The survey found that 77 percent of priests and 81 percent of bishops “can be categorized as ‘flourishing.’” But it did also note high rates of stress among priests, with 45 percent reporting at least one symptom of burnout, and nearly 10 percent showing “severe” signs. Asked to rate their faith in their own diocesan bishop’s leadership, fewer than half the priest respondents (49 percent) said they had “quite a lot” or “a great deal” of confidence in the bishop. As to whether they had high levels of trust in the bishops’ leadership of the church as a whole, less than a quarter (24 percent) agreed. In interviews, priests described bishops as “imperious,” “operating from hubris,” and “consider[ing] themselves above the law.”
(The Pillar, https://www.pillarcatholic.com/us-priests-are-flourishing-but-dont-trust-their-bishops/)
Source: The Gospel Coalition, 2018.
Yet the conservative Protestant respondents more frequently reported their evangelistic efforts in terms of passive witnessing to the faith than active forms of evangelism (such as inviting people to attend church with them). Thiessen and Wong note that the conservative congregants were more likely to report “too few non-believers as friends,” and to view Canadian society as hostile to Christian values, admitting that their fear of rejection was a barrier to evangelism. Previous research has shown that evangelism is most effective when Christians introduce members of their social networks to the faith, so that the strictness and resulting lack of secular contacts could be a barrier to effective evangelism.
(Studies in Religion, https://journals.sagepub.com/home/sir)
(The Canadian census report from Statistics Canada can be downloaded from: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/221026/dq221026b-eng.htm)
According to data gathered by Switzerland’s Federal Statistical Office, 36.8 percent of former Roman Catholics and 19.7 percent of former Reformed Church members cited disagreements with the positions of their religious body as their main reason for leaving. Additionally, 14.7 percent of former Roman Catholics and 21 percent of former Reformed Church members stated that they had merely been born into the church, but had never been believers. Around 15 percent in both religious traditions stated that they had lost their faiths. Interestingly, only 6.3 percent of former Roman Catholics and 11.3 percent of former Reformed Church members stated that they were no longer willing to pay the church taxes the government collects on behalf of the established churches. Church exit figures remain high and Winter-Pfändler concludes that there is no sign of a trend reversal. Reasons mentioned for leaving remain more or less the same over recent years.
(The original article in German can be found here: https://kirchenstatistik.spi-sg.ch/kirchenaustritte-und-die-frage-nach-dem-warum/; for the French translation, see: https://kirchenstatistik.spi-sg.ch/fr/les-sorties-deglise-et-la-question-du-pourquoi/)
(International Bulletin of Mission Research, https://journals.sagepub.com/home//ibm)
Source: First Ghana SDA Church.