What the Data Shows- and Why the Church Still Matters
As 2025 comes to a close, Barna Group released a summary of the most-read faith and culture trends of the year. Taken together, they offer a surprisingly honest picture of where many people actually are right now—spiritually curious, relationally cautious, and unsure what to do with Jesus, the Bible, and the Church.
Before we rush to conclusions, it’s worth slowing down and listening carefully.
What the Data Is Telling Us
Here are several key findings from Barna’s most-read stories of 2025:
- Spiritual moments still matter. In times of crisis or loss, people are more likely to reflect spiritually than politically. Even in a secular age, suffering awakens spiritual questions.
- Marriage is delayed, not discarded. While fewer adults are married than in previous generations, most young adults—especially Gen Z and Millennials—still hope to marry someday. The desire for lifelong commitment hasn’t disappeared; confidence and clarity have.
- Faith is increasingly private. More than half of American Christians say their spiritual life is entirely personal and private. Those who say this are less likely to pray regularly, less likely to grow spiritually, and less likely to see faith shaping daily life.
- Teenagers are curious about Jesus. Nearly 80% of U.S. teens say they want to keep learning about Jesus throughout their lives, even as many remain hesitant toward organized religion.
- Bible reading is rising. Millennials and Gen Z are opening the Bible more than they have in years. Nearly half now say they read Scripture weekly—an extraordinary shift in a single year.
These are not the signs of a culture that has “moved past” Christianity. They are the signs of a culture searching, but unsure where to land.
What This Actually Means (And What It Doesn’t)
It’s tempting to read this data optimistically or pessimistically. The truth is more nuanced.
People are
spiritually hungry, but that hunger is often unfocused.
They are
curious, but cautious.
They are
reading, but unsure what to believe.
They want
meaning, but without risk or obligation.
What we’re seeing is not a rejection of faith—it’s a fragmentation of it.
Many people are trying to carry Christianity in pieces:
Jesus without the Church.
The Bible without authority.
Spirituality without repentance.
Community without commitment.
But Christianity doesn’t work that way—not because churches invented rules, but because God designed faith to be formed in community, through His Word, under the gospel of Christ.
Private faith eventually runs out of oxygen.
Curiosity without truth drifts into confusion.
Bible reading without teaching often produces confidence in the wrong things.
This is not a judgment. It’s simply reality.
Why the Church—And Why a Church Like Central
So why should someone actually come to church? Not theoretically—but this church?
At Central Presbyterian, we exist because we’re convinced of a few simple things:
- People don’t need less Bible—they need more of it explained clearly.
Not slogans. Not religious jargon. But Scripture read, preached, unfolded, and applied week by week. - People don’t grow through vibes—they grow through discipleship.
Christianity is learned, practiced, corrected, and deepened over time, in the company of other believers. - People don’t need performative religion—they need the gospel.
Real grace for real sinners. Christ proclaimed for skeptics, seekers, burned-out Christians, and long-time believers alike.
We believe the church is not a place for people who have it together. It’s a place where Christ meets people through His Word, His sacraments, and His gathered people.
If you’re skeptical, you’re welcome to come and listen.
If you’ve walked away, you’re welcome to come and sit quietly.
If you’re burned out on shallow Christianity, you’re welcome to come and hear the Bible taken seriously.
If you’re a believer looking for faithful preaching and intentional discipleship, you’re welcome to put down roots.
An Invitation—Not a Sales Pitch
We’re not interested in pressuring anyone or pretending the church is perfect. We are interested in being faithful.
The trends of 2025 tell us something important: people are opening their Bibles again, asking questions again, and wondering—quietly—whether the Church still has anything to offer.
We believe it does.
Not because of our music, our programs, or our personality—but because
Jesus Christ is alive, His Word is true, and His gospel still saves and shapes people today.
If you’re hungry for that—come and see.
Not just to attend a service, but to hear the Bible preached, to have Christianity explained, and to discover what it looks like to follow Christ in the context of a real church, with real people, under real grace.
That’s what we’re aiming for at Central Presbyterian.










