en vogue. … Ten years

ago, if I would have proposed anything like that, people would have thought I was

from Mars.”