For churches that have Sunday night activities, more than half of pastors say it’s still “game on” despite the big game next weekend.
According to a new study from LifeWay Research, 68 percent of Protestant pastors say their church typically has some activity on Sunday night. And among those pastors, almost 6 in 10 say they will continue as normal on the night of the Super Bowl (59%).
“It is easy to think everyone is watching the game,” said Scott McConnell, executive director of LifeWay Research. “But even during the Super Bowl, millions of Americans are doing other things that are important to them. For many, that includes attending church.”
For some, it will be church with a side of football.
Almost a quarter of pastors (24%) say they change things to include watching the game. Another 12 percent adjust their Sunday night plans in other ways.
Only 5 percent of churches that normally have activities on Sunday evenings plan to cancel those entirely.
According to CBS, which broadcast last year’s Super Bowl, 167 million viewers watched all or part of the game. This made it the most watched TV broadcast in history, drawing in 52 percent of the US population to at least part of the Denver Broncos’ victory over the Carolina Panthers.
The Super Bowl’s popularity creates an issue for churches that usually have activities during that time.
“While Christians believe the truth does not change, we recognize practices often do,” said McConnell. “Churches face a difficult task of navigating between wanting to remain countercultural and still reaching the culture. In this study, we find churches coming to different conclusions for their congregation and local context.”
Pastors of churches with fewer than 100 in attendance are more likely to continue as normal on Super Bowl Sunday night. Almost 7 in 10 said their church’s activities would go on as usual (68%). Churches with 100 or more were split, with slightly more than half (52%) continuing as normal.
“The overall percentage continuing normal Sunday evening activities is driven by smaller churches,” McConnell said.
Pastors in the Northeast (53%) and Midwest (51%) are less likely to continue normal Sunday night services than those in the South (65%). Those in the Northeast (18%) are also twice as likely to say they plan to adjust Sunday night activities in other ways than pastors in the South (9%).
There is also an age gap. Pastors 65 and older are the most likely to say they are continuing with normal Sunday night activities (75%), and the least likely to say they plan to make adjustments to include watching the game (11%).
Meanwhile, pastors 18 to 44 are more likely to cancel Sunday night activities (8%) compared to those 65 and older (2%).
Some denominations are more likely to continue as normal. The majority of Church of Christ (78%), Baptist (65%), and Pentecostal (65%) pastors say they will have regular activities. Less than half of Lutheran (41%) and Methodist (34%) pastors say the same.
“The church is one of the few places in our country where people in a community still gather together each week, but the Super Bowl has become an event that also brings groups together,” said McConnell.
“Churches are faced with a choice: Do we want to compete with the game, incorporate it somehow, or ignore it? There’s no consensus answer among Protestant pastors.”
[Editor’s note: CT previously covered LifeWay surveys on whether evangelicals think God blesses Christian athletes or cares who wins.]
Methodology: The phone survey of Protestant pastors was conducted from Aug. 22 to Sept. 16, 2016. The calling list was a stratified random sample, drawn from a list of all Protestant churches. Quotas were used for church size. Each interview was conducted with the senior pastor, minister or priest of the church called. Responses were weighted by region to more accurately reflect the population. The completed sample is 1,000 surveys. The sample provides 95 percent confidence that the sampling error does not exceed plus or minus 3.2 percent. Margins of error are higher in sub-groups.
LifeWay Research is a Nashville-based, evangelical research firm that specializes in surveys about faith in culture and matters that affect churches.