The Vanishing Church

How the Hollowing Out of Moderate Congregations Is Hurting Democracy, Faith, and Us

Narrated by Jim Denison

English language

Published Jan. 13, 2026 by ChristianAudio.com.

ASIN:
B0FNYV93PQ
Audible ASIN:
B0FNY67MM8

Many people take it for granted: Evangelicals are Republican, Democrats aren't religious, and moderate Christians may as well not exist. But it wasn't always this way. Those who grew up evangelical in the 1980s were just as likely to sit next to a Democrat as a Republican at church. What happened in the decades that followed?

Data scientist Ryan Burge demystifies the recent polarization of American pews, helping listeners understand why the religious landscape has changed so much in the last fifty years and how this divide impacts every aspect of society. Burge argues that Americans prioritized their political parties over their denominations amid the culture wars. As many churches embraced conservative politics, moderate and liberal Christians left the church in droves.

Yet Burge shows us that returning to church may be just what America needs. Many Americans want to be people of faith and believe deeply in …

2 editions

Old man yells at polarization

The Vanishing Church has a similar topic to the previous title I listened to, Why Religion Went Obsolete. While that book's author is more detached and disinterested, Burge by contrast is a former pastor who watched his own church dwindle away. Now he laments the declining number of churches that are mixed politically and socioeconomically, which he sees as having brought people together and provided material benefits for people of different walks of life.

Subjects

  • Christianity
  • Politics