
Millennials  gravitate toward classic, quiet church spaces that feel authentic and  provide a break from the busyness of a fast-paced, technological world,  revealed a study commissioned by church architectural firms.
 
 Online surveys administered to 843 young adults ages 18 to 29 by  Christian research firm Barna Group and Cornerstone Knowledge Network,  the market research organization created by church design firms Aspen  Group and Cogun, found 67 percent chose the word "classic" to describe  their ideal church. By contrast, 33 percent prefer a trendy church as  their ideal.
 
 "They don't want something created artificially for them; they  don't want a bait and switch. What they want is something deeper and  more authentic," Aspen Group AIA Architect Derek Degroot said of the  survey results.
 
 That search for authenticity translates into the look and sound Millennials prefer for their ideal church.
 
 When asked to choose their preference between a church sanctuary  and a church auditorium, 77 percent chose sanctuary. When shown four  different kinds of church windows ranging from modern and least  "churchy" to traditionally ornate, over a third of all respondents chose  the most ornate stain glass window common to chapels. When shown four  styles of church altars, the study showed that a majority of respondents  chose altars that "are unambiguously Christian and are more  traditional."
 
 "Millennials are a very visual group," explained Barna Vice  President of Publishing Roxanne Stone. "If they go into your church and  they don't know where to go or it's ambiguous or they don't understand  what something is for, they will move on."
 
 Additionally, 78 percent of millennial respondents selected a quiet church as the ideal over a loud church.
 
 The results seem to buck against the trends of the typical  megachurch where the sanctuary is a vast space broken into several  seating sections, congregants are treated to concert-like worship  services, and the pastor preaches from a stage.
 
 Stone said the same result proved true in a field test where  another group of Millennials visited a downtown cathedral, a suburban  megachurch, a city park and a coffee shop and were told to react to the  space.
 
 She recalled "Many of the Millennials when we asked them point  blank where would you go to church, they said probably at the suburban  megachurch but they didn't have the same kind of appreciation for the  megachurches as they did for the cathedrals; they didn't walk in and  have the same sense of awe."
 
 Traditional settings featuring decorative depictions of the  crucifixion and glass windows were particularly popular among young  adults who identified as either marginally churched or unchurched.
 
 "These sort of suburban megachurches," Stone explained, "they  don't feel like church, so when they enter these spaces and, they  haven't had a religious background, they don't know where they are.  Instead of feeling what they were coming for which is [the] desire to  connect with the sacred, instead they're sort of asking questions of  what they're supposed to do in this space."
 
 While millennials in the study showed a flair for the traditional,  60 percent of respondents still preferred the descriptor "modern" over  "traditional" for their ideal church, 64 percent chose "casual" over  "dignified" and 56 percent selected performance over ritual.
 
 In creating the perfect church space for young adults, Stone said  church leaders need to keep in mind that for Millennials growing up in  the information age and church is just one of many places where they can  experience a spiritual feeling or connection. Therefore Millennials  want a church that gives them a unique experience.
 
 "What we need to create," said Degroot, "are respites that get us  away from the busy world, that allow us to connect with one another and  to connect with God."