For a growing number of young Americans, Christianity is a dirty word. Thatâs the sobering reality painted by researcher and Biola alumnus David Kinnaman in unChristian, a new book that is raising eyebrows both within and outside of the church.
Through hundreds of surveys and in-depth interviews, Kinnaman â president of The Barna Group â found that two in five young non-Christians hold a bad impression of modern-day Christianity. To the vast majority of 16- to 29-year-old outsiders, Christians are defined by what we oppose rather than who we are for, he says.
Biola Magazine asked him about what it all means.
Most Christians probably sense that Christianity has an image problem. How bad is it?
The image problem is worse than we imagine. Itâs getting harder to be a Christian in the American culture. Part of that is because within this up-and-coming generation, theyâre more negative, hostile, aggressive, frustrated and disillusioned with faith in general â and with Christianity in particular. In our research, we looked for both positive and negative perceptions, and we found that the predominant perspectives that young non-Christians have toward Christianity are negative. Nine out of the top 12 perceptions were negative. The specific ones were that weâre known as being hypocritical, proselytizers, anti-sinner or antihomosexual, sheltered, boring, old-fashioned, too political and judgmental. Another aspect of the image problem is that many young Christians also share these negative images of the faith they follow.
Itâs tempting just to blame the way Christians are portrayed in the media. Why is that a mistake?
Maybe itâs best to look at our own lives: No single Christian makes up his or her mind simply based on media, or Christian media for that matter. All of us, as human beings, are nuanced, interpersonal and smarter than simply being the product of media. Now media certainly have a role, and I donât want to underestimate that at all, but I learned to give people the benefit of the doubt, and more credit, that their experiences, their relationships and their conversations are very critical in shaping how they feel about Christianity. If you were to sit in my seat for a while and read through the thousands of interviews that we did and hear the stories of people talking about their experiences â it wasnât just their perceptions, but what had happened to them. It was heartbreaking.
Jesus warned that his followers would be hated. So what are Christians doing wrong?
Scripture says that we will be persecuted and hated for our faith, but thatâs held in tension with many other places in Scripture where it says weâre to have a good reputation with outsiders. Jesus himself says that the world will know we are his followers based on our love for one another and our unity. Think of it: heâs inviting outsiders to hold us to account! Our beliefs are not subject to popular opinion, but our love is. This means we should not adjust what we believe; the Bible has a very clear teaching on sin; it has a very clear teaching on homosexuality being inconsistent with Christian discipleship. We very much affirm these things throughout the book. In essence what outsiders told us is our approach to upholding those values is un- Christian. Weâve gotten so busy defending the fort that we forgot why we built the fort in the first place.
One root problem seems to be that many Christians lack spiritual maturity.
Yes, I think there are two major challenges that the Christian community faces. One is just what youâre talking about: spiritual apathy and lack of true transformation in the church. About seven out of 10 Americans say theyâve made a commitment to Christ, but only about one-tenth of those individuals have a biblical worldview. Superficial faith â being Christian in name only without any real heart renovation â is the more significant of the spiritual problems our nation faces. But among those individuals who have a biblical worldview, the primary challenge is spiritual arrogance. So youâve got apathy on the one hand, which strips away any kind of life of power and purpose. And then with those who really embrace deep biblical truths, Satan wraps us up with pride and arrogance. We get so busy talking about sin that we never really do anything for those who are affected by sin.
You stress that you donât want Christians to water down their faith to make it more popular. How do you hope people respond to the book?
I hope people meditate and consider prayerfully the story of the Prodigal Son. Youâve got three characters: a loving father, the prodigal and the older brother. My view is that the church, the people who have the most to offer theologically, are most often tripped up by the older brother mentality. We get resentful. Our motivation for serving God gets out of balance. We slowly lose gratitude for what God has done in our lives. And we get into this mode where we imagine loving the sinner but hating the sin. And yet Jesus, in Luke 7, gives a much higher standard than a clichĂ© like âlove the sinner, hate the sin.â He says that if you have been forgiven much, then love much. We donât understand the depth of gratitude that we ought to display toward God, and in response to that, how we ought to be about the job of restoring those who are broken and hurting around us.
What was the biggest surprise for you as you examined the research?
It was really surprising how God opened my eyes to my own spiritual arrogance and apathy. It really changed me as a researcher. I started to understand that the heart of an evangelist is to try to see through someone elseâs eyes. It doesnât mean that Iâm changing my message to fit what that person expects. But you donât understand what a person goes through by telling them everything that you believe. I didnât fully anticipate the depth of hurt, the depth of peopleâs experiences with Christians, and how a thoughtless, human-oriented Christianity damages and destroys people. That compares to a God-oriented, life-of-the-Spirit Christianity that actually pointed people to a deeper life and faith.
Time magazine, USA Today and CNN have all profiled the book. Why is there such a mainstream interest?
There are probably many reasons. Cynicism would say itâs because they like to find fault with the Christian community, and thereâs probably some of that at play. I think whatâs been more interesting to me is weâve heard many different people in the media say that itâs refreshing to see someone within the Christian community really trying to provide a brutal reality check without losing a sense of hope. It is attractive and disarming when we are transparent and honest about how the Christian community has often failed to live up to what it should be doing in our culture.
Is there anything you wish youâd included in the book?
Well, I kept some things out of the book. There was more data available to include. I actually kept some things out because I thought it would come across as angry, youthful arrogance or nitpicking. Iâm really glad that I decided to do that. But I think there are other things that the church will have to continue to think about and wrestle through. As much as anything, I donât think itâs my job to pound people with data so that they change. I believe it is our collective and individual tasks to listen carefully to the Holy Spirit. He is constantly revealing the ways each of us have been un-Christian, the ways weâve gotten off track, the ways weâve missed the heart of what it means to be a living expression of the gospel. And again, if itâs becoming harder to be a Christian in America, that just means there are more opportunities to be like Christ in a skeptical and challenging culture.
David Kinnaman (â96) was appointed president of The Barna Group, a Christian research firm in Ventura, Calif., in January 2007. Kinnaman previously served as the vice president.