Article

Currents Shaping Our World: Switched after Birth

We’re changing more than churches–also denoms and religions.

If it seems most everyone in your church used to be “something else,” they did. More than 33 million adults in the United States reported they had changed their religious identification or preference at some point in their lives, according to a study by the City University of New York. That’s 16 percent of the total adult population. Demographers call this faith-shifting phenomenon “religious mobility,” and it’s on the rise.

The U.S. population remains predominantly Christian. In 2001, 77 percent self-identified as Christian, although that number is down from 86 percent in 1990. The number of people identifying with any religion also declined in the same period, from 90 percent to 81 percent.

While mainline Protestant groups are declining, evangelical and charismatic denominations are on the rise. Of those who identify themselves as “evangelical/born-again,” 37 percent “switched” to the faith from another religion.

Who’s moving: The shift is greatest among mainliners, smaller faiths and sects. Jehovah’s Witnesses are most “mobile.” Accounting for less than 1 percent of American adults, one-third of their members leave the group, and two-fifths join from another religion.

Implications for church leaders: Religious mobility means we cannot assume that members understand basic faith tenets, denominational distinctives, or heritage. But, that they’ve switched brands doesn’t mean they’ll sign up for history lessons. Heritage and distinctives must be communicated along with vision and goals in existing teaching venues and in church communiqués.

Expect practices from other churches to seep into your system as leaders from other backgrounds join the team.

And we must watch out for acronyms. Insider language creates outsiders and makes newcomers feel like strangers. Besides, who recalls what BYPU is anyway?

—data from American Demographics (March 2003)

Keeping the basics current is important, but beyond that, Scott Swoboda of ChurchSites.com says posting these simple things will make your site snap:

If you don’t have someone to update the site weekly, then post stuff that doesn’t change much:

To evaluate your site, here’s a link to a 20-minute self-test:
www.ergocreative.com/sitetest

www.gospelcom.net/rev-fun
New ministry cartoons daily.

www.leadershipjournal.net
Our site will soon feature our best ‘toons, 24 years’ worth!

Trendex

Anything New On Your Website?


  • Next week’s bulletin
  • Church newsletter
  • Calendar
  • New members’ photos
  • Sermon notes or audio
  • Minutes everyone needs
  • A presentation of the gospel
  • Statement of faith
  • Photos from mission trips
  • An album of missionaries
  • A map to the church.
  • Staff bios, photos, and
  • e-mail addresses

—from Your Church (May/June 2003)



Links to Laughs


Copyright © 2003 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal.Click here for reprint information onLeadership Journal.

Posted July 1, 2003

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Currents Counter-Culture: Indigenous Worship vs. Religious Mobility

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Currents Shaping My Soul: A Once and Future Emerging Leader

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Worship Toolkit: Experiential Worship

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The Uncertain Leader

You can’t always be sure, but you’d better be clear.

New Leaders, Unmarked Paths

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Prep Time: To Illustrate

Squeezed Out

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Tight Money Strategies

Six ways to balance when the budget goes red.

When No One Seems Qualified to Lead

How five churches overcame obstacles to leader development.

Currents Shaping My Church: War, Politics, and the Pulpit

How do you handle potentially explosive social issues when you know your congregation is not of one mind?

Growing Edge In Brief

What's to Become of Tom?

The kid is self-absorbed and directionless. I don’t like him. Does he have a future as a leader?

Currents Shaping My Soul: Why Gordon Feels Conflicted

Leadership Weekly readers weigh in on the value of uncertainty.

Gregg's Other Life

Would our fragile church survive if it learned the worship leader’s tragic secret?

Pool Guy Pastor

Going to church like going swimming means different things to different people.

Growing Edge Book Review: The Secret to Getting Things Done

Three overlooked processes between vision and completion.

Lasting Influence

A Leadership Forum

Simeon's Brigade

England’s churches were reawakened by 1,100 young ministers, who learned their craft from an awkward, unpopular, and sometimes angry mentor.

Mentoring that Produces Mentors

From a handful of hungry men, we’ve developed several generations of leaders.

Sermon Workshop: Preaching Hot Potatoes

A Way to keep the pressure on the listener and off the speaker.

Prep Time: To Illustrate

View issue


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