The Episcopal News Service recently published a story titled, “2019 parochial reports show continued decline and a ‘dire’ future for The Episcopal Church.” In its assessment, the article describes a steep decline in attendance in the Episcopal Church of New Hampshire.
The Church of New Hampshire has reviewed the report and found it is based on inaccurate numbers embedded in the parochial reports. In reality, Average Sunday Attendance (ASA) in New Hampshire was statistically flat between 2018 and 2019. In fact, ASA numbers modestly increased by 3 persons.
For the past few years — through 2018 — the Diocese of New Hampshire’s ASA totals included chapel services held at two Episcopal-affiliated schools in the state. In 2019, these schools did not submit their parochial report numbers: an oversight resulting in an apparent precipitous drop in ASA.
According to Benge Ambrogi, COO and Canon for Mission Resources, “Without school attendance included, New Hampshire’s ASA in 2018 was 3,020 and 3,023 in 2019, indicating not decline, but growth by 3 people. In the context of decline across the church nationally, attendance levels in the New Hampshire church is positive.” Ambrogi noted that chapel attendance at the two NH schools in question was unchanged between 2018 and 2019.
The Rt. Rev. Robert Hirschfeld, Bishop of New Hampshire announced that, “Moving forward, we will be more careful about how to integrate chapel attendance at our church-affiliated schools in the parochial report to the wider church. In this way, future reports will consistently reflect a more accurate picture of the church’s reach in New Hampshire."
“As we all know, for many decades now, the Church has employed this metric to try to determine the state of our health and holiness as a community in Christ, even as a greater portion of the US work force must work on Sunday mornings,” added Bishop Hirschfeld. “We have always sought to use the same measurements as the rest of the Church, however, our attention has been on other signs of our resilience, vibrancy, and joy in bearing witness to the Resurrection. Having a positive ASA number by three persons does not obviously make a trend. That said, I hope it is a sign that our three-fold efforts to renew the faithful in their knowledge and love of Jesus, to reconcile the world to God in Christ, and to revive the Church are worth committing to with increased boldness, especially in these demanding times. We will continue to turn our attention to how God is doing a new thing among us.”