Article

Slipping from the Radar

Lower priority and fewer classes for Sunday school.

Nearly nine in ten pastors say Sunday school is an important part of their church’s ministry, but apparently not as important as it once was. In a 2002 survey, researcher George Barna found 22% of pastors called Sunday school their church’s top priority. In a survey this year, that number dropped to 15%. The pollster offers several evidences for this decline in attention to Christian education:

• Fewer churches offer classes for young children. For infants under age two, the number of participating churches fell from 79% to 73% since 1997. For kids ages two to five, the number declined from 94% to 88% in that period.

• Fewer classes for adolescents. Churches with Sunday school programs for junior high students declined (93% to 88%), as did high school classes (86% to 80%).

This represents about 20,000 fewer churches providing Sunday school for each age group. The numbers held steady over the past eight years for elementary age students with 92% of churches offering classes, and adults at 91%.

Churches offering midweek programs for children are also on the decline, dropping six points in three years to 58%. Younger pastors are more open to new forms of Christian education for children, and more likely to ax traditional Sunday school. Another significant shift is the number of churches creating their own curriculum. That number has doubled in three years to 18%.

The survey was commissioned by Gospel Light, a curriculum publisher in Ventura, California.

—with info from Barna.org

What Are You Still Reading?

Only two books showed up frequently on pastors’ reading lists, in a George Barna survey, and both of them are by Rick Warren. The Purpose Driven Life was named by 21% of pastors as one of the most helpful books they read in the past three years. Just behind that was The Purpose Driven Church at 15%.

The rest of the list covered more than 200 titles, with none getting more than 5% of the vote. John Maxwell was runner-up to Rick Warren, followed by Henry Blackaby, Jim Cymbala, Bill Hybels, Andy Stanley, and Philip Yancey.

More than half of pastors (54%) read at least one book on discipleship or personal spiritual growth, while 23% read books on church growth or ministry and 22% read about leadership. At the bottom of the list: cultural trends, prayer, and preaching, with 5% or less.

—Barna.org

Copyright © 2005 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal.Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

Posted October 1, 2005

Also in this issue

Redirecting a congregation for the road ahead.

Sharp Curve Ahead

When God began a painful and wonderful transformation in my father’s heart and church, I thought I was merely along for the ride.

Renewing Older Churches

If your church is over 40, you’ll need a plan to stay fit.

All in Favor of a New Church Name?

Our game plan for changing the name of our church.

Finding True North

Confused and aimless? You can recover your sense of direction.

More to Worship than Music

Are you giving non-musicians a voice?

A Controlled Burn

Leading change is a dangerous, consuming calling.

Doing Church at the Metro Stops

Not having a building doesn’t stop this creative and growing congregation in D.C.

Clean Out the Sludge

A theology of turnaround.

Service Interruptions

What to do when emergencies and outbursts bring your worship service to a halt.

Serving in Satan's Shadow

A tiny church in a hostile setting reminds us it’s the small things that make a difference.

Sermon Surfers Stun Vicar

Country parson pops with iPod crowd.

On the Sacred (and Slightly Irreverent) Way

Finally, a spiritual formation guide for less-than-saints.

Heir Apparent

A retiring pastor and his successor discover what it takes to make a transition plan work.

Even Healthy Churches Need to Change

If it ain’t broke … thinking leads nowhere.

No, I'm Not Your Best Friend

There’s a good reason pastors and associates don’t feel like friends. It’s more important than that.

Back from the Brink: A Leadership Special Report

Disastrous conflict, moral failure, spiritual depression, or simply long, slow decline. Churches do come back from debilitating trauma. How?

Underneath the Cosmetics

Before asking how church should look, let’s make sure we’re clear what the church is for.

Helping the "Healthy"

How do we preach saving grace to those who just aren’t “good” at sinning?

The Marrying Kind

Why some men marry early and some not at all.

View issue


Our Latest

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube
Down ArrowbookCloseExpandExternalsearch