Posted at 09:24 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Look around at your neighbors, co-workers, family, friends, acquaintances, or others you encounter who don't go to church – these next two weeks provide a great opportunity to reach out to them. The Center for Missional Research commissioned Zogby International to ask people about their receptivity to an invitation to church over the holidays.
The good news is that regardless of where you live, each region of the country showed more than 30 percent who are willing to come if invited. Now we just have to invite them.
Looking further at data provided in the study, the question naturally arises, "Are those who are most receptive the ones who have some religious connections or background?" What does this say about those who are truly non-Christian?
What does this mean for you? Simply, that opportunity is knocking ... loudly. Seize the opportunity while people are open and while attention is on the birth of Christ. Don't let this season pass while people in your area are considering their New Year's resolutions. No matter where you serve, what the age group is around you, or whether people consider themselves to be religious or not, there are some – quite a few, really – who will come to church if you'll invite them.
Posted at 08:29 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
In the US, this year 3,500 churches will close, this month 1500 pastors will leave the ministry, and today approximately 7,575 people will move on from church. Of those who move on, some never affiliate with a religion again saying they just “gradually drifted away from the religion.” America is experiencing, not only economic decline, but also church decay. Why?
Although there is no single reason for the collapse of the church, one has to wonder what would have happened if the pastors were not responsible for most of the ministry in these churches? What if the people who left, moved on equipped and committed to discipling others in the faith? What if these churches acted more like a community of disciples and less like consumers of spiritual goods and services? Wouldn’t the outcome be different? Churches would be more resilient and people would be less prone to drift. The church collapse is, in part, the result of a discipleship crisis. READ MORE>>
Posted at 08:00 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Calling ALL MEN! Join a Courageous Living lifegroup today based on the movie "Courageous". This 4 week study is being offered at a variety of times and groups are beginning now. Check the church website for times and locations under "GROW", click on "Join a lifegroup"
Posted at 04:28 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
The Barna Group recently released
research that reveals how attitudes about Bible usage are changing across
generations. The research interviewed over 1,000 people in five separate
studies. They defined each generation in the study: the Mosaic generation (ages
18 to 25), the Busters (ages 26 to 44), Boomers (ages 45 to 63), and Elders
(ages 64-plus).
The full report can be found here. Here are some of the differences they found between generations:
Less Sacred – While most
Americans of all ages identify the Bible as sacred, the drop-off among the
youngest adults is striking: 9 out of 10 Boomers and Elders described the Bible
as sacred, which compares to 8 out of 10 Busters (81%) and just 2 out of 3
Mosaics (67%).
Less Accurate – Young adults are
significantly less likely than older adults to strongly agree that the Bible is
totally accurate in all of the principles it teaches. Just 30% of Mosaics and
39% of Busters firmly embraced this view, compared with 46% of Boomers and 58%
of Elders.
More Universalism – Among Mosaics, a
majority (56%) believes the Bible teaches the same spiritual truths as other
sacred texts, which compares with 4 out of 10 Busters and Boomers, and
one-third of Elders.
Skepticism of
Origins – Another
generational difference is that young adults are more likely to express
skepticism about the original manuscripts of the Bible than is true of older
adults.
Less Engagement – While many young
adults are active users of the Bible, the pattern shows a clear generational
drop-off – the younger the person, the less likely they are to read the Bible.
In particular, Busters and Mosaics are less likely than average to have spent
time alone in the last week praying and reading the Bible for at least 15
minutes. Interestingly, none of the four generations were particularly likely
to say they aspired to read the Bible more as a means of improving their
spiritual lives.
Bible Appetite – Despite the
generational decline in many Bible metrics, one departure from the typical
pattern is the fact that younger adults, especially Mosaics (19%), express a
slightly above-average interest in gaining additional Bible knowledge. This
compares with 12% of Boomers and 9% of Elders.
Conclusion
seems to be the younger generations have a greater hunger for Bible knowledge
than older generations, yet they are more skeptical, read it less, and consider
it less accurate.
This research can be seen as discouraging on the surface, but it reveals a
deeper opportunity as well. If you feed the hunger for Bible knowledge through
biblical depth in all areas of ministry, then perhaps you’ll see the fruit of
less skepticism and a higher view of Scripture.
Posted at 10:41 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Sunday School lifeGROUP Rally
for leaders in all age divisions
Preschool, Children, Students and Adults
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Worship Center
4:30 – 5:30 PM
Topic – “Walk Across the Room” a
Church-wide 4 week study in Worship and Sunday School beginning Sunday, September 27 -
Details available on Sunday, August 30.
Posted at 04:25 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted at 09:29 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)