Church Tomorrow?

What the 'Nones' and 'Dones' Teach Us about the Future of Faith

Stephanie Spellers

Morehouse Publishing

Dec/2025, 256 Pages, Hardcover, 5.5 x 8.5

ISBN: ‎9781640658608

$26.95

$26.95

In the vein of Michelle Goldberg’s Kingdom Coming, an investigative and research based visionary work on the future of faith.

The religious landscape of America is changing. Religious ideas are in the zeitgeist, and at the same time there are reports of declining church attendance and an increase in the number of people who define themselves as unaffiliated with a particular religion--the 'nones' and 'dones.' Stephanie Spellers, a thought leader and spiritual scholar, explores the questions and contradictions that a generation is experiencing in regard to the role of faith in their lives. She travels the country, from Atlanta, Georgia to Santa Clara, California; from the Twin Cities of Minnesota to New York City to delve into the hearts and minds of those who feel a yearning for spirituality but don't know where to find it. In provocative and revealing conversations, Spellers listens to these disillusioned seekers as she engages with them to collect whatever wisdom they have to share. As she travels, she examines some pressing questions: Why are they passing on church? What spiritual pathways are they seeking and creating? And most importantly, how could their insights help to shape the future of Christian community? 

Praise for The Church Cracked Open
"If you are looking at the landscape of the church and wondering, ‘How’d we get here?’ and what’s next, I invite you to board Rev. Spellers’s plane and take in the big picture with her. Take in the history, the theology, the pain, the beauty, and the hope that her view from thirty thousand feet offers. When she lands the plane, you’ll realize—there’s simply no better guide out there."―Nadia Bolz-Weber, author of Accidental Saints

“Spellers courageously challenges American Christians to have tough conversations surrounding imperialism, racism, and self-centrism. Moreover, she offers solutions that bring us back to what Jesus intended the church to look like and function.”―Herman Baxter, Jr., The Christian Century

“Congregations seeking to wrestle with their own past practices and future hopes will find this book a very helpful guide. Do not expect easy answers or simple solutions: this is a
map to the land without roads, where only trust in the love of God and a community of loving pilgrims will find—not a city on a hill—but a family of faith.” ―Tobias Stanislaus Haller, Anglican Theological Review

STEPHANIE SPELLERS serves as Presiding Bishop Michael Curry’s Canon for Evangelism and Reconciliation. The author of The Church Cracked Open, and The Episcopal Way (with Eric Law), she has directed mission and evangelism work at General Theological Seminary and in the Diocese of Long Island. A native of Kentucky and a graduate of both Episcopal Divinity School and Harvard Divinity School, she lives in Harlem, New York.

“In Church Tomorrow? Stephanie Spellers has given us a lively, accessible guide to the demographic and sociological trends reshaping our church and the perspectives of generations we too often fail to reach. In these pages, readers will find a spirited and timely challenge to the status quo and a valuable tool for discerning where the Spirit is leading Episcopalians and the church we love.”
—Sean Rowe, 28th Presiding Bishop of The Episcopal Church

“Through deep listening, Stephanie Spellers amplifies the voices of seekers, skeptics, and spiritual dreamers too often ignored. Church Tomorrow? calls us to live with authenticity, courage, and love, reminding us that the Spirit still breathes new life into dry bones. May this book find its way into many hands and hearts.”
—Julia Ayala Harris, president, Episcopal House of Deputies

“With prophetic insights from voices long past and the testimony of today’s “nones and dones,” Stephanie Spellers subtly shifts the question from where did they go? to where does the church go? Church Tomorrow? is not a portrait of decline or uncertainty, but a call into conversation—a summons to rediscover what it means to be a people called out to embrace the dynamic, passionate, and incarnate movement of the gospel. In this way, the “nones and dones” offer us a vision for becoming the church of tomorrow. This book lets us in on that vision.”
—Kelly Brown Douglas, author of Resurrection of Hope

“Stephanie Spellers has given us so much: in-depth analysis of religious practice in America, and a chance to hear the stories of young adults seeking spiritual meaning who aren't finding it in our churches. More importantly, she challenges us to hear what they have to say as a prophetic word to the church. This is a book I will return to often and share with other Christian leaders.”
—Mariann Budde, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington and author of How to Be Brave

“Remarkable . . . a vision for the future that is decidedly not the way we’ve always done it but instead shaped by the way of Jesus and his love.”
—from the foreword by Michael B. Curry, former Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church

“Reverend Stephanie Spellers has been a guide and prophet to me many times, and what I love about this book is that now even more people will get to benefit from the leadership, the vision, and the wisdom that has affected me so powerfully. If you’re wondering about the future of the church, put this important book at the top of your list.”
—Shauna Niequist. New York Times bestselling author of Cold Tangerines, Present Over Perfect and I Guess I Haven’t Learned That Yet

“Rev. Stephanie Spellers brings the fire. Just as James Baldwin said that it is his love for America that drives him to criticize her perpetually, Spellers loves the church so much she will not settle for what it has become. Through the eyes of the "Nones" and "Dones" she holds a mirror up to the church and asks the question: "Is this who we want to be?" This is a wake up call, a prophetic rebuke of religious hypocrisy, a "get-behind-me-Satan" exorcism inside the pious institutions we call "church." But it is also an invitation to reimagine how God moves in the world, a liberating escape from the theological jails we've locked ourselves into, and a firm reminder that new life comes out of the compost ... even the compost of Christendom.”
—Shane Claiborne, author of The Irresistible Revolution and co-founder of Red Letter Christians

“Folks, this is it. This is the book for church leaders in the 2020's to read and discuss together, as soon as possible. My suspicion is that many church leaders will then ask their whole congregation to read it. Church Tomorrow? not only provides the content we need, shared with clarity, skill and sensitivity ... it also comes from the person—and people—we need to bring us this message. If you love your church, read this book as soon as you can.”
—Brian D. McLaren, author of Do I Stay Christian? and Faith After Doubt


“As a millennial priest doing ministry with mostly former 'nones and dones,' it frustrates me how rarely solutions posed by the church to our own decline actually converse with people who aren’t in our pews. God bless Rev. Canon Spellers for actually listening to the people the church loves to talk about, and for asking the obvious, but terribly taboo, question: why aren’t y’all here? Rev. Cn. Spellers offers her incredible dual gifts as a meticulous journalist and deep, pastoral listener to paint a portrait I want everyone worrying about emptying pews to prayerfully read.”
—Lizzie McManus-Dail, author of God Didn’t Make Us to Hate Us

“Stephanie Spellers's Church Tomorrow? lays foundations for the next critical conversation in the American church. With authority that comes from leadership in one of America’s oldest denominations, Spellers asks two critical questions: Can these bones live? And if so, how? Combining the storytelling power of numbers, testimony, and scripture, Spellers weaves the story of the church now and the church that yet can be, if only leaders lay hold of actual faith and move the body of Christ into new ways of being together in the world. Read this book. Then do it.”
—Lisa Sharon Harper, author of The Very Good Gospel

"Stephanie Spellers has written a book that is in part a critical diagnosis and a doxology. With candor and compassion, she chronicles congregational decline, but without lament. In fact, this book calls forth healing and hope! Church Tomorrow? listens to the Nones and Dones not as statistics but as sages, reminding us that dry bones still rattle with the Spirit’s breath. This is a prophetic and practical word that cuts through clichés, confronts complacency, and calls the church to courage. Anyone who cares about the future of faith should read this book, wrestle with its witness, and rejoice in its vision."
—Dr. Jonathan Lee Walton, president of Princeton Theological Seminary

“Stephanie Spellers knows the church and knows the voices of those who seek spiritual community like no one else. Her newest book is a rich dive into the voices of spiritual young adults who do not find belonging in Christian churches. This is an important read for those of us who seek to serve them from the church.”
—Winnie Varghese, dean of the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine in New York

“Weaving together survey data and in-depth interviews, Church Tomorrow? offers a rare blend of depth and nuance in the analysis of American religion. Written in an accessible and engaging style, it deepens and broadens the conversation around the growing trend of religious disaffiliation in the United States.”
—Ryan Burge, author of The Nones

$26.95

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