Mapping The Nominals
Mapping The Nominals
Mapping The Nominals
Discussion Paper for the Global Consultation on Nominalism of the Lausanne Movement Rome, 14-
18 March 2018
PRE-CONFERENCE DRAFT
Contents
Introduction
The Myth of the Nominal Christian
Maps and coordinates
Parameters
Classifications
Our matrix
Global, regional and sectorial maps
Categories of ‘nominal’ Christianity
1. Churched yet nominal
2. Marginal church membership
3. Parallel Christianity
4. Unaffiliated yet ‘Christian’
5. Dechurched
To conclude
Bibliography
Introduction
Having looked in the preceding article at nominality and how to define it, our focus now shifts to the
people called ‘nominals’.
There are many people in our society who came out of a church, but they didn’t come all the way out. They
are disconnected—probably not being genuine Christian believers. These are nominal Christians.
‘Nominals’ were raised to appreciate (though not know) the Bible, a certain moral code and general
Christian-ish principles. They may have had some experiences with God, but they do not have a vital walk
with the Lord. They are not disciples being transformed by the indwelling of his Spirit.
A nominal knows about Christ, but doesn’t really know Christ, at least in the way evangelicals mean it.
He or she considers himself to be ‘Christian’ because he isn’t Hindu, or because he or she said a meaningful
prayer 40 years ago at a youth camp. He or she doesn’t hate God, but just doesn’t love him with all of his
heart, mind, soul, and strength.
Nominals see God as the source of good things in life, but not necessarily as the only source of eternal life.
They have an appreciation for the things of God, even though they don’t have a thriving relationship with
Him. They respond positively to the Bible, and they see value in the church. They even live according to
some Christian-ish principles.1
Ed Stetzer, the author of these lines, does not offer a definition of a socioreligious phenomenon but
rather a description of people. This is an important step, because it brings out the variety of ways in
which people are nominally Christian.
Twofold approach
At this juncture, we should make an important distinction. We can look at nominality from a
theological perspective, and from a socioreligious perspective. While the first is legitimate and
necessary, it runs the risk of overlooking the various forms of what is collectively called nominal
Christianity. This is where the second approach is needed.
From a theological point of view, we shall ask questions such as: What makes someone a member of
the Body of Christ, the Church universal? Through what rite, or creed, or experience, or action does
someone become a Christian? What are the visible marks of a true Christian? What is the difference
between a nominal and a non-Christian with respect to God’s grace and salvation in Jesus-Christ? This
will lead to normative definitions. Consequently, nominality will be distinguished from normality.
Whatever form it takes, it invariably falls short of the ‘normal Christian life’.
However, this leads to negative definitions, to putting something behind the ‘but’ what these people
are not, viz. authentic or committed or genuine or practicing Christians. Such definitions don’t tell us a
lot about who they are, what they believe, how they relate to the Church, and in what sense they
consider themselves Christian. For that, we need a contextual approach, which is phenomenological. It
provides information and analyses their views. This is basically what the socioreligious studies are
trying to bring to light. Practical theology and mission studies can therefore use their methods and
learn from their findings.
Being aware of this, the authors of the Purpose Document of our consultation offer a twofold
description. First, a theological assessment of all nominal Christians: ‘they lack experiential
engagement and spiritual participation in the biblical definition of what it means to be a Christian’. At
the same time, they recognise that:
Nominal Christianity takes different shades and nuances depending on the large religious narrative it is
inserted into. Majority Roman Catholic culture will bring its unique ways of embodying it; the same is true
with majority Eastern Orthodox or Protestant/Evangelical contexts. There is no such a thing as a broad
category fitting all types of nominal Christianity, but there are several strands within its vast domain.
Contextual analysis is required if one wants to go beyond sociological stereotypes.
In other words, we are faced with phenomena that cannot be described exclusively in terms of a
theological understanding of being a Christian.
Certainly, we need terms to analyse practices, terms to qualify ideas, but these are abstractions,
theoretical constructs, technical terms for the convenience of language and academic discussion.
Nevertheless, speaking in the third person is not enough, we should also listen to what the people
designated as ‘nominal’ themselves say in first-person language. What do they say about their beliefs,
their faith, their spiritual experience, their relationship with the Church, and so on?
So, let us move from third-person language of the study-room to the first-person language of people’s
stories. Canadian author Luc Cawley writes:
You meet nominal Christians every week… Perhaps your temptation has been to see them as frauds,
hypocrites or backsliders, For many people, though, the ‘Christian’’ aspect of their identity matters to them.
They may even have experienced some aspects of Christian conversion. The Christian faith may be a source
of pain as they recall the difficult relationships or unresolved doubts that pushed them from the church. Or,
alternatively, Christianity could be something that has an impact on their lives… The best way to find out
what, if anything, Christianity means to them is to ask them to tell their story. 2
To put it in a nutshell; move from the concepts to the people, from nominality to the ‘nominals’.
In this respect is noteworthy that the Lausanne Consultation on Nominality in High Leigh, 1998, has
precisely done this. During the meetings, several people who agreed to be identified as nominal
Christians were interviewed. It became evident that many considered churches and their spokespersons
as judgmental and lacking care and understanding, for example, in relation to sexuality. Churches were
sometimes seen as insensitive to the complexity of life and as being simplistic, rigid, arrogant and
exclusive. Churches which have no place for doubt made them suspicious.3
Some people I know describe themselves in terms of their sporting allegiance (‘Packer’s fan), their political
affiliation (‘liberal’), their hobbies (‘avid reader’, ‘snowboarder’) or their relationships (‘devoted husband’,
‘struggling parent’). Some might even employ religious themed labels like ‘atheist’, ‘secular Jew’, ‘spiritual
but not religious’ or ‘vaguely Hindu’. I’ve rarely met anybody, though, who calls himself a ‘non-Christian’.4
In general, people outside the Christian faith identify themselves in terms of what they do believe, not
in terms of what they don’t believe. And when it comes to that, they are not at all the same.Luc
Cawley goes on to say that a one size fits all approach to ‘the’ non-Christians does not work. Atheists,
Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, nominal Christians, and the spiritual-but-not-religious crowd are very
different from one another, after all. Unfortunately, our evangelistic programs and apologetic
arguments often act as if they do. To effectively engage them with the Gospel, we need to take account
of what they believe, how they act, what makes them tick. This requires that we be flexible in our
outreach to them.
The reason why we quote this book at some length, is that we find its argument appropriate for our
subject. What he writes about the ‘non-Christian’ is true for the ‘nominal Christian’ as well, it is not a
self-designation, but a technical term, used by theologians, pastors, evangelists and mission
practitioners, to indicate a certain category of people in need of Christian ministry. In real life these
people themselves hardly ever identify as such.
As for me, I have never met anybody who called himself a ‘nominal Christian’. When it comes to their
religious position, I hear them describe themselves in a host of different ways. For example, ‘Catholic
but non-practicing’ or ‘coming from a Protestant culture’. Others tell me: ‘I no longer go to Church,
but I keep my personal relationship with the Lord’.
• Churched – regular Churchgoers who are committed to their Church and often actively
involved.
• Casuals – affiliated to a Church who only occasionally go to a service, mainly during
Christian holidays.
• Wanderers – have drifted away from involvement with a local church, even though ‘many of
them have not permanently abandoned the faith’.
• Official Christians – otherwise secular people who check ‘Christian’ on forms. ‘They have not
had enough contact with the church to have ever developed an accurate understanding of Jesus
or to have made any response to Him.’
The distinguishing criterion is people’s relationship with the Church. Once the types are defined,
Cawley looks to another aspect, namely what people believe. The result is the following matrix:5
The ‘churched’ are regular churchgoers, the ‘casual’ are registered members who hardly ever go to
church, the ‘wanderers’ have stopped going to church and some are no longer members either, while
the ‘official’ are unaffiliated to a church but identify as ‘Christian’ when responding to survey
questions. We shall come back to this classification further on.
5 Idem, p. 162.
Van de Poll, Mapping the ‘Nominals’, Pre-consultation draft, page 5
conversion is usually a process that takes time, that it is a cluster of several experiences. That makes
every personal pilgrimage to faith a unique story, Cawley insists, but it is always about responding to
Jesus.6
Like so many Evangelicals, Cawley uses the term nominal to indicate the common denominator of all
forms of so-called nominal Christianity. But that is at the same time its limitation. When we take a
closer look at the groups of people concerned, it becomes clear that ‘nominal’ is too general a term to
adequately describe the major characteristics of each form of ‘nominality’. Further on, we shall
propose several other terms to give a more precise indication of the categories or groups of people that
can be distinguished.
For want of a better alternative, we shall keep using the term ‘nominal’ as a collective term for these
phenomena, in inverted comma’s. In name only, so to speak.
Parameters
To begin with, here are the six parameters that were identified in the preceding article as essential
aspects of being Christian:
•
•
Initiation (becoming Christian)
Faith (trust, relationship with God, spiritual experience, believing ‘in’)
• Beliefs (knowledge, meaning, believing ‘that’)
•
•
Church attachment (membership, felt belonging)
•
Church participation (attendance, active belonging)
•
Practice of spiritual life (prayer, devotional reading and other disciplines, spiritual growth)
Practice of the faith (witness, Christian conduct in daily life in society)
Ideally, then, all the aspects go together, but this is not always the case. Some believe without
belonging to a Church, or without attending Church services. Others in turn are Church members but
do not adhere to the major Christian doctrines. Or they will not abide with Biblical norms and values.
And then, when it comes to belief, this can mean an affective relationship with God for some, while
for others it is more a matter of convictions, of knowing something for sure.
Classifications
These different configurations of aspects allow us to distinguish certain types of ‘nominality’. Several
authors propose classifications, usually based on one or two church parameters (‘belonging’).
6 Idem, p. 165ff.
Van de Poll, Mapping the ‘Nominals’, Pre-consultation draft, page 6
• One who attends church regularly and worships devoutly, but who has no vital personal
relationship with Jesus as Saviour and Lord.
• One who attends church regularly but for cultural reasons only.
• One who attends church only for major church festivals (Christmas, Easter, etc.) and
ceremonies (weddings, baptisms, funerals).
• One who hardly ever attends church but maintains a church relationship for reasons of
security, emotional or family ties, or tradition.
• One who has no relationship to any specific church and who never attends but considers
himself a believer in God (in a Protestant traditional sense).7
More recently, South-Korean theologian Jeung-Ou Nam has published a study in French, about
sociological Christians (the generally used term in a French speaking context) and the renewal of the
Church.9 He looks at this phenomenon from a global perspective and adds a detailed case study of his
home country South-Korea. Using the parameters of church affiliation and church participation, and
combining it with another one, namely faith, he distinguishes what he calls ‘three levels of concrete
involvement in the life of the Church’.
• The Christian is registered in the records of the Church, but he is not present at the service.
those who were formerly present but who no longer come to church.
• The Christian is registered in the Church’s records, goes to church frequently, but does not
have faith. Here we should think of churches dominated by liberal theology, its members
might be actively involved while denying basic classical Christian doctrines.
• The Christian who is not registered in the Church but has faith. Here the author refers to the
phenomenon described as ‘believing without belonging’.
These classifications make an important point: nominal Christianity is found among Church members,
as well as outside the organised Church community.
• Christians by birth. Individuals and even entire communities may self-identify as Roman
Catholics, Lutheran, Anglican, etc., but only by virtue of their birth or because that particular
tradition is identified with their national, tribal or family identity. This kind of nominalism,
Gibbs argues, arises within the context of Christendom in the western world and in nations
where European Christian traditions were imported as part of colonial influence.
• Second generation Christians. They are found in any church that is more than a generation old,
but especially in rapidly growing churches, which fail to nurture new believers in the faith. As
a consequence, the growth impetus will not be sustained beyond the first generation of
believers. This, he argues, represents the greatest challenge facing the vibrant churches of
Africa, Latin America and parts of Asia experiencing unprecedented numerical growth.
• Those who have stopped being part of a congregation. Some of them because they no longer
adhere to the doctrines or the ethical codes, others because of dissatisfaction with the
superficiality and the ‘consumer models’ of the church.
This last category should be noted. Gibbs was one of the first Evangelical authors on mission and
church development to call attention to the Evangelical church-leavers. He wrote about ‘the multitudes
which have already voted with their feet by swelling the ranks of the lapsed and the notional
“believers”, suggesting strategies to win them back.11
Brierly has drawn up this table to show the evolution of the percentages for the different ‘religious
positions’ over the years, starting in 1980 and ending with a prognosis for 2020. Here we only show
his figures for 2010.12 Our interest is in his classification. In his view, nominal Christians ‘say they
believe in the Christian God but virtually never (if ever) attend church, even though they are church
members, indicating they probably attended church at one stage’. He distinguishes them from non-
affiliated ‘notional’ Christians who ‘are not church members and have never attended church, but they
say they believe in God and sign themselves as “Christian” on a Census form’.13
Interestingly, Brierly found that unaffiliated ‘notional’ Christians occasionally attend a Church
service, and that there is even a small percentage of unaffiliated regular attenders (see the first
column). Unfortunately, the diagram does not provide information about the religious experiences, the
beliefs and the behaviour of these people.
While Brierly would call them ‘notional’ and not ‘nominal’, Abby Day refers to this group as
‘Christian nominalism’. Other researchers describe them as ‘believing without belonging’, a phrase
coined by Grace Davie. A collaborator of Peter Brierley, David Voas, has characterised them as the
‘fuzzy faithful’ and the way the relate to Christian beliefs as ‘fuzzy fidelity’. Their religious positions
oscillate between those of the religious and the non-religious populations.15
Intrigued by the fact that 72 per cent of those who answered the religion question in the 2001 census
opted to identify themselves as ‘Christian’, Abby Day set out to find out what that Christian identity
meant for people who have no faith in God, Jesus, or Christian doctrine. Instead of the Church
parameter, she used belief as the major criterion. That led her to distinguish three types of ‘nominalism
outside the Church’:
• Ethnic nominalists express beliefs rooted in people and place, where ‘Christian’ often means a
specific nationality and culture, be that English, American, or Scandinavian. They do not
believe in God and never attend church services, but they are Christians because they see
England as a Christian country, and so Christianity is an ethnic marker of Englishness.
• Natal nominalists take their Christian identity from their parents or grandparents, They were
born of Christian parents, christened or baptised in their childhood, and used perhaps to go to
church in their childhood but no longer do so today. Some do not believe in core Christian
doctrines.
• For aspirational nominalists, being ‘Christian’ confers goodness, respectability and a sense of
belonging to those who have the same aspirations. They affiliate themselves with Christianity
but are not church goers.16
• Highly religious and close to the church: strong agreement with Christian convictions and
belief in God, high solidarity with the Church and regular participation in church life.
• Little religious, but close to the church: rejection of Christian beliefs, but strong attachment to
the church and regular participation.
• Religious but not close to the church: strong approval for Christian religious experiences and
beliefs, but little attachment to the church and little participation in their lives.
• A bit religious and a bit involved in the church: median position in religiosity and
churchliness.
• Non-religious and not involved: rejection to Christian belief in God and Christian religious
experience, rare to no involvement in the church life.
This rather complex and somewhat paradoxical picture is the result of combining three parameters,
religious experience (faith, believing in), religious beliefs (believing that), and church participation.
By asking to what extent people were religious and/or related to the Church, the researcher found five
configurations – only among affiliated Christians. It would be interesting to see the results of a similar
survey among the non-affiliated Germans. Probably that would show a picture similar to that of their
British counterparts, mentioned above.
15 David Voas (Brierley Consultancy, London) “Fuzzy fidelity: threat or opportunity?” by Prof David Voas, Future First,
Vol 1, No 6, 2009, Pages 1,6 and “The Rise and Fall of Fuzzy Fidelity in Europe,” European Sociological Review, Vol 25,
No 2, 2009.
16 Idem, summary of chapter 9, p. 174ff.
Van de Poll, Mapping the ‘Nominals’, Pre-consultation draft, page 9
What strikes the reader, is that Kretzschmar never qualifies any of these types as ‘nominal’. Instead, he
looks at them from the perspective of attachment and involvement, and qualifies them in terms of
closeness and distance, as Kirchennahe or Kirchenferne. Some are in the centre of churchlife, others
are in the margin. We find this a helpful terminology. Later on, we shall introduce the term ‘marginal
Christianity’.
Our matrix
How then shall we draw a map of the vast field of nominal Christianity? It seems to us that the Church
parameter is indeed the most appropriate one to begin with. However, we should bring in the other
parameters as well to complete the picture of the various types. The schematic form resulting from this
combination is a matrix, such as the one presented by Luke Cawley. Taking his matrix as a starting
point, we come to the following modified and elaborate version. Instead of four types, we find that
there are really five forms of ‘nominal’ Christianity. Moreover, while Cawley only mentions two
parameters, Church and beliefs, we add other parameters so as to give a more complete picture.
In our table below, the horizontal axis shows five categories of nominality, according to the different
ways of relating to the Church. The vertical axis shows a comparative list of the main characteristics
of each form, according to the parameters of being Christian.
Comp
Apart from the first line (forms of nominality), the descriptions in all the other lines is provisional. The
aim is just to give an indication. We need to take a closer look at each form to give more precise
descriptions. For the same reason, we have left the last lines open.
Compared to the matrix of Cawley, we begin with the same category of churched nominals. Our
second category of marginal nominals corresponds to what he calls the ‘casual’, but it is broader,
including forms of so-called minimal Christianity.
Van de Poll, Mapping the ‘Nominals’, Pre-consultation draft, page 10
Those whom Cawley calls ‘Wanderers’ are in fact Church-leavers, people who disconnect from a faith
community, who are no longer actively involved. We call them dechurched.
His description of what he calls ‘official nominals’ lacks clarity, because he includes people who were
baptised as infants (and who are therefore officially Church members), as well as non-affiliated
persons who identify as ‘Christians’ in surveys and polls. The first really belong to the category of
marginal Church membership, while the latter constitute, in our view, a distinct category which we
simply call unaffiliated nominal Christianity.
There is yet another form of nominality that goes unnoticed in the analysis of Cawley, as in any other
classification that we are aware of. We call it parallel Christianity.
Furthermore, many studies on nominality so far have been conducted in a Western context. But there
are marked differences, not only within the Western world, but also between countries like the United
States, Canada or Britain on the one hand, and on the other hand Latin-America, Africa, the Middle-
East, Russia and its neighbouring countries of the former Soviet-Union, South-Asia, China, Korea,
Australia, the Oceanian isles, and so on. Each region presents specific characteristics with respect to
the practice of the Christian religion. When it comes to nominality, it can be helpful to study it in a
regional context.
In this respect it is worth noting the emerging interest in this subject in a non-Western context. Recent
studies have been conducted in these parts of the world. Pars pro toto, we mention two African and
two South Korean authors.
xxx
Turning to the Koreans, Jeung Ou Nam has published a French article on ‘the sociological Christians
and the renewal of the Church’.18 He finds that nominal Christianity is no longer a characteristic pho
of countries with a history of established churches, but also in other parts of the world. He then
17 Peter Berger, Grace Davie & Effie Fokas, Religious America, Secular Europe? Grace Davie, Europe the Exceptional
Case. Jean-Paul Willaime, Europe et religions.
18 Jeung Ou Nam, ‘Les chrétiens sociologiques et le renouveau de l’église.’
Van de Poll, Mapping the ‘Nominals’, Pre-consultation draft, page 11
Sectors of Christianity
Another form of regional mapping is to concentrate on a major sector of Christianity, on a major
church-tradition and the areas of the world where this tradition was dominant in the past, or still is
today. Call it sectorial mapping. An example that immediately comes to mind are the three Lausanne
Occasional Papers (LOP), published in 1980. Each of them deals with nominality in a major church
tradition, among Roman-Catholics, among Orthodox, and among Protestants. Notice that at that time,
no attention was paid to forms of nominality in Evangelicalism, Pentecostalism and Charismatic
Movements.
We also notice that the method of mapping is not the same in these three publications. In the first
document, the total Roman-Catholics population is classified by using different parameters,
regeneration and faith for some, theological views (beliefs) and political positions (practice) for others.
This resulted in the following ‘map’ of categories and characteristics:
• Traditional and conservative Roman Catholics (holding the dogma of the Counter-
Reformation as defined by the Council of Trent): Traditional and conservative; often
politically right.
• Modernist/Progressive Roman Catholics: Post-Vatican II liberals; theologically, and often
politically, left-wing.
• Moderated Roman Catholics: The ‘Montinian Center’ which is more attached to Vatican II
documents. Some are biblically oriented, some are political reformists.
• Cultural Roman Catholics: This includes a family, tribal, and social identity with little
knowledge of theology. It is often manifested in popular religiosity and syncretistic
superstition.
• Ethnic Roman Catholics: Often migrants using their religion to provide a sense of belonging.
They feel that not to be Roman Catholic is not to belong, and to lose nationality and roots.
• Alienated/lapsed Roman Catholics: These are indifferent not only to Roman Catholicism but
also to the God of Catholicism whom they equate with Christianity.
• Charismatic Roman Catholics: Some are truly born again and committed to the Lordship of
Jesus and enjoy the emotional uplift and personal freedom. They are committed to remain
Roman Catholics.
• Those who see themselves as Evangelicals.
All these categories are considered ‘nominal’, except the latter two. The decisive parameter is
conversion (‘born again’). In fact, the whole discussion on Roman-Catholic theology hinges on
initiation, how does one become a Christian.
The document on Protestantism concentrates on the nominals among them, i.e. ‘those who have no
vital personal relationship with Jesus as Saviour and Lord’. Here the decisive parameter is faith. Next,
the nominal population is subdivided on the basis of one parameter, church attendance, in those who...
• attend regularly and seem to worship sincerely but who have no vital personal relationship
with Jesus as Saviour and Lord
• attend church regularly but for cultural reasons only.
• attend church only for major church festivals, weddings, baptisms, funerals.
• hardly attend church but maintain a relationship with the church either for security or family
or even traditional reasons.
• have no relationship with an organized church and never attend church but nevertheless
consider themselves as Christians.
While the document on the Orthodox sector gives a detailed description of their history, theology and
church practices, as well as an overview of the different Orthodox communities all over the world
regions, it does not draw a map of the nominals among them, as in the other two documents. One gets
the impression that all Orthodox are ‘nominal’.
In the Purpose Document of our Consultation, this classification is maintained, but the three Church
traditions are now located as three different geographical regions, in which one of them is dominant.
Participants will work in three groups Roman Catholicism, Orthodoxy, and
Protestantism/Evangelicalism. Notice that nominality in Evangelical circles is now included!
The sectorial approach helps to clarify the picture within the population linked with one church-
tradition, but we are not sure whether it is helpful to combine this with a regional approach. The main
problem is it tends to look at a geographical region only from one angle, that of Roman-Catholicism in
this country, that of Orthodoxy in that country, that of Protestantism in another country. But no
country is only made up by only one of these confessions, even if one expression of Christianity has
been dominant in the past and shaped its culture. Even when one form of Christianity is still
predominant in some countries, no country is a cultural island in the world. Especially in a world that
is increasingly becoming a global village.
Moreover, there are cross-sectional cultural and religious developments that affect the whole
population, and all the various Christian confessions and denominations. All Western societies, for
example, are traversed by secularism, the postmodern outlook, consumerism, and a shift from
adherence to religious institutions to individualised spirituality.
Given these developments, it seems to us, that the regional approach is a better way to start than the
sectorial approach. Begin with a country or a continent and look at all sectors of Christianity
represented in that region. A next step could be to see how nominality takes form in this or that
church-tradition.
We suggest that our matrix is a good tool to use, because it uses general categories that are not
dependent on one church-tradition. Moreover, it tries to bring into play all the parameters of Christian
identity. But of course, other maps can be used for this purpose as well.
There can be absence of personal faith, spiritual life. Daily practice can be indistinguishable from that
of the surrounding society.
At a certain point, the discrepancy between church participation and other parameters becomes such
that the professed Christian identity, practiced on a ‘churchy’ level, stands in contradiction with the
rest. In which case, we are dealing with nominal Christians.
It is in this context what we should to situate the ‘true versus nominal’ discourse. We have raised some
questions with respect to this approach, but we do acknowledge the intention behind it, namely that
these people will grow into a deeper understanding of what the Christian faith really is all about.
This category is also the Sitz im Leben of the ‘discipleship versus nominality’ discourse. In the
foregoing we have objected to the categorical use of the term ‘nominal’, but we should not discard the
pastoral desire underlying this discourse, namely to see these regular churchgoers become committed
disciples of Jesus-Christ.
In our view, we should be reluctant to call certain churched Christians ‘nominal’, let alone ‘non-
Christians’, because we might speak too quickly without really knowing what the other really
experiences and believes. We might even make ourselves guilty of ‘judging a brother or a sister’.
Having said that, we underline the pastoral intention to see people come to a closer relationship with
God in Christ, through his holy Spirit.
During the last decades there is an increasing trend among nominal members to leave the church. In
Scandinavian countries the Lutheran Church has opened websites where people can deregister. A
number of Belgian Catholics has demanded to be ‘de-baptised’, only to obtain an official attestation of
their demand, given the official position of the Roman-Catholic Church that it cannot annul a
sacrament.
Even so, what strikes us and makes us pause to think, is that many ‘nominals’, especially among the
Roman-Catholics and the Orthodox, do not sever all links with the institutional church. Although their
daily life is largely secularised, and although they may have a secular worldview, they wish to
maintain at least an administrative link with organised religion. Reasons may vary:
However, the overwhelming majority hardly ever attend a mass, but that doesn’t mean that the church is not
important for them. Almost all Italians consider themselves as good Catholics. They honestly believe that if
you’re baptised in the church, if you have done First Communion, if you’re married in church, and if you go
to confessional and to mass once a year at Easter, then you’re a good Catholic.21
Minimal church participation is based on the idea that when you are not interested in church life, you
still want to keep on good terms with the church in order to be acceptable to God. For many people, it
has become automatic to do the minimum thing and be comfortable. It almost goes without saying.
So, while Evangelicals from their point of view would call t hem ‘nominal’, these persons themselves
do not feel that they are Catholic or Orthodox ‘just in name’.
3. Parallel Christianity
There is yet another form of nominality that goes unnoticed in any one of the classifications that we
are aware of. We would call it parallel Christianity, because it refers to people who are largely
disconnected from local church life, but actively involved in parallel structures of social work,
Christian NGO’s or missions.
21 This conversation took place during my stay at the Italian Evangelical Bible Institute in Rome, March 22, 2010. Ronaldo
Diprose passed away in 2017.
Van de Poll, Mapping the ‘Nominals’, Pre-consultation draft, page 15
This category also includes people who connect with Internet, television and social media, rather than
a visible parish community.
Viewed from the angle of the local parish or the local Evangelical assembly, they are ‘nominal’ as far
as their church practice is concerned, but they are necessarily ‘nominal’ with respect to other
parameters. On the contrary, many of those who are active in parallel structures, take their Christian
identity very serious. In each case we must look where nominality comes in.
To date, not much attention has been paid to this subject. We can make some observations though.
must therefore limit
Missions
First, there are the mission organisations that almost function as a church for the workers who are
involved. As they attend the conferences of the mission, the prayer meetings and the Bible studies of
the team, and training programs, they don’t have time left for a local church. Some don’t feel the need.
Of course, this is everything but uncommitted Christianity! Even so, one can put the question whether
the link with local fellowships of believers could become a relationship ‘in name only’.
Social Christianity
Second, there are those for whom the involvement in structures for social welfare, or in the actions of
Christian NGO’s to combat poverty, and for whom this takes the place of involvement in the local
church. A recently conducted large scale survey among French protestants brought to light that only a
small minority regularly attends church, and that an increasing number see their social activities as the
main, if not the only expression of their Christian faith.22
Surely, the initial motivation of these people is related to their Christian identity. However, there is a
real risk for social Christianity to evolve into nominality. The organisations generally do not provide
spiritual edification or worship opportunities. As people are engaged disconnected from church life,
their spiritual life is not nourished. While they might fight against injustice in the name of Christian
values, their faith is left starving.
Church at distance
Thirdly, there are Christians who prefer watching a service on television or through podcasts and live
streaming on the computer, instead of going to a church nearby. ‘Whereas local preachers once would
only have had their sermon received by whoever was at worship on Sunday, they can have a global
reach’, comments Meriel Jane Waissman. ‘The concept of community stretches and expands, as
relationships forged on Sunday mornings continue to evolve through our digital ties.’23 It is estimated
that the Church of England today reaches more people through social televised services than in their
actual church buildings.24
While these are tremendous opportunities for churches to connect with an unaffiliated public, the
flipside is that church members will use these means to connect at distance. We are not talking about
those who are not able to go to church, because of illness or old age. We are talking about those who
prefer a church at distance to the real fellowship with other believers.
When this become the rule, what will be the consequences for their spiritual life, their relationship
with God, their understanding of the Bible, their commitment to living out the faith from day to day?
Asking the questions is enough to say that there is a risk of superficiality, of a consumer attitude, and
an impoverishment of their Christian life. In the long run, this might end up in nominality
Internet
Fourthly, there is the Internet with its possibilities to download daily devotional texts, chat with other
believers on a forum, set up virtual group meetings, or even to create ‘liquid churches’. Clearly, the
nominality comes in with respect to physical church participation. The question is whether this will
induce nominality in other areas as well. Through Internet, people have access to a wealth of
information, also concerning the Bible and questions related to true Christian faith, but also to
uncountable amount of non-truth, fake-news and theological rubbish. When connecting to the Internet
takes the place of a participating in a local community, the Christian life becomes individualised, with
the tendency for each one to develop a theology and a spirituality à la carte, without the corrective
factor of sound teaching. In the long run, there is a real risk of heretical ideas and deviating into
practices that are a contradictory to the Christian identity. In other words, nominality.
The question can be asked whether the Internet has a destructive effect on church life and in the long
run on Christian life as such, or whether it will transform the way in which churches function. We can
only mention this and notice the need for research and reflection.
It is only the latter (i.e. the more orthodox indicators of religious attachment) which display an undeniable
degree of secularisation throughout Western Europe. In contrast, the former (the less institutional indicators)
demonstrate considerable persistent religious adherence. With this in mind, I am hesitant about the
unqualified use of the term secularisation even in the European context. Indeed, it seems to me considerably
more accurate to suggest that West Europeans remain, by and large, unchurched populations rather than
simply secular. For a marked falling-off in religious attendance (especially in the Protestant North) has not
resulted, yet, in a parallel abdication of religious belief – in a broad definition of the term. In short, many
Europeans have ceased to connect with their religious institutions in any active sense, but they have not
abandoned, so far, either their deep-seated religious aspirations or (in many cases) a latent sense of
belonging.26
This leads Grace Davie to the conclusion that ‘religious belief is inversely rather than directly related
to belonging. In other words, as the institutional disciplines decline, belief not only persists, but
becomes increasingly personal, detached and heterogeneous and particularly among young people.’
Believing without belonging has quickly become a catch phrase that rings a bell with most people
who study the religious situation in their country. It describes the phenomenon that Christian beliefs
are widespread beyond church institutions. Davie says that the religious landscape in Europe is now
paradoxical: ‘What is going away is inherited, institutionalized Christianity — what many would call
“nominal Christianity. Yet new patterns of orthodox Christian faith (and of other religions) are
growing too. Contrary to the confident predictions of its death, religious faith is an increasing presence
in the modern world order.’27
Grace Davies’ message is both exciting and challenging for Christians in cities today, writes Tim
Keller, leader of the Church planting network City to City.
Gone is that great “canopy” of nominal Christians who were not personally devout but who thought religion
was a good thing and important for society — and who were not very difficult to draw into Christian
churches. On the other hand, contemporary people have the same intuitions of God and sin and spiritual
longings for love, meaning, and grace that their ancestors did. 28
Europeans are still able to specify their religious background, just as they can name their birthplace, father's
occupation, and secondary school, but whether these things make any difference to how they see themselves
or the way they are perceived by others is not at all certain. Notoriously, many people who to all appearances
are unreligious do choose an affiliation if asked, depending on the wording and context of the question.
These nominal Christians comprise more than half the population in most European countries. 30
They live Christian lives; they are Christians because their lives reflect the life and values of Jesus Christ.
Like him they acknowledge that we live in a creation; that God cares for us, that we should care for one
another, and so on. It is the religion of the golden rule: do unto others as you would have them do to you.
Sometimes they feel the need to attend a Church on such occasions as a Christmas Carol Service or Midnight
Mass. They want family weddings and funerals to be held at a Church. They watch and feel uplifted by Songs
of Praise on Sunday-night television. Sometimes they might want to hear inspiring music at a cathedral
27 Quoted by Tim Keller, ‘The City, the Church, and the Future’.
28 Idem.
29 Peter Brierly, Where is the Church Going? § 17.2.
30 David Voas, ‘Fuzzy fidelity: threat or opportunity’, p. 1 and 6. See also his article ‘The Rise and Fall of Fuzzy Fidelity in
Europe’.
Van de Poll, Mapping the ‘Nominals’, Pre-consultation draft, page 18
Matins or Evensong. They see the Church, in other words, as a spiritual resource. But they do not want to
belong. 31
We could call this ‘behaving without belonging.’ Granted, this is a diluted form of practising
Christianity. It only touches the social behaviour side of it, omitting the belief side and the worship
side almost entirely.
Allan Billings calls such people ‘cultural Christians.’ He distinguishes them from ‘church
Christians’ (people who regularly go to church and adhere to its basic beliefs). This term should not be
confused with the Kulturchristentum in nineteenth-century Germany, although there are similarities.
As I talk with people in my French surroundings and look at their attitude to Christianity, I recognize
this description. In this country, as in Spain, the preferred term is sociological Christians. There are
many sociological or cultural Roman Catholics, like the cultural Anglicans in Britain, described by
Billings and his team. I suspect that the reader will meet them in any European country.
This cultural Christianity is the effect of more than a thousand years of Christianity that has left
behind a legacy of stories, words, images, and rites, through which Christian beliefs are transmitted.
Think of the popular idea of Saint Peter at the gate of heaven, of the deceased floating on a cloud to
heaven, of a horned devil that tempts people to commit a deadly or ‘capital’ sin. It has above all left us
with values and a morality, notices Allan Billings: ‘The way we treat one another – especially the sick,
the aged, the poor, the stranger in our midst – owes a great deal to the Biblical notion that all people
are created in God’s image and deserving of care. We are a people who have been shaped and continue
to live by Christian values.’32
He goes on to say that many people want to abide with social values that have a Biblical origin, and
which they do not hesitate to call Christian values.
They feel that they are doing what can be expected of any Christian. And God, if he exists, will certainly
approve. He will accept them. It is lived Christianity. It is hardly a matter of ‘believing without belonging,’
since most people are not much interested in beliefs; the attachment is more emotional and practical than
intellectual. 33
Similarly, Callum Brown indicates, with respect to the same British situation,
What [once] made Britain Christian was the way in which Christianity infused public culture and was
adopted by individuals, whether churchgoers or not, in forming their own identities.34
Abby Day concurs. She argues that unaffiliated people who identify as ‘Christians’ do not so much
believe in Christian propositional truths but rather express a sense of belonging to a society or a
culture that is rooted in Christian traditions. She then distinguishes three categories: Ethnic nominalists
express beliefs rooted in people and place, where ‘Christian’ often means a specific nationality and
culture, be that English, American, or Scandinavian. They claim to be Christians just because they are
British, and because they see England as a Christian country, and so Christianity is an ethnic marker of
Englishness. Natal nominalists take their Christian identity from their parents or grandparents. These
people used perhaps to go to church in their childhood but no longer do so today. Some do not believe
in core Christian doctrines, for example, life after death. For aspirational nominalists, being
‘Christian’ confers goodness, respectability, and a sense of belonging to those values. They affiliate
themselves with the humane ideals of Christianity but are not church goers.35
What Billings, Callum and Day write about Britain applies to all other countries that were
Christianised in the past, notably in Europe. It would be interesting to compare this to countries where
Christianity is a relatively ‘young’ religion.
5. Dechurched
The last category could be called ‘church leavers’ but that is not so polite, so we use the more abstract
term dechurched. However, we are indeed referring to people who have stopped being actively
involved in a church, who no longer attend services. Some remain affiliated, others have stopped
church membership as well. Have they therefore become ‘nominal’? Strictly speaking only with
respect to the church parameters. It remains to be seen to what extent this is also true for the other
parameters.
There are two sub-categories here. First those who have become dechurched because they no longer
believe in the teaching of the church, they no longer agree with the moral code of the church, they hav
doubts about God, the historicity of the Bible. When they still identify as ‘Christians’, affiliated or
unaffiliated, they can indeed be called nominal.
Notice that many people no longer go to church, not because of doctrinal issues or personal doubts,
but because of disappointment and negative experiences with church leaders. While some of them join
another church, most of them seem to disconnect altogether from church involvement. The Lausanne
Statement on Nominality is particularly attentive to this group.
In many countries, large numbers are leaving the churches.
While some leave because faith is no longer meaningful, others are disillusioned. Some are put off by the
style of church life, or problems such as poor leadership or inappropriate handling of church finances. Many
leave because they feel burned out and no longer capable of giving of themselves personally. 36
This phenomenon is also affecting Evangelical churches. A recent study in the Netherlands among
dechurched Evangelicals brought to light that many of them try to maintain their spiritual life on an
individual basis, through personal contact with other believers, through occasional or regular group
meetings, but that there is a gradually decrease in commitment and conviction.37 The Barna Research
Group has recently published a report on dechurched Evangelicals in the United States, showing that
this phenomenon has reached considerable proportions, from 7 percent of all Americans in 2004 to 10
percent in 2017.38 This report labelled this group as ‘those who love Jesus, but not the church.’ They
still believe in Scripture, and most of the tenets of their Christian faith, but they have lost faith in the
church,’ said Roxanne Stone, editor in chief of Barna Group.
They’re Christians who say their faith is important to them but haven’t attended church in six months or
more. This crowd shares a lot of core beliefs with their churchgoing neighbors; nearly all of them (around
95%) believe in only one God, that he is everywhere, and that he is the ‘all-powerful, all-knowing, perfect
creator of the universe who rules the world today.’ And 89 percent of them are committed to Jesus. 39
Upon reading the report, we realise that these people are not at all nominal just because they have
stopped going to church. But what we have said about parallel Christianity and unaffiliated
‘Christians’ also applies to this group. In the long run there is the risk of a decreasing commitment to
the Christian faith, as it is no longer nourished by the fellowship and no longer exposed to the the
teaching of the word of God.
To conclude
Our observations and reflections in this paper are presented as a basis for discussion, so they are open
for correction, modification and further development. We hope that they will serve as a starting point
for fruitful deliberations.
By way of conclusion we take up our introductory remark that we wanted to move beyond third-
person language about nominality and listen to the first-person language of the stories of the people
concerned. Let us anticipate the following step, that awaits us after this paper. When all is said about
Christians called nominals, we shall have to move from third-person to second-person language, and
beyond…
We are not only theologians but also pastors, evangelists, mission workers, practitioners. As such we
are challenged to move on from ‘they’ to ‘you’. How do we translate our idea of nominality in second-
person language? In words that make sense to them? How do we translate our ‘but’ in words that build
bridges of understanding? What do we say to these people when we meet them? How do we relate to
them?
A keyword is invitation. ‘God continually invites all people to a deeper faith in Christ and a growing
commitment to follow Him, responding to and being sustained by the grace which has been shown in
the death of Jesus Christ on the cross and inspired by the indwelling Spirit’.40
As we meet and share with so-called nominals, we might be in for surprises. For unexpected findings.
Perhaps for the discovery that with this or this person, we should drop our idea of nominality and
change our language from a distant ‘they’ in a brotherly ‘we’. In that case, we can change the ‘but’ in
an even smaller word, a two-letter word capable of opening horizons, taking up a challenge, getting on
with a job, catching hope: SO. ‘We are Christians, so…’
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