Young People and Church since 1900: Engagement and Exclusion

Thompson, Naomi. 2017. Young People and Church since 1900: Engagement and Exclusion. Abingdon: Routledge. ISBN 9781472489784 [Book]

[img] Text
03 Chapter 3.docx - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (54kB)
[img] Text
03.1 Chapter 3 figures.docx - Supplemental Material

Download (2MB)
[img] Text
03.2 Chapter 3 tables.docx - Supplemental Material
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

Download (11kB)

Abstract or Description

This text considers the peak and decline of Sunday Schools in the twentieth century and the emergence of Christian youth work over recent decades. Bringing together historical and contemporary research allows patterns and shifts within the discourses of young people and Christianity over time to emerge. The historical research was informed by the records of the Sunday School Unions for 1900-1910 and 1955-1972. For the contemporary study, young people and youth workers from across the Christian denominations in Birmingham were interviewed.
When the Sunday School pioneers saw a need in their communities in the late eighteenth century, their response provoked a 200 year movement. These early Sunday Schools met a clear social need; that for basic education. By the twentieth century, Sunday Schools were highly-structured, centralised and attached to churches and Unions, with their original purpose made redundant by the growth of mainstream education. They faced rapid decline in the 1960s; a rigid institution amidst societal change.
Over recent decades, Christian youth work has emerged as a response to further youth decline within churches. Many youth workers engage with young people’s self-perceived needs by delivering open access youth provision in their local communities alongside more specifically-Christian activities. Tensions emerge over whether the youth worker’s role is to serve community or church needs, with churches often emphasising the desire to see young people in services. This echoes the discourse of Sunday Schooling where religious education and church membership became prioritised at the expense of social need.
In bringing together the historical and contemporary research patterns of struggle between social need and institutionalisation emerge. By focusing on factors internal to Sunday Schools and churches, the research asserts the role that churches have in their own fate and challenges the popular discourse of them as passive victims of secularisation.

Item Type:

Book

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Social, Therapeutic & Community Engagement (STaCS)
Social, Therapeutic & Community Engagement (STaCS) > Faiths and Civil Society

Date:

4 August 2017

Item ID:

19932

Date Deposited:

03 Mar 2017 16:17

Last Modified:

10 Dec 2020 14:01

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/19932

View statistics for this item...

Edit Record Edit Record (login required)