That doesn't seem to be the pattern. While officially non-denominational churches--or deliberately broadminded ones like the Unitarians--have adopted loose statements of belief in accordance with their theology...
the "battles that ended up in compromise," in the more traditional denominations really didn't end up in compromise but, instead, ended up in schism.
Consider the Methodists, Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Lutherans, and others that saw new and rival church organizations/synods/etc. launched recently as a consequence of them not being able to find an acceptable compromise.
Good points....
Just to add.... Protestantism has re-aligned.
What I think we're seeing in the USA in Protestantism is a re-alignment. In the 17-19th Centuries, we had mostly transplanted EUROPEAN denominations - results of the Reformation. Often LOTS of them (at one time, there were over 20 Lutheran denominations in the USA). There were Anglican and Methodist from England, Reformed from Scotland, Holland and Switzerland, Lutherans from Germany and Scandinavia, Anabaptists from Germany. And since they were historic churches related to the Reformation, they generally had clear Confessions and Statements of Faith.
But throughout the 20th Century, denominations tended to loose their European character and became more
AMERICAN (All those Lutheran groups switched to English and sometimes to more American hymns and worship styles and practices including "don't look Catholic" ). And making a strong impact was
RELATIVISM ("There is no Truth, just opinions") and
LIBERALISM (need to de-myth the Bible and make Christianity modern, rejections of historic/traditional theology). All this combined with American
PRAGMATISM ("feel good" religion, just make me successful) became more the issue - not heaven/hell, not justification, not forgiveness, not God.
American Protestantism re-aligned.
Traditional/Confessional/Conservative vs. Liberal/Relativistic/Pragmatic. By 1988 Lutheranism in the USA divided into LCMS/WELS (Conservative) vs. ELCA (LIberal) for example. And the two have been drifting further apart since 1988. We can see the same thing in Calvinism/Reformed Protestantism, and while much smaller, in Anglican/Episcopalian churches. Even denominations largely formed in the USA (albeit from European roots) - Baptist and Methodist - have seen this divide. ODDITY: The LCMS often finds itself more akin to conservative Reformed and even Baptist churches than the ELCA.
The conservative branches still care about Truth and doctrine - and tend to be more clear as to what they believe and teach. The liberal groups tend to not especially embrace that there even is truth so aren't so concerned with it.
Blessings!
- Josiah
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