Spring 2025 | Is Christianity Losing its Religion?

Is American Christianity losing its salt and light? Warning signs are flashing left and right: a public spirit of cruelty, an out-of-touch institutional ethos, the great harm of clergy abuses. Reflections invited YDS-related scholars and ministers to speak to the moment and declare their own reasons for Christian faith. The stakes are high. These writers make contemporary sense of Jesus’ message, finding moral clarity and fire, rejecting disillusion or nostalgia. As they discover, the faith is always rising again. “God’s love has the first and the final word,” writes Shannon Craigo-Snell ‘95 M.Div., ‘02 Ph.D., “and we are invited to be part of it in our time and place.”
Cover image by Cody Otto/Unsplash

Reflections

From the Dean's Desk

By Gregory E. Sterling, Dean of Yale Divinity School

In February 1991, the alternative rock band R.E.M. released the song “Losing My Religion.” The song was a major hit in both its recorded form and in its video version—by now the video has more than a billion views on YouTube. The song is about unrequited love with a refrain that still rings in my ears:

Contents

By Teresa Berger

A case for Christianity comes down to belief in a Triune God and an abiding sense of those who’ve come before, especially believers who’ve stood up for the faith against hellish odds.

By Shelley D. Best ’00 M.Div.

Real faith runs deeper than quoting scripture or wearing a crucifix. It is not blind allegiance or nostalgia but an act of courage and clarity. And its work today is not done.

By Paul Fleck ’11 M.Div.

There’s the careful discipline known as biblical exegesis, and then there’s eisegesis, the temptation to claim the text for one’s own personal ideology. Reading First Corinthians 13 again should reset everybody’s perspective.

By Sandra L. Fischer ’12 M.Div.

A church’s local halo effect—its service-oriented involvement in small town or big city—stems from a congregation’s own lively convictions about the story of Jesus. A stronger town-church relationship could renew both.

By Will Mebane ’06 M.Div.

The vows of baptism carry the expectation that believers will follow Jesus in his actual teachings, which include a respect for the dignity of every human being. That’s not “preaching politics”—that’s the New Testament.

By Andrew McMillan ’80 M.Div.

The “sneaky love of God” makes for some surprising adventures in the life of a minister whose vocation was has been renewed by a “gold-rush fever for the beauty of Christ in the eyes of the forgotten people.”

By Vincent Wei-Cheng Lin ’24 S.T.M.

A Christian vision is taking hold that transforms a basic dinner gathering into an occasion of deep connection and thanksgiving. A common meal becomes an uncommon church.  

By Craig Robinson

The word evangelical need not be confined to current-day theo-politics. It’s time to reclaim it as a term for spreading the good news of biblical values that center on love of God and neighbor.

By Aaron Klink ’05 M.Div.

Physical struggles cannot diminish the biblical insight that the body is God’s good creation and sustained by God’s spirit. Bodies won’t be reduced to scientific biology alone.

By Shannon Craigo-Snell ’95 M.Div., ’02 Ph.D.

In dispirited times, theological visionaries arise to replenish the Christian message. This moment stands poised to rediscover Letty Russell, Shawn Copeland, Delores Williams, and Howard Thurman.

By S. Slade Hogan ’22 S.T.M.

In the future, people will look to Christian belief for an experience of eternal resonance—a personal space for encountering God yet in proximity to others and their needs.

By Roger Ferlo ’79 Ph.D.

Congregations are among the few places left in the U.S. where people can renew contact with a vision of truth incarnated in liturgy, silence, food, prayer, and in the courage to face Jesus’ teachings.

By Karis T. Slattery ’20 M.Div.

The world is ready for a Christianity that asks questions, seeks light, rests in darkness, stays rooted in justice, and invites individual spiritual growth.

By Ian Barclay ’24 M.A.R.

Is it possible to be a Christian without settling the question of belief in God? Gratitude, attention, and trust make it possible to “live our way into the answer” in this world where the natural and spiritual daily intersect.

By Caroline Blosser ’24 M.Div.

Sometimes a shrugging “I don’t know” is a prelude to an astonishing holy encounter. It might happen in church, in the woods, or among thousands of hunger people. Just ask Jesus’ disciples. 

By Ray Waddle

An unexpected summons to the altar on a Sunday morning stirs a reckoning about being Christian at a time when the word has become for many a spiritual turn-off.

Reflections is a publication of Yale Divinity School