Equipping You to Minister to the Dechurched in Your Life
Apr 21, 2024
auto_awesome
The podcast features theologian Michael Horton, pastor Justin Holcomb, professor Walter Strickland, and pastor Bob Hiller discussing how to reach the dechurched. They explore the importance of community, service, building connections, sharing hope, confirmation, acceptance, and spreading the gospel globally.
Dechurched individuals need a friend to invite them back to church for a sense of belonging and community.
Church involvement should be seen as a place to both receive and exchange gifts, emphasizing the importance of community and fulfillment through the gospel message.
Deep dives
The Link Between Rest and Spiritual Emotional Balance
Ensuring true rest requires a deeper understanding of finding spiritual and emotional rest in Christ, going beyond just physical relaxation. The necessity to reassess weekly schedules to make space for this spiritual rest underscores the importance of integrating church involvement into one's life for a comprehensive sense of peace and balance.
Shifting Paradigms in Church Participation
Discussions focus on contrasting paradigms regarding church involvement, emphasizing the significance of viewing church as a place to receive and exchange gifts rather than solely for instruction. The importance of understanding the unique role of the church in providing a sense of community, belonging, and fulfillment through the gospel message is highlighted.
Fostering Belonging and Service Within the Church
Emphasizing the concept of belonging within the church through service and community engagement, the narrative illustrates how active participation and serving others in the church can enhance one's sense of membership and connection. This act of serving enables individuals to experience a deeper sense of belonging and fulfillment in the church community.
Inviting and Nurturing Return to Church Attendance
Addressing the phenomenon of 'de-churching', the discussion focuses on encouraging individuals to return to church through love, acceptance, and genuine invitations rather than altering theological stances. Highlighting the impact of relational connections and supportive church environments, the narrative underscores the importance of extending invitations and creating spaces of love and acceptance for those seeking spiritual reconnection.
If you go to church, do you know why you attend? Do you know why your friends and family have casually just stopped going to church? How can we talk about the necessity of the church in a way that is beautiful and life-giving, but goes beyond personal preference? In this episode, Michael Horton, Justin Holcomb, Walter Strickland, and Bob Hiller answer these questions and more as they discuss how Christians can reach out to their dechurched friends, family, and neighbors.
“When asked how willing they would be to go back to church, 51 percent said they are either somewhat willing or very willing—51 percent! Unsurprisingly, the reasons they would come back also represent a longing to belong. These dechurched evangelicals said they would come back if they made new friends (28%), if they move and want to make new friends (18%), if they became lonely and want to make new friends (20%), if their children want to go (16%), if their spouse wants to go (18%), if a friend invites them (17%), if there is a good pastor (18%), if they find a good community (17%), if they miss their church community (20%), or if they just find a church they like (14%). This group's high orthodoxy scores also inform other reasons they would come back: if they feel the distance from God (20%) or if God tells them to go back in some significant way (18%). The main takeaway here is that many dechurched evangelicals simply need a friend to invite them to church.” - The Great Dechurching: Who’s Leaving, Why Are They Going, and What Will It Take to Bring Them Back? by Jim Davis and Michael Graham, with Ryan P. Burge, p. 28.
Become a Partner to support the work of White Horse Inn as we apply the riches of the Reformation to the modern church.
Subscribe to Modern Reformation magazine. Our March/April issue is “The Head & the Heart,” where we feature essays, poems, and articles about how the Bible does not separate the “rational” mind and the “emotive” heart; rather, “In the Bible, the intellect, will, and emotions are all capacities that belong to the whole, integrated person.”