Article

Your Church’s Priorities?

They probably depend on your demographics.

Fewer than half of senior pastors agreed on a single ministry emphasis as one of their church’s top three priorities for this year, according to recent research. The priorities pastors set often depended on the size and denomination of the church and the race and gender of the pastor.

The Barna Group surveyed 614 senior pastors and found them focusing on 12 different areas of ministry. Most frequently cited were discipleship and spiritual development (47%), evangelism and outreach (46%), and preaching (35%).

Predominantly white churches were more likely to name discipleship (50%), while black churches ranked evangelism as their top objective (67%). Female pastors more than male pastors targeted discipleship (65% to 46%). And larger churches were “far more likely than smaller congregations to prioritize evangelism and outreach,” according to George Barna.

“The magnitude of differences between black and white congregations is very significant,” Barna said. “Compared to white pastors, few black pastors identified worship and preaching as top priorities. …This may reflect the fact that black pastors are attempting to broaden the faith experience and depth of their people by shifting their focus to other dimensions of spiritual growth.”

Lesser priorities: A second tier addressed congregational care: visitation and counseling (24%), worship (19%), ministry to teens and young adults (17%), missions (15%), community service (15%), children’s ministry (13%), and congregational fellowship (11%).

At the bottom of the list were family ministry (4%) and prayer (3%).

Faves: Worship was named by more mainliners (37%) than Baptists (12%). Teen ministry was favored by Pentecostals (25%) and Southerners (21%). Younger pastors, under 40, were twice as likely to focus on children’s ministry than older pastors (22% to 11%).

—with info from Barna.org

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

Posted April 1, 2005

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