Is Christianity in Crisis or Transition?
We are facing an unprecedented convergence of crises: global warming, climate change, mass migration, and systemic ecological collapse. Our planetary systems are exhausted and no longer able to sustain human life as we know it. While countless non-profit organizations work tirelessly on sustainability and integral ecology, and Christian communities engage in vital works of social justice—addressing poverty, immigration, war, racism, and human rights—the harsh reality is that these efforts, however noble, are not reversing the trajectory of destruction. In some areas, the problems are actually worsening.
This failure points to a deeper truth: the crises we face are not merely environmental or social but fundamentally religious. The way we understand God, ourselves, and our relationship to the natural world shapes every aspect of how we live and act. If our sense of religion or theology is outdated, disconnected from contemporary scientific understanding, or trapped in institutional forms that no longer serve life, then our responses to global crises will be inadequate at best, and potentially harmful at worst.
Christianity is still sought by many but understood by few. It has become an outdated organization fit for another world. If Jesus of Nazareth were to appear today, I do not think he would recognize the Catholic Church as founded on his life and mission. He would probably ask, “What the heck is this?” Men in flowing robes stand around an altar with a gold chalice and paten in the center, one of whom gives a homily on something that sounds esoteric and abstract. “Where are the women?” Jesus would ask.
The Vatican continues to host expensive conferences on how best to listen to one another in the face of different viewpoints, more conferences on global warming and the environmental crisis, still more conferences on the perils of technology. All meant to be signs that the Church is deeply concerned for the modern world. A lot of talk but no action.
There is a bigger question that looms in our midst. How do we know when religion has died? What are the signs of a moribund church? In the Catholic world, the Church continues to operate just as it did in 1200 A.D. The structure is the same, many of the prayers are the same, the same Creed, even the songs are the same: Tantum ergo is still a favorite among Catholics. The Latin Mass has returned here in Washington, D.C., with a nine o’clock Mass on Sunday attended mostly by young men and women who are dressed for a 1950s movie of “Father Knows Best.” Their young children run around playing after Mass, while their parents chat about various things, as “Father” stands by in a long cassock and beretta.
The Catholic Church, which has twenty-three rites, is a collection of competing interpretations, each claiming to represent the “authentic” tradition, but none successfully integrating ancient wisdom with contemporary understanding. The traditionalists retreat into a romanticized past, finding comfort in ritual and hierarchy while largely ignoring the ecological and social crises of our time. The progressives embrace social justice and interfaith dialogue but often lack the theological depth to sustain their activism or connect it to a coherent vision of God’s work in the world. Neither approach adequately addresses the fundamental challenge: how to recover the cosmic dimensions of Christian faith in a way that speaks to contemporary experience and understanding. The Latin Mass community seeks transcendence but finds it in nostalgic recreation of a bygone era. The progressive community seeks relevance but sometimes loses touch with the mystery and grandeur that make Christianity more than mere social work. Both miss the opportunity to discover a Christianity that is simultaneously ancient and contemporary, mystical and engaged, transcendent and immanent.
As a child, I was taught that the (Roman) Catholic Church is the one true Church and there is no salvation outside the Church. Now that I am older, I must ask: Would Jesus really accept this statement? I sincerely doubt it, because he himself brought Temple worship to a whole new level—the level of the human person. “Destroy this temple,” he said, “and I will rebuild it in three days,” meaning the temple of his body (Mk 14:58). Jesus was the end of cultic worship, not the beginning.
The prominent Indian leader, Mahatma Gandhi, said that “Christianity is a great idea but it has yet to be tried.” He further quipped, “I would be a Christian, if it were not for the Christians.” Only someone outside Christianity could read the New Testament without bias then look around the Church and realize, “something is really off here.” A Christianity that promises to protect us from the world cannot help us learn to live responsibly within it. A faith that sees nature as merely the stage for human salvation cannot inspire the ecological conversion our planetary crisis demands. A religion that is primarily therapeutic cannot provide the prophetic voice that challenges the systems of domination and exploitation destroying the earth.
Christianity began as the radical personalization of God but wound up being primarily therapeutic. The Catholic Mass has become like a McDonald’s drive-through: pick up the food and leave. It satisfies the masses by keeping them fed and safe, ignorant of Christianity’s potential to destroy powers of domination and rebuild a new world. For many, the Catholic Mass promotes radical dependency on external power: God is in control and will protect us in this chaotic world. The piety of the faithful ranges from prayer groups to excessive kneeling and bowing, from Martin Luther hymns to Gregorian chant. Christianity has become simply whatever we want it to be—a consumer product designed to meet our psychological needs, rather than a religious transformative encounter with ultimate reality. Therapeutic Christianity continues to treat the natural world as a backdrop for human drama rather than as a sacred community, of which humans are called to be conscious participants. It reduces salvation to a personal rescue mission from a fallen world rather than participation in the world’s transformation.
Was Christianity aborted by the emperor Constantine? Or is it still waiting to be born, as Gandhi suggested? Teilhard de Chardin saw Christianity in its birthpangs. He spoke of religion as a dimension of biological evolution. Religion is the energetic transcendent depth by which organisms are oriented toward more life. He said that religion is “biologically (we might almost say mechanically) the necessary counterpart to the release of the earth’s spiritual energy… born to animate and control this overflow of spirit.”
Paul Tillich’s definition of religion as “ultimate concern”—that which enkindles a passion for life—resonates deeply with Teilhard’s evolutionary vision. Religion, in this understanding, is not primarily about doctrines, rituals, or institutional structures, though these may be important expressions of it. Rather, religion is the fundamental orientation of life toward what matters most, the passionate engagement with existence that gives life meaning and direction.
For Teilhard, religion is a natural phenomenon. Traditional Christianity has often positioned itself explicitly against “natural religion,” which it has viewed as humanity’s insufficient attempt to reach God through reason and experience alone. But Teilhard saw this apparent opposition as a tragic misunderstanding that arose from the “supernatural split” that occurred when Christianity was hijacked by Greek philosophical categories and transformed into a supernatural theism, losing touch with its own deepest insight: that the divine is not separate from the natural order but is the very energy and direction of natural evolution itself. The true function of religion, he said, is “to sustain and spur on the progress of life” and “to nurture the human zest for life.” This places religion at the very heart of evolutionary development.
Religion is not a supernatural phenomenon but a phenomenon integral to the whole in evolution—religion is faith in the whole. Religion born out of the furnace of cosmic wholeness means that religion is larger than humanity alone and integral to the future of the earth. It is, as Teilhard suggested, an organic counterpart to the awakening of the earth’s spiritual energies. This suggests that the Earth itself is undergoing a kind of religious development, becoming more conscious of its own nature and destiny. Human religion is not separate from this planetary process but is the way the Earth becomes conscious of its own spiritual dimension. Just as mechanisms in nature account for the emergence of life, so too, elements of religion are essential for the emergence of life. On the lower levels of nature, such elements are part of the network of interconnected life, including elements of trust and cooperation. On higher levels of conscious life, religion takes on specific forms of symbolic thought and ritual.
Carl Jung also realized that before there were churches, temples, or formal religious institutions, there was “natural religion”—the spontaneous emergence of the religious instinct from the depths of the human psyche itself. This natural religion is not something we learn from books or inherit from traditions, though it may be expressed through them. It is the soul’s innate capacity to experience the sacred, to seek wholeness, and to recognize its fundamental relatedness to the divine mystery that permeates all existence. Natural religion recognizes that the sacred is not primarily “out there” to be discovered but “in here” to be uncovered. The kingdom of heaven, as Jesus taught, is within. The divine presence that we seek in temples and churches, in scripture and sacrament, is first and always present in the depths of our own psyche, calling us toward wholeness, love, and authentic relationship. Jung’s natural religion is not opposed to traditional religious forms but provides the psychological foundation that makes them meaningful. Without the natural religious instinct, formal religion becomes empty ritual; with it, even the simplest practices can become doorways to transcendence.
This understanding transforms our approach to spiritual practice. Prayer becomes not petition to an external deity but communion with the divine presence within. Meditation becomes not escape from the world but deeper engagement with the sacred dimension of ordinary experience. Service to others becomes recognition and response to the divine light that shines through every being. While religious traditions differ in their external forms and historical expressions, they share common roots in the universal religious instinct that emerges from the depths of the human psyche.
We will continue to unravel because the mind must be free to engage the infinite. A mind governed by external laws and rules will split off from the whole if it is stifled within. This is why artificial intelligence is so alluring, because it meets the needs of our psychic depth. Our religious desires will continue to be sought in artificial intelligence unless we return religion to its dynamic and evolving nature. Academic theology has failed in this regard and the Vatican is too mired in tradition to engage the creativity of evolution. Teilhard had a vision to bring Christianity and evolution into a coherent worldview for the vitality of all life. This vision is the heart of the Center for Christogenesis.
The path forward requires nothing less than a complete reimagining of Christianity—not as a rescue operation from the world but as conscious participation in the world’s transformation. This evolutionary Christianity will recognize that the Christ event is not a supernatural intervention in natural history but the emergence of a new level of consciousness that reveals the divine nature of reality itself. It will understand salvation not as escape from matter but as the divinization of matter, the awakening of the cosmos to its own sacred nature. Such a Christianity will be simultaneously mystical and prophetic, deeply rooted in the contemplative tradition yet boldly engaged with the ecological and social crises of our time. It will offer not therapeutic comfort but transformative challenge, calling us to become conscious participants in the ongoing creation of a more complex, conscious, and compassionate world.

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Awesome ! You leave me breathless and awed and hoping that Pope Leo reads this and takes it to heart. as well as the rest of us.
I agree that almost from its first beginnings, Christianity has lost its way from following the life and teachings of one Jesus of Nazareth. I would say, then, that for most of the expressions of Christianity today, they are in crisis. Organizations such as this wonderful Center for Christogenesis, however, can help lead us into the very transition that is needed — if Christianity is to survive.
I sincerely hope that the current Pope of the Roman Catholic Church is listening to you, Sr. Delio, and can become part of this dialogue. As a retired United Methodist pastor, myself, I think that it’s long past time that we should be looking at our faith through the lens of reason and experience, and no longer have it be dominated by our traditions and literal interpretations of scripture.
May it be so.
Thank you, Ilia, for this timely, prophetic, inspiring writing. It is a challenge to find a faith community, both formal and informal, that is comfortable absorbing, exploring and discussing what you share. I’ve been following you for several years and very much appreciate your continued work. Peace
Thank You, Ilia, for this wonderful article! I need to discuss, to think on it with others who are also on this path that is calling me!! In a way, my time is short. I am 97 years old. I’ve been following you more or less since I first heard you years ago. As I recall, that was at a Call To Action meeting in Milwaukee! – ?? Oh, my!!
Peggy Neal
Instinctively, we not only know this to be true, but (from my perspective) is the cause of our restlessness and seemingly confusion that seems to be so prevalent today. We are struggling to bring about this “ New Heavens and New Earth “ that we are unconsciously aware of within, to full consciousness.
What an excellent analysis Ilia! Thank you so much. Our crisis is a birth a dear friend once said. The opening lines of your reflection express the urgency of this birth. The waters have broken. (chaos) The womb is preparing, the womb is ripe. There is no turning back. We either birth this new creation or we abort it. In terms of collective human growth this would be a late term abortion, the most heinous of all! Jesus said to the Pharisees, ‘Today it will be stormy, for the sky is red and overcast.’ You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the times. We are in labor right now. We are still in the Womb collectively and labor has begun. This is an ecological crisis, a crisis of the “oikos” (where ecology, economy are rooted in the Greek word for house) It’s a crisis of the home, the household. We are being called home to the house hold of God, of Love. It calls for a total transformation of the Patriarchal household in which we have lived for millennia to a household in which there is equal partnership between Masculine and Feminine energies and were the distribution of resources within the household is shared to meet the needs of all in the household, based not on merit or hieracrchy but on everyone in the household as the Imago Dei, the Image of God.. What it will take is fa new theology of marriage, home, and family life. where the the Feminine (those energies of relationship and compassion) take their equal place alongside the Masculine energy to produce and ahieve both working together, complementary and not in opposition, pushing, breathing, pushing, breathing, the hard labor it takes and the willingness to suffer the pain of birthing something new, a homecoming where everyone is welcome in the household of Love where God is All in All. When Catholicism raises the Feminine to the level of the Divine, not as an abstraction but in Reality and women can Sacramentally represent Christ then we may see a powerful transformation of consciousness. A picture of a woman in a Roman Collar would have said more than the 4000 words in Laudato Si.
Pope Leo has been saying some very challenging words about the whole church structure that is corrupted by our modern age of materialism that leaves out the poor and marginalized. He is requiring the “princes” of the church to take off their royal robes and do as Jesus did: walk with those who have been used, abused and thrown away, and give away or sell what is in the coffers of the Vatican and give it to the needy and the hungry and starving. His practicality is based on actions that don’t just call for more meetings to discuss all the problems, but starting in the core structure, requiring integrity that can move mountains of rot and callousness from the heart of its people. This is both a practical and mystical response to a very human problem we all share in. He’s getting opposition, of course, but much respect for his courage to get at the heart of the human condition and the pride that puts barriers to God’s love in all relationships. We are in the age of decisions at every level.
It would be fascinating to see how other spiritual individuals would react to the power, beauty and truth of this beautiful essay. Perhaps Sister Delio might consider it as a beginning “birth idea” to be expanded upon through a comparative essay shared with other significant spiritual authorities such as the Dalai Lama.
Thank you so much for this! I agree with much of what you’ve written, and I love this site. Yes, we need that transformative connection with the divine – or with what Jung called the numinous. And yes also to the sacred nature of the physical cosmos, to mind IN matter, not apart from it. At the same time, I think we still need rituals (maybe even sometimes traditional ones) to enable our participation in the Divine. Our words, stories prayers are all attempts to find a path into connection. We do need theological transformation, a new way of understanding and articulating truths, and we also need non-intellectual ways to make connections -songs. poetry, prayers, Taize, whatever works – it is a real challenge. I think I’m saying that I want to keep some of what you call ‘therapeutic comfort,’ which is what those practices bring to me. I think you are suggesting that the practices be seen in a new light, which does seem right to me. I want that to still be part of my practice of faith, along with the transformative challenges.
I
Wow, I am breathless! Thank you, Ilia! You are embodying this vision in you mind, heart and body. I am so very grateful.