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Has the Culture of Church Changed?

Today, Seth Godin, renowned marketing blogger, quotes an organization he supports. In doing so he is exploring the impact of the mission statement.

Churches, these days, are heavily “into” mission statements.

There is more to mission than writing statements. Seth likes the term “manifesto.” It’s a stronger, more action-oriented term. Your manifesto defines your culture, while your mission statement collects dust. (Click to tweet).

Here’s the manifesto he quotes from an organization called Acumen:

Acumen: It starts by standing with the poor, listening to voices unheard, and recognizing potential where others see despair.

It demands investing as a means, not an end, daring to go where markets have failed and aid has fallen short. It makes capital work for us, not control us.

It thrives on moral imagination: the humility to see the world as it is and the audacity to imagine the world as it could be. It’s having the ambition to learn at the edge, the wisdom to admit failure, and the courage to start again.

It requires patience and kindness, resilience and grit: a hard-edged hope. It’s leadership that rejects complacency, breaks through bureaucracy, and challenges corruption. Doing what’s right, not what’s easy.

Acumen: it’s the radical idea of creating hope in a cynical world. Changing the way the world tackles poverty and building a world based on dignity.

Love the phrase “hard-edged hope.” It describes Redeemer.

The problems Redeemer has faced in the ELCA is that the ELCA has become a complacent church. Congregations seem to be increasingly self-focused. As long as things are fine for them, what problems can there be?

The problem is that this complacency quickly defines our culture.

Our culture is worshiping together in a fairly defined way. It is friendly chatter around coffee before or after worship. It is choosing from a fairly short list of acceptable public charities to support (Habitat for Humanity seems to be the most popular). Some congregations support or operate food pantries and nursery schools. Ladies Groups knit prayer blankets and fix meals. Toys are donated at Christmas. Cookie cutter ministries.

The church that grew from the biblical teachings of Martin Luther was anything but complacent. 

Lutheranism grew from the ability of Christians to question authority and to fashion ministry with scripture as a guide — not pronouncements from hierarchy. The whole structure of the Lutheran Church, which focuses on the congregation is designed so that congregations can look at local possibilities for mission and respond independently, without carrying the weight of bureaucracy.

The ELCA uses the word “interdependent” to define this structure. The intent is that each level of church might draw strength from one another. Our regional body has reinterpreted this to mean that they are authorities unto themselves. No one can question them. There is no structure above them to check their power. The churches below them are supposed to do that — but that has proven to be ineffective at best and risky at worst.

The result in our region is SEPA Synod—a collection of 160 congregations that instead of drawing strength from one another, tends to exist with each member church living in its own little world. The way to avoid challenge is to never stray from conventional ministry. Just keep doing the same thing as the world around us slips into history.

Redeemer, on the other hand, had fashioned a ministry around new challenges. This was made all the easier by SEPA’s refusal to provide pastoral leadership. Our priority was not in maintaining good relations with leadership. It was in exploring ministry possibilities. We continue to do so.

Redeemer’s manifesto addressed many of the same points as those quoted above. It was the mission plan we created in 2007.

We were fashioning multi-cultural ministry in a new way. Diverse cultures were joining together in ministry, worshiping  and serving together. We weren’t just sharing a building.

We were investing our resources in this ministry. Our resources. Not SEPA’s resources.

We were recognizing something that the rest of the Church does not want to admit. We cannot serve needy populations when the expectation for every congregation is to support a building and professional staff at a minimum budget of $130,000 before a dime is spent on mission or outreach. This model is creating a church where only the rich and middle class can expect to participate fully. This worked in a culture where everyone attended church and knew what was expected of them. It doesn’t work when you are trying to reach the vast and growing population of unchurched people.

Redeemer was responding to this economic challenge, not by pleading for stewardship. We taught stewardship, but we recognized that it would take decades to develop personal giving. (This was made much more difficult by SEPA raiding our bank account in 1998.)

The only way toward fiscal viability was to develop our own funding streams.

We were unafraid of failure. We learned from it. Our early attempts to reach the diversity of our neighborhood were not particularly successful. Our pastors were not comfortable with multicultural ministry, so evangelism was difficult. Our success came when we were free to find professional leadership who could actually further our mission beyond status quo Sunday worship. It came into full flower when we put outreach leadership into the hands of our immigrant members.

SEPA was so intent on seizing our resources that they never really looked at what was going on in our community. They ignored our success and dwelt on ancient failures.

The past five years have proven that they really don’t care about their congregations and their missions. They certainly don’t care about the people.

Our suggestion for congregations:

Spend more time writing your manifesto and less time on your mission statements. Let’s regain our Lutheran culture!

 

Who Are Today’s Shepherds?

mother sheep and twin lambsWhat Does A Shepherd Do, Anyway?

My early years were spent fairly close to the earth. We were not a family of farmers but we always lived near farms and among farmers. I was born into a home that was across the country lane from a large poultry farm. Our parsonage lot was carved out of a cow pasture. We moved to our next parsonage. Its lot was carved out of a donated corn field. When our family finally moved into our own home it was the farmhouse of a working sheep farm.

My brother is among the few people who can start their résumés with the experience of being a shepherd.

Most people don’t know much about sheep or shepherding these days.

When Jesus claimed to be s shepherd, that meant something to the people whose families measured their wealth by counting sheep—a concept that puts us to sleep today.

What did Jesus mean? What does a shepherd do, anyway?

Here’s what I remember from the years when I woke to the sound of bleating sheep.

  • Sheep are not smart animals. They cannot get themselves out of trouble. If they fall into a ditch or catch a leg in a fence wire, there they will stay, crying for rescue.
  • Sheep follow without question. When one runs through the pasture and leaps, just because, the sheep following will leap when they get to the same spot, too.
  • Sheep like to stick together. They know their own kind.
  • Sheep are content to spend their lives nibbling on grass, seeing to their own interests.
  • Without a shepherd, when the grass runs out, they will stray. This is dangerous. Sheep rely on numbers. It’s the shepherd’s job to find grass and water.
  • Sheep have no ability to defend themselves from predators, outside of gathering together so that only one or two of their number are sacrificed to settle the wolves’ appetite.
  • Sheep need someone to watch their tails. They are born with long fluffy tails which just get in the way. Off they go.
  • Sheep will obey a ruler without question, even one that barks and runs around in circles.
  • Sheep, despite their weakness, have value. The wool from one or two sheep can keep a family warm. The milk from a few sheep can nourish a family. Some people like their meat—camouflaged with mint or wine sauces.
  • Sheep do not tend toward aggression, although a mean streak can sometimes be detected in individuals. They will quickly become mutton.
  • Sheep without a shepherd are in danger. Sheep with a lazy or negligent shepherd are in even more danger.
  • Ewes predominate in the flock, but both rams and ewes are needed to sustain the flock.
  • If we want to eat meat, an animal must die.
  • While sheep know their shepherd’s voice, sometimes shepherds have a hard time knowing one sheep from another. They splash a bit of color on their coats.
  • Fences make shepherding easier—or unnecessary.
  • The sounds of sheep are pleasant. The smell you get used to.
  • Sheep are good-looking bright spots in a green field.
  • Touching sheep makes your hands soft.
  • There are black sheep, brown sheep and white sheep. They all smell like sheep.
  • It is easier on your shoes to walk through a sheep pasture than a cow pasture.
  • Lambs make us laugh and forget ourselves.

Jesus had his shepherd hands full!

How does understanding sheep help us understand the biblical analogy of shepherd?

photo credit: Tambako the Jaguar via photopin cc

 

Jesus as Shepherd: Images

Adult Object Lesson: Part 2

In yesterday’s post, which was our weekly object lesson idea for adult listeners, we proposed having your congregation draft a résumé for Jesus.

Modern résumés often included visuals and your resume for Jesus can take advantage of this.

We suggested that your listeners consider attaching a photo of Jesus as shepherd to their résumé to enhance your congregational discussion.

Images abound on the internet. We’ve chose a few that have varying nuances.

The topic is one of the earliest to be depicted in Christian art.

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Here is an Eastern religious icon.

goodshepherd7There are more familiar depictions. The painting by German artist, Bernard Plockhorst, has been reproduced in stained glass art in sanctuaries all across America. Note the mother sheep nudging at Jesus left hand as if to encourage him to care for her lamb he is carrying. (See yesterday’s post.)

 

 

 

There are comforting presentations. In this image, Jesus pays careful attention to the youngest in the flock.

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Here are two depictions that were published in France as prayer cards, probably in the 1800s.

The flock is chained to the cross. In the second depiction, Jesus seems to be engaged in work. There is intentional effort in his love.

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Here we have a pensive Jesus. He is thinking of more than the sheep’s physical needs.

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Last, we add a proactive, risk-taking Jesus, who under the shelter of an eagle’s wings risks his safety to reach out to sheep in danger.

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Which image would you choose for Jesus’ résumé?

Watch with Whom You Pray!

I read this morning some February news about the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod’s leadership reaction to December’s tragic massacre of the innocents in Sandy Hook, Connecticut. Their president, The Rev. Matthew Harrison, responded to criticism of the local Lutheran pastor for participating in a community prayer vigil in Sandy Hook, along with the leaders of other local faiths.

Why was this an issue? Common sense is for any Christian to grieve with the victims and the community, to demonstrate compassion and offer consolation.

No. As the nation wept inconsolably, some in the LCMS managed to dust off its rulebook to cite an ancient rule that their leaders are not to participate in interfaith prayer. All the grieving participants might get the idea that Lutherans agree with Muslims, Jews and Catholics, or perhaps—and heaven-forbid—love them. The grief of today does not measure in importance against eternal damnation for praying with those who believe differently.

Surely, interfaith dialog was the first thing on the minds of those attending.

At least one attendant would have understood. President Obama deals with the same progress-blocking thinking in politics. Party first! Denomination first! 

In politics, elected representatives easily become alienated from the people they serve as soon as they are surrounded daily by those with party interests. Clergy, too, surround themselves with colleagues with denominational self-interest. The air is thin in their lofty headquarters. 

But all is well, the offending pastor got the message. He humbly apologized, pointing out that he had taken steps to assure everyone present in Sandy Hook that he wasn’t endorsing the religious beliefs of other participating clergy.

The disclaimer before the benediction he delivered must have been a great comfort.

President Harrison, smugly acknowledges that the local pastor was in a difficult position and admonishes anyone from criticizing the repentant pastor too harshly. That falls a bit short of support.

Aren’t we, who live in multicultural society, often in this position? Lay people live and work every day with people of many faiths. Are we always to check the religious credentials of our neighbors before we address their needs—or our common needs—in prayer?

One of the objections seems to have been that the pastors were in their regalia. Perhaps they all should dress as Jesus did—just like everyone else!

While accepting the apology, President Harrison boasted of his leadership skills. He had taken the “unprecedented” step of contacting “the most prominent blogs in the synod and asking them to refrain from commenting on the issue.” He asked them to pull down any critical comments they had already posted.

“He [the pastor] didn’t need to be attacked,” Harrison said. He quickly turned his concern for the pastor and the traumatized community he serves back to concern for the denomination. “We don’t need a public airing of our pent-up grievances.”

The incident is so denominationally self-centered and so typical of the thinking of church leadership. In the wake of tragedies large and small, we tend to focus on denominational tenets and ignore all the teachings of the Lord we serve.

There are no atheists in a foxhole, they say. There are also no denominations. (Click to tweet.)

Meanwhile, we wonder. How long will it be before church leaders replicate President Harrison’s “unprecedented” step and make the monitoring of church bloggers a routine part of their perceived power?

 

It’s “Feed My Sheep” Sunday

The lectionary this morning tells the story of our Lord’s commissioning of Peter to lead his church. A simple exchange between Jesus and his most dynamic disciple has led to the hierarchical church we know today.

We are reposting a cartoon that addresses “Feed My Sheep” Sunday and our situation.

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Leading Jewish Temple Consultant Agrees

The Emerging Entrepreneurial Church

Today’s blog post of Rabbi Hayim Herring validates what 2×2 has been writing for a while.

Churches that survive into the coming decades will not rely solely on offerings for income.

The rabbi writes:

Organizations that thrive in the 21st Century will be distinguished by two attributes: entrepreneurship and organizational foresight.

He suggests that the word innovation be replaced with the word “entrepreneurship.”

He notes these subtle but significant differences (the bullets are quotes):

  • Innovation requires creativity but, unlike entrepreneurship, does not address issues like tolerance for risk, organizational agility, improvisational ability and speed.
  • Innovation often comes in bursts after focusing on discrete ideas and issues, while entrepreneurship requires cultivating a certain kind of culture, defined by a set of practices and attitudes that are infused throughout an organization.
  • Innovation implies the creation of something new, while entrepreneurship can mean dramatically improving what is already working with new vision and processes.

This sounds impossible. It is not. Even small churches can follow it.

The problem is that church hierarchies don’t recognize the potential. Armed with an impenetrable sense of entitlement and a tradition that supports it, they measure their congregations by ancient standards. These standards are failing almost everywhere!

The entrepreneurial church is not about making money for money’s sake, but is more about creating revenue streams with ministry projects. More lucrative ministries will provide funds for ministries that will never be self-supporting.

People today hesitate to give offerings, especially when they can’t see their offerings at work. More and more, congregations are begging for offerings just to help them survive — not to help them serve. It’s a losing proposition.

Less committed people of faith are not going to see this as a good investment of their time or tithe. They are more likely to contribute both money and energy to projects when they see them making a difference. They are not seeing this in churches that have budgets that are top-heavy in overhead.

There are many opportunities that are entirely in keeping with the mission of the Church.

One of Redeemer’s strengths is the ability to recognize opportunity.

There would be no conflict between Redeemer, East Falls, and the Southeastern Pennsylvania Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, if Redeemer had been nurtured and granted the freedom their constitution gives them to shape and fund their ministry in less traditional ways. Are we not regularly implored to “transform”?

  • Our Christian Day School, which was ready to open as a Christian School for the first time in 25 years, would be providing upwards of $6000 per month for ministry—and creating a Christian witness in a neighborhood which is losing its Christian schools.
  • Our aid to immigrant families would be producing $100,000 per year. Redeemer had a plan in place that would help immigrant first-time home buyers. The expertise of our members would ease the path to home ownership and the congregation would gain some money in the real estate transaction, which would then go to help another immigrant family.
  • Our website would generate another few thousand per month for ministry. The website reaches out to small churches all over the world.

More than enough resources for a neighborhood ministry.

This is no different from religious publishing houses making their living publishing books or religious social service agencies tapping into government revenue streams. And it doesn’t camouflage mission to meet government requirements.

Unfortunately, our regional body has no vision for its small churches. They are waiting for them to die. 

9 Tips for Creating Content for a Church Blog/Web Site

St Jerome

What kind of content should congregations include on their web site?

Social media rules the internet and content is king!

There is untold power in using social media, but churches tend to lose interest in using the power at their fingertips.

Take some time to review typical church websites. Big church, small churches . . . they are all pretty much the same. They provide little more than basic information. They are called “brochure” web sites.

Typically, the opening page lists worship times and has a few photos of the church on Easter or Christmas.

Fancier church websites run some javascript and have photos fading in and out. Happy kids. Happy families. Choirs. Activities.

The links from the home page point to bios on clergy and staff and lists of programs offered by the church.

Somewhere there might be a nod to a mission statement or a Bible verse or two.

Job done. “We’re on the internet.”

This type of website may do no harm, but it doesn’t help a church stand out. Your members will take a look now and then. But the community and the unchurched are unlikely to ever stumble upon your church web site unless they are newcomers planning to spend a few Sundays church-shopping.

Your web site can be so much more!

But how? Where to you start?

The “brochure” web site is a start. But as soon as you can, attach a blog to it. It can be part of the same web address or it can be separate.

The blog has many advantages. It is easy to update. You won’t need to outsource this. The content you create for the church blog, will reflect your congregation’s personality. You might even find that the discipline of blogging will shape your congregation’s mission.

  1. Filter the jargon. Don’t assume that your audience knows about church.
  2. Show that you are part of your community. Include articles about secular organizations that share your mission. Link to their sites. Advertise events at the public library, local schools and parks. If  your members are active in a local charity, ask them to write about their involvement. True, the focus is not the church, but the church will have positioned itself as being a spiritual hub in a vibrant community. Newcomers looking to learn about all sorts of things in your neighborhood will find your website — even when they weren’t looking for a church.
  3. Have multiple voices. This is tough for churches. Church is accustomed to the pastor being the voice of the whole congregation. This was once a necessity—back when clergy were the only educated people in town. That is long ago, indeed. Have your pastor introduce other contributors, so there is a sense of teamwork and shared authority. The world expects this in the secular world and the unchurched are likely to find it welcoming in the religious world. Don’t exclude youth. They understand the power of the web.
  4. Feed your lambs. Provide some spiritual food. The temptation is to reprint the sermon. There is nothing wrong with this — except it is not likely to be effective. One sentence excerpts from a sermon would be more effective. You might even ask your congregation to tweet a thought from the sanctuary as the sermon is being delivered! One-minute videos (easily produced with a smartphone) would also be good. Present this content so that it can be tweeted or shared on multiple social media channels.
  5. Revamp the newsletter. Another temptation is to post a 16-page PDF of the congregation’s newsletter. This creates a barrier. Readers will think twice before down-loading the PDF. Only members are likely to do this. Pull the articles out of the newsletter and feature them as posts. You might find you have no need for a newsletter!
  6. Serve. Provide links to organizations that can help troubled people. Does your church support a food pantry or shelter for homeless or abused people?  Do you know of senior centers, day cares or counseling or support groups? Post that information on your web site. The organizations do not have to be church-sponsored or religiously affiliated. People looking for help don’t care about that. They might remember where they found help . . . and tell others. (It’s a good idea to ask permission. That step creates a contact for you with your neighborhood. Make friends. They might link to you!)
  7. Teach. The Sunday School is all but dead. But people still have an interest in understanding their faith. Have a monthly theme and post something small about that theme each day. The modern attention span is short. A paragraph or two is sufficient. Done well, these snippets might lead to a live event where you can meet people.
  8. Curate. Link your readers to interesting photos, articles or videos you find online. Have them open in a separate window so your readers don’t lose you. You will be not only sharing the Good News but you’ll draw some search engine traffic.
  9. Help other churches. What? Isn’t that self-defeating? No! It’s called goodwill. Don’t be afraid to tell your readers about interesting things going on in other churches. They just may reciprocate.
photo credit: Lawrence OP via photopin cc

The Squandering of a Small Congregation’s Reputation

clrgyglassesChurch Vision: A Study in Black and White

Congregations and clergy, including regional leaders, are often strangers to one another.

Regional leaders can know very little about the congregations they serve or the people who support them with their offerings.

It is not likely that they visit often with lay leaders. Even if they did, lay leadership shifts every couple of years or so.

Regional leaders have only two sources of information.

  1. Annual parish reports (completed and submitted by clergy) 
  2. Pastors’ firsthand accounts which can not help but be delivered with self-interest.   

Regional leaders are likely to come into contact with congregations at pivotal times in a congregation’s history.

  1. When they need to call a new pastor for any number of reasons.
  2. When there is some form of conflict, which often involves a pastor.

Consequently, regional leaders are likely to have a very biased view of a congregation.

When they don’t know what’s going on they fall back on numbers — not seriously considering what the numbers represent.

They might send someone to visit a church and report their findings. That visitor reports there are only 14 in worship. They have no way of knowing that 50 usual attendees are really upset about something that might involve the pastor. They are not going to hear about this from the pastor! They come to the conclusion that the church cannot survive. They never deal with the problems. When the regional body is hungry for assets, it is easy to reach this lazy conclusion.

The congregation then has a reputation among clergy. The memory for this reputation is quite long. Clergy might comment: “Wasn’t there trouble in 1960?” The congregation has no idea what they are talking about!

Lay people are often unaware of the power of the clergy gossip mill. They are unlikely to be part of the conversation that can spin out of control with no way to correct misunderstandings.

Clergy are sometimes so self-absorbed that they even come up with trendy slang. Years ago, pastors talked among themselves about alligators. “Who is the alligator in your church?” they might ask one another. An alligator in clergyspeak is a lay person who lurks in the congregational water ready (in this clergy person’s mind) to snap its jaws on a pastor’s throat. Paranoia? Perhaps! It reflects neither love nor respect for their flock. It does untold damage to a congregation within the Church—all the less fortunate when it voids the congregation’s reputation outside of ecclesiastic circles.

Every congregation has a reputation in its community. Clergy can influence it or they can exist totally unaware of it.

This reputation spans longer periods of time—generations—and takes in the community’s knowledge of the congregation’s participation and response to community needs and the lives they have touched that may not be part of the congregation’s membership or collected statistics.

The community measures churches with a different yardstick.

  • They work together on community projects.
  • Their children attend schools and programs sponsored by the church.
  • The community can count on the congregation to share their facilities generously.
  • The community remembers a congregation’s response to a local disaster.
  • They may have acquaintances and family members whose lives were touched in some small but significant way.
  • The community knows nothing and cares less about denominational involvement or reputation. They only know what they see and that’s the local congregation and its members.

A regional body has no way of measuring this, except as filtered through the clergy. Too bad. This reputation is an asset to the entire denomination. It is far more powerful than slogans or logos or even press releases.

The challenge to the Church is to know a congregation’s reputation and protect and nurture it. It must learn to separate the truth from the gossip. This becomes difficult when the regional body’s interests are limited to placing pastors and accumulating assets.

2×2 published a parable about this division between clergy and lay leaders and how it impacts the small church and the mission of the church. It is based on our 60 visits to local congregations—most of them quite small. It is meant to spark discussion on how clergy and laity can work together and advance mission with the limited resources (both human and financial) which define today’s church.

LandingPageWidgetRead Undercover Bishop. Share its short chapters weekly with your congregation. Ask if they see themselves anywhere in the story. Study questions are included at the end of the book.

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How to Learn to Play the Guitar

. . . or acquire any new skill

guitarThere is a trick to learning to play the guitar.

Never put the guitar away.

The hurdle of getting a musical instrument out of the closet and out of its case every day is an obstacle to the much-needed practice.  

This applies to other skills, too. If you put away the brushes, the next painting may never happen.

Our attics and basements tend to filled with things we carefully stored, never to be used again.

The temptation in church work is to put aside small church communities, while we wait for things to improve on their own.

Leaders neglect them. They tell us there is a plan. They are waiting for more people to show up—for donors to appear (or die) — for the right pastor with the right chemistry.

This is the ministry philosophy of many denominational leaders. They wait for ideal conditions for ministry—conditions they think they can control.

They want to avoid conflict, so they avoid ministry altogether.

They want pastors to be happy and fulfilled. They don’t want them to experience the angst that is best friends with creativity.

Creativity is necessary for transformational change. Transformational change will make everyone unhappy at least a little and for a little while. So let’s keep the small church on ice.

Ministry dies while church leaders wait.

How is this approach working?

photo credit: Hendrik Schicke via photopin cc

The Squandering of Voice in the Church

Hearing the Voice Within

It will take a while for the Church to recognize that they can no longer control the voice of the faithful. The reason for this delay is that congregations and individual Christians do not yet realize that we have more power than ever before in history.

We are accustomed to abiding in silence, accepting what we are told and assuming that the powerful within the church have godly interests.

This is not always true.

Martin Luther took a huge risk when he hammered his list of 95 complaints onto the cathedral door. The response was predictable. Luther was forced into hiding for fear of his life. Fortunately, he made a few well-positioned friends who helped him over this rough spot. He emerged to become a respected preacher and teacher of the Word.

Martin Luther wasn’t the first to raise many of the issues he cited. He was the first to survive. He was the first with the power of a printing press to amplify his voice.

 

The old tools of intimidation still work. Clergy who are beholding to hierarchy are easily silenced.

During the extended conflict between Redeemer Lutheran Church and the Southeastern Pennsylvania Synod has anyone wondered why it is the lay people who have been dragged through courts? The clergy who were working with the congregation, voted with the congregation, and encouraged the congregation headed for the hills after private meetings in the synod office.

 

Today, each individual within the Church has far more power than Martin Luther.

We have a voice that will be more difficult to control.

Eventually, our voices will have influence.

Redeemer, excluded from participation within the church, started a blog. We are one of very few churches who have taken this step and use this tool for weekly outreach. It has both changed and shaped our ministry in ways we never expected.

Blogging builds community. We have encountered dozens of individual bloggers who write from a spiritual point of view. They are poets, photographers, parents, writers, artists, and adventurers. They are all over the world—Thailand, Armenia, Scandinavia, Africa, the Mideast. Some of them have church connections. Others do not. They tend to represent the age demographic that is missing in the church on Sunday morning—20-40.

They have discovered that within the Church, they have little voice, but outside the Church, they can grow.

The ability to grow as individuals is a key factor that is missing in many church communities.

Modern youth have been reared in a world where they must constantly reeducate themselves. They are involved in an ongoing process of self-discovery. In the past this discovery period ended at about age 30, when we settled down. This will no longer be true for any of us, regardless of age.

Self-rediscovery tends to be discouraged within the Church. We are likely to be assigned a task that Church needs to have accomplished. We will be told how to do it—how to teach, how to sing, how to fix the altar, and how to distribute the offering plates. Once we accept one of these jobs, it may be ours for life!

It is no wonder that people turn away from the Church. They seek community where their voices can be heard—their ideas and talents recognized.

If the Church does not find a way to welcome the voice of the people and adapt to modern expectations, they will find their churches to be empty on Sunday mornings.

Church leaders who face this change in society with tenacious resistance will enjoy fleeting successes.

A storm is coming. A wise church would nurture voice if they want transforming change.

What are we afraid of, anyway?

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