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January 24, 2008

Dr. Bullard's Top Ten Global Trends

My superintendent forwarded to the pastors under his care an article by Dr. George Bullard .  I found this article fascinating, scary, and undeniably relevant to, well, everyone.  It is long and worth reading.  Here it is:

Ten Global Trends Impacting the Future of Congregations

Webinar Edition

By

George W. Bullard Jr.

GBullard@TheColumbiaPartnership.org

Discovering Global Trends

Last year a friend, who is a professional futurist, shared an unpublished manuscript with me containing almost five dozen trends that are currently shaping the future. As I read the manuscript, I was inspired as to how many of these had implications for the future of Christian congregations, particularly in

North America.

Being a person who would shun one source research, I began looking around at various web sites and print publications for other lists of trends. During my search I found some future forecasts, some global trends in religion, some trends in branding and marketing, and some vital signs of the future. I studied all of these to see which ones most impressed me as trends with implications for congregations, and around which congregations need to take action.

Ultimately I developed my own top ten global trends impacting the future of the congregations. Some implications and potential actions seemed obvious to me, but I knew there had to be more. I invited a group of people to join me for one of four webinars where I would share my ten trends, and ask them to dialogue about implications and potential actions for congregations.

During November 2007 around 35 people joined me in this endeavor through the four webinars. Between webinars I changed one or two of the trends seeking a set that felt right. This manuscript shares the final ten trends, and a summary of the implications and potential actions for congregations. I invite you to join the dialogue and share your insights into additional trends, and other implications and actions we missed. Send your contribution to GBullard@TheColumbiaPartnership.org. Perhaps out of this we can develop additional trends to share at a future date.

A key request as you read these trends: Don’t shoot the messenger. I am reporting trends, sharing ideas about their implications for congregations, and suggesting actions congregations might need to take. I did not create the trends. In some cases I might not be promoting the trends. I am only saying these are trends we cannot ignore. I also realize several of these trends will challenge theological and ecclesiastical positions held by some North American congregations.

 
Global Trend One: Within 50 years the world population will surpass 10 billion.

 
Currently the world population is 6.6 billion. A significant pace of population growth will continue for the foreseeable future. Underneath this macro trend are thousands of specific trends.

One that stands out is the aging of world population. The senior adult population is increasing dramatically throughout the world. Especially in the developed or first world people are living much longer. This fact alone greatly increases world population. The traditional age of retirement is losing its significance. Second and third careers are becoming common as more people make mid-life changes in occupation.

In the developing or two-thirds world the birth rates have not slowed down as much as predicted. This drives the younger end of population growth, and is the part of population growth most often publicized.
A second specific trend revolves around the number of different active birth generations. Employers are seeing up to four birth generations represented in their employees. This presents challenges because of differing work ethics and value systems characteristic of each birth generation.

Implications for Congregations: With the increase in the number of older persons, congregations must place more emphasis on ministry with senior adults. They must see senior adults in at least five categories. First, are the active, full-time workers. Second, are the active, part-time workers. Third, are the active yet fully retired from work. Fourth, are the inactive. Fifth, are the dependent senior adults.

Competition between senior adults and other age categories for the focus and attention of their congregations will increase. The tensions between the aging populations and newer generations will become greater. Senior adults and younger generations will be in conflict over the priorities of the congregation.

The tenure of senior adults in a congregation, and their economic ability and commitment to support the congregation, will tend to control the character and nature of many congregations. At the same time, it is getting more expensive to get older in terms of medical needs. Therefore, senior adults will be very cautious about how money is spent. They do not want to run out of money. They will project this caution on their congregations.

 

With one generation not yet in the work force, and one that is now out of the work force, congregations will see the age range of their active participants span up to six birth generations. The typical congregation can minister effectively to three birth generations without making major worship, discipleship, fellowship, and governance accommodations to the various generations.

 

Once a congregation begins to focus on four or more birth generations they must diversify their programs and ministries to communicate with and effectively attract people from the various age generations. For example, worship styles must be varied.

 

Congregations who do not diversify their programs and ministries will have one of two things happen. First, they will not reach multiple age generations in significant numbers unless they have a strong reason—such as family connections—that keep them tied to the congregation. Second, conflict over values will be high in these congregations, and they will maintain a degree of active tension that will taint the fellowship atmosphere of the congregation.

 

Actions by Congregations: The increase in the senior adult population will call for new models to help existing congregations develop a vision for the future. The current senior adults are going to be around for a long time. The distance between their perspective on vision and that of younger generations will increase. Having a lot of senior adults in a congregation does not necessarily mean the demise of the congregation in the near future.

 

Congregations will need to rethink the spiritual and culture glue that holds them together. The diversification of age groups will have an impact on architectural issues. Accommodations will have to be made for space and accessibility needs for both younger families and older households.

 

A majority of congregations need to rethink being all things to all people. The typical congregation has less than 100 persons in average attendance. They have few resources to diversify what they offer.

 

Consider intentionally starting congregations that are age specific. Already many senior adult-focused congregations exist in areas where there is a high concentration of people over 55 years old. For years it has been acknowledged that contemporary or emerging congregations were coming into existence to address the felt needs of younger generations.

 

A place exists for multi-generational congregations who take on the challenge of diversifying their worship, program, and ministry offerings. They have multiple worship services that each offer a different style of worship, while focusing on the same core theology and a similar structure to worship.

 

Global Trend Two: Family structures are continuing to become more diverse, and the traditional nuclear family is diminishing.

 

Less than one-fourth of households are the traditional nuclear family. The various types and categories of families/households have been dramatically increasing over the past five decades. The fastest growing type of family/household has one person in it. This means the stereotypical family of mother-father-sister-brother-cat-and-dog, around which so much of the post-World War II generational values were built, is diminishing.

 

Implications for Congregations: Much church programming is still based on a post World War II generation perspective. During this generation few congregations had a ministry focus on blended families. Divorce recovery ministry was practically unknown. Interracial couples were something the movies dared to talk about. The thought that unmarried couples would be regular, faithful attendees in congregations was too far outside the norm. Same gender couples were not yet on the radar screen.

 

Singles ministries were just beginning to emerge as a college and career emphasis for twentysomethings. Even in these singles ministries congregations did not know what to do with divorced women. Divorced men typically dropped out of the church.

 

What we had were emerging family structures with whom we did not know how to minister. And, that was just the beginning. Congregations have struggled for the past five decades to figure out whether they ought to shun what were considered by many to be sinful marriage and family relationships, or to be non-judgmental and let the Holy Spirit work in these situations.

 

What ultimately happened was that an increasing number of congregational leaders—including pastors—had various ones of these new family structures impact their own family. This led to a re-evaluation of mores and theology. Congregations began changing the definition of what is a really bad sin.

 

Actions by Congregations: Congregations must embrace the geometric increase in the types or categories of families/households to whom they are called to minister. The major category of families/households has probably moved from less than six to more than a dozen over the past fifty years.

 

Smaller membership congregations, however, cannot do this effectively.
They need to pick out the top three categories of families/households they have the capacity to reach, and focus their programs, ministries, and activities accordingly.

 

Congregations of 1000 or more in attendance will be attractive to many families/households because of their ability to offer a wide range of high quality programs, ministries, and activities. In fact, by the end of this decade it will take a congregation of this size to offer a high quality focus on all the major family/household categories. These will be the full service, family focused, 24/7/365 congregations of the next decade.

 

Global Trend Three: The acceptance of diversity and pluralism is growing.

 

The population of the world is increasingly diverse and pluralistic. This is a well established fact. The key word in this trend however is “acceptance.” In

North America

many people are becoming more tolerant regarding diversity, and more open theologically and methodologically to viewpoints, practices, and life styles they would not have embraced too many decades ago.

 

Racial and ethnic diversity is on the rise. A greater acceptance of women in various leadership roles is embraced. People of diverse religious backgrounds are now present in communities, at school, and at work. Theological norms of the past are now open for dialogue and even debate. Societal values are changing radically. Many communities are experiencing increasing multi-cultural expressions, socio-economic diversity, and lifestyle diversity.

 

Implications for Congregations: The tendency is for congregations to reflect the diversity and pluralism of their context. In places of little diversity and pluralism congregations are more homogeneous. In places of greater diversity and pluralism congregations are more heterogeneous.

 

The core ideology and doctrine of congregations will be challenged by increased diversity and pluralism. A challenge of core ideology will cause congregations to re-examine their core values and to clarify anew the core of the Gospel. They must distinguish between cultural values and faith values.

 

As cultures diversify and become more pluralistic in thought and action, we will see the presence of minority viewpoints becoming the majority characteristics of culture and some congregations. Congregations will, of course, lag behind in becoming more diverse and pluralistic. At times this will be a good thing.

 

Dialogue rather than issue discussion and positional debates will become more important in congregations. Storytelling will increase as we seek to listen to one another. Deepening relationships will precede clarifying core values and doctrinal distinctives. This will lead to a greater acceptance of diversity within congregations, and a tolerance for doctrinal diversity on non-essentials.

 

Actions by Congregations: Congregations must positively struggle with diversity and pluralism. They must learn how to dialogue about issues they detest or fear, and to have genuine conversations with people whose viewpoints they reject. Avoid judging people without understanding the basics of their faith.

 

Congregations must shift their paradigm or get left behind. More multi-cultural congregations will come into existence. More emphasis must be placed on developing clear core values. Congregations will be driven to distinguish between those things that are essential in their theology and ecclesiology, and those things that are cultural barnacles that have attached themselves to the core values and practices of their congregations.

 

Dialogue—without judgment—will take on a greater importance in the life of congregations. Regular sessions will be held where people can share their religious autobiographies with small groups or the whole congregation. We may even see the return of testimonies in many congregations who abandoned them some years ago.

 

Global Trend Four: Immigration and emigration movements are exploding.

 

People are increasingly not living in their country of birth, but they may still be living among people of their dominate culture. Newer generations of Americans will increasingly live outside the

United States

to pursue personal and career interests.

 

The people groups of the world are mobile. Various people groups are living throughout the world and impacting the cultures in which they reside by creating more pluralistic societies.

 

Implications for Congregations: Immigrants are significantly impacting the communities, countries, and congregations to which they go. They are having economic and cultural impacts. This is particularly true when large numbers of people from one country emigrate from their home country and immigrate to a new country. A couple of examples would be the Chinese in several cities of Canada, and the Latinos throughout the United States.

 
Existing congregations are not often significantly impacted by first generation immigrants desiring to become regular attendees or members of their congregations. They prefer to worship in their own cultural setting and language.

 

Congregations are impacted when their community context becomes transitional with families/households demographically similar to existing congregations moving out of the community, and large numbers of immigrants from another country or culture moving in.

 

Existing congregations are also impacted by the need to start programs, ministries, and activities that reach out to new immigrants. Ultimately they may partner with new immigrants to start new congregations that reach the immigrant groups.

 

Actions by Congregations: Engage in multi-cultural education for congregations to help them be sensitive to new immigrant groups, and respect the richness of their culture. Also, cultural sensitivity education for entering immigrant groups may also be beneficial to help them understand the diverse cultural they have entered.

 

Seek to develop culturally appropriate programs, ministries, and activities that effective connect with new immigrant groups. See such activities as missional or kingdom-oriented, rather than a focus on church growth.

 

Provide the partnership activities necessary to sponsor new congregations for the immigrant groups when this is the best way to reach out and affirm their spiritual needs. Work with your denomination and other congregations to make this possible. Look for Pentecost opportunities when a multi-cultural congregation is the best solution rather than a separate congregation.

 

Some immigrants are not permanent in North America. They will be moving on to other parts of the world. To the extent existing congregations can reach out to the new entering immigrants, they ought to assimilate them into the congregation quickly so the depth of their spiritual encounter through your congregation will be meaningful while they are present with you.

 

 

Global Trend Five: The growth of Islam is continuing at a significant pace.

 

Islam will continue to gain power and influence, and have the largest impact of any religious group in the world. Islam is the fastest growing major religion in the world. Birth rates within the Islamic families are driving this more than the rate of conversion. Muslims are also spreading throughout the world and have major economic and cultural impacts wherever they are present in large numbers.

 

Many European cities are likely to be dominated by Muslims at some point during this century. Islam will surpass Christianity as being the dominate world religion before the end of this century. The number of Muslins worldwide has doubled since 1970 to 1.2 billion. Projections are for the number of Muslins to be 2 billion by 2025 as compared to 3 billion Christians.

 

Implications for Congregations: North American culture is in the midst of an emerging post-Christendom era. The dramatic increase of Islam is one contributing factor to this, but not the only one. It is possible that by the end of this century Christianity would drop to second place behind Islam in size and worldwide influence.

 

Too many congregations, and individual Christians, are unprepared to encounter non-Christians and dialogue with them about spiritual and theological convictions. This makes the whole field of Christian apologetics more important than ever. This also heightens the importance of interfaith dialogue rather than debate.

 

Too many congregations, and individual Christians, are specifically unprepared to engage a Muslim in dialogue about spiritual and theological convictions. They fear the unknown. They have never read the Koran. They do not realize there are as many varieties of Muslims as there are Christians. They fear the violence of fundamentalist Muslims in a similar way that Muslims fear fundamentalist Christians. In both cases the fears may be unfounded.

 

Actions by Congregations: Similar to the actions concerning immigrants, congregations first need to engage in education concerning Islam. The Church should develop strategies to reach out to Muslins throughout the world, as well as in the context of many congregations. Proactive attempts at interfaith dialogue will increase the ability to live peaceably with one another.

 

Congregations must help individual Christians be clear about their theology, doctrine, and ethics. Informed Muslims with deep convictions can outshine a casual Christian very quickly. Christians need to be obvious followers of Jesus who focus more on a relationship with the triune God than arguing the finer points of doctrine.

 

Congregations need to discover ways they can reach out to Muslim families/households with loving ministry. They also need to discover ways to champion the religious rights of the Islamic faith in the same way they would desire for Christian congregations and individuals to have full religious freedom.

 

Global Trend Six: Communications technologies are changing the way we live.

 

The pace of technological change, in general, and communication technologies, specifically, accelerates with each new generation of discoveries and applications. Communication technology increasingly dominates both the economy and society. Communication technology is creating a knowledge-dependent world society with social interaction creating new perspectives of knowledge on a continual basis.

 

Creation of virtual communities happens out of the overflow of typical, ongoing social networking. An increasing number of people know more about people they interact with digitally than about people they interact with face-to-face.

 

While the watchword during the American political crisis called Watergate was to follow the money, during the current communication explosion the watchword is to follow the information flow.

 

Implications for Congregations: Congregations must redefine authentic community around various means of interaction and two-way communication. They must redefine how they communication among members and regular attendees. To the extent they are seeking to reach out to younger generations, they must focus more on digital communication.

 

Congregational budgets must shift to include more funding for web sites, blogs, e-mail, podcasts, and other means of digital communication. An ever larger number of people will make the decision about attending a congregation by first looking at its web site. If what they see is not pleasing, they will never attend the church.

 

In the emerging Christian culture world missions channels will follow the information flow and not the organizational flow. Congregation to congregation missions involvement will be dominant, as will congregation to region, and congregation to country. Family foundations connecting with congregations, regions, and countries will also continue to grow in numbers. The whole volunteer effort through disaster relief and recovery, and the efforts of various denominations symbolize this, as does the missions partnership movement in North America of the past 30 years.

 

Actions by Congregations: Congregations must adapt and communicate what people need or they will ignore them. The emphasis that once was placed on print media must be expanded, and shifted, to involve a major emphasis on digital communication. The congregational web site is its virtual front door. Print, audio, video, e-mail, instant messaging, text messaging, and social networking through My Space and Face Book must all be part of a multi-generational communication strategy.

 

Global Trend Seven: Information-based organizations are in ascendancy.

 

Information-based organizations are quickly displacing the old command-and control model of management. We are moving from centralized to decentralized to distributive systems for organizations. Distributive systems are networked organizations that empower the grassroots.

 

Implications for Congregations: The next Christendom will not be organized in a centralized or decentralized way, but in a distributive way. A distributed way of organizing is not hierarchical. It is a network manner that is characteristic of emerging movements that are self-organizing. It is a strong method of organizing that is characteristic of how the Internet is organized. It is not controlled. It is free. It is the ultimate, ongoing, autonomous collaborative movement. Distributive requires much more trust and freedom. Ecclesiological values will be challenged by distributive models.

 

Leaders who insist on being in charge are going to have tough challenges of leadership. The implications for re-examining the theology of leadership are tremendous.

 

Actions by Congregations: Empowerment of laity, which is already a fast-growing trend in many North American congregations, will continue to accelerate. Programs, ministries, and activities in congregations need to be organized around the interests of various affinity groups who will provide the leadership for these. Congregational leaders must be increasingly permission-giving.

 

Congregations will be led more by an enduring visionary leadership community than by a single leader. This will empower a broader base of kingdom ministry than can occur with a centralized organizational pattern. The senior pastor will be the initiating visionary leader who provides the key spiritual atmosphere out of which the core values of the congregation can emerge. The vision will provide the fuel that drives the direction of the congregation, and the core values will define the rightness of that direction.

 

Global Trend Eight: Increasingly Christianity will be dominated by the Southern Hemisphere.

 

Philip Jenkins through his book The Next Christendom: The Coming of Global Christianity [Oxford University Press, 2002] and other mediums has been a major proponent of the next Christendom coming from the Southern Hemisphere. I believe he is correct. Evidence of this already exists at the edge of North American Christianity.

 

More specifically, Christianity is becoming dominated by people of color from Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Already more than 60 percent of Christians are people of color outside Europe and North America. This does not mean they control denominations yet. It does mean they dominate the spread of the Christian movement.

 

Implications for Congregations: Congregations will be more conservative in theology. Worship will be more experiential. With the Southern Hemisphere Christianity will come a more dominating form of Christian culture than is currently experienced in North America. Generally moral issues will be expressed in more conservative forms. It could lead to a greater quality of ministry in North America.  At the same time, avoiding a theocracy may be a challenge. How the new Christendom will interact with the rise of Islam is unclear.

 

Mainline Protestantism may feel marginalized. Mainline Protestant denominations will struggle for vitality in the midst of an ongoing conservative resurgence within their midst that may continue to splinter their denominational organizations.

 

Actions by Congregations: Congregations must discover how to be distinctively Christian in a post-Christendom world where not only is religious conviction uncelebrated, but religious expression is openly criticized. Canadian Christians have been experiencing this for some years. United States Christians are just beginning to experience these post-Christian expressions.

 

The good news perspective on this, if there is any news that would be characterized as good, is that Christianity tends to grow when persecuted. This could move North America closer to the new Christendom that will follow a strong—hopefully positive—resurgence of Christianity. This will come in response to the growing influence of Southern Hemisphere Christianity.

 

Congregations should rediscover the orthodox beliefs and practices of Christianity that empower the re-emergence of first century Christianity. This form of Christianity will focus more on relationship with the triune God than the programs, ministries, and activities of congregations. It will focus more on being missional than be institutional. It will focus more on transforming the context of congregations than attracting people to the church facilities.

 

Global Trend Nine: Time is becoming the world’s most precious commodity.

 

Many people consider money, or its equitable distribution, the most precious commodity in the world. In some parts of the world this may be true But, in comparatively wealthy North America, time is the most precious commodity.

 

Workers will increasingly choose more time over more money. They will want more vacation or holiday time. They will want sabbaticals for personal renewal. Simultaneously they want to be more highly compensated for the time they devote to work, and a stake in the profits of their company or other means of gaining long-term economic value. If they cannot get these from working for someone else, they will launch their own business and live out their own time values.

 

Implications for Congregations: Because people are lords of their time, they will be in attendance at congregational worship fewer weekends per year. Four to five decades ago full annually worship attendance meant a minimum of 48 weeks per year. Now it is 39-42 weeks per year.

 

Centralized congregations are having trouble finding people who will commit to the leadership structure. People do not want to make commitments that tie them down. They want a theology of the stewardship of time to declare what they do as Christ-followers away from congregational activities is as important as they attendance at and leaders of congregational programs.

 

Because time is valuable, congregations will be forced to show value and progress in what they do. People want to see results. Coming to congregational activities out of loyalty is out. Maximizing the use of time is in. To older generations, commitment to the congregation was expressed in time present in the church facilities. To younger generations, commitment to the congregation may be an irrelevant concept.

 

Actions by Congregations: Congregations need lean, mean administrative structures. More time needs to be obviously committed to missional involvements than to management activities. Spend more time involved in ministry and less time attending meetings. Worship must be both inspirational and instructional because many people will only commit to an hour or so on the weekend unless it is something that appeals deeply to them or to family members.

 

Do more relationship activities and fewer programs. Streamline programs and customize what is offered. Increase quality in every reasonable way possible. House churches or home groups in communities may be more appealing to younger generations. Give people permission to do things with their time. Offer peace in the middle of overwhelming time pressures.

 

Global Trend Ten: A shortage of natural resources is having global impact with water being the key issue.

 

While many natural resources are renewable, the pace we are using these resources is much greater than the pace at which they are renewing. Going Green is not just an issue for the political or social fringe. It is a core global issue.

 

Water is the key issue of the 21st century whereas oil was the key issue of the 20th century. Dwindling supplies of water in China will impact the global economy. The diminishing of natural resources is giving rise to a focus on social responsibility. Consumers are increasingly demanding social responsibility from organizations and themselves. They are increasingly calling on congregations to be world citizens concerning natural resources.

 

Implications for Congregations: Congregations must take this trend more seriously, or people will not take congregations seriously. Worldwide conflict over the equitable access and distribution of clean water will increase. Whether cyclical or permanent, this is an issue congregations must address.

 

Congregations have generally lagged behind on earth stewardship issues. There is both good news and bad news here. The good news is that congregations have been more concerned about individual people than about natural resources. The bad news is that congregations have not addressed systemic challenges of various kinds, much less those that impact natural resources.

 

Actions by Congregations: Congregations need to work on a theology of what it means to be a good steward of God’s creation. While they can engage in short-term earth stewardship projects such as recycling efforts, they must also engage in long-term issues such as the accessibility and distribution of clean water. Providing clean water through wells and water purification in various places around the world open doors for many more expressions of God’s love and care for people.

 

In other words, Going Green is also a people issue. It is just addressing it with a framework or strategy. Going Green has economic development implications which can move forward to community transformation issues among various people groups.

 

Congregations must teach an integrative theology of earth stewardship as it relates to the sacred trust we have from God for all of His creation. This sacred trust includes giving people water for today’s thirst, and the water of eternal life after which they will never again thirst for spiritual meaning and significance.

 

A Key Implication, Action, and Methodology

 
All these trends call for the continual development of Christian people to be leaders of the next generation of missional action in God’s world. They may require a new set of skills to be developed. They definitely call for continual learning. They call for sensitivity to diverse age groups, families/households, immigrants, religions, perspectives on time, patterns of communication, organizational styles, Southern Hemisphere Christianity, and natural resources.

 
A key implication is leadership. A key action is learning. A key methodology is dialogue.

December 18, 2007

Is Christmas a Pagan Holiday?

Below is a post from last year, still relevant for today.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Off and on I have heard people say that the date on which we celebrate Christ’sTree_1 birth is somehow connected to paganism. Some say that early believers chose to celebrate Christ’s birth on December 25 as an alternative to a pagan festival, or that, far worse, early believers blended a pagan festival on that same date with a celebration of Christ’s birth. Some folks, of course, don’t care what the origins of celebrating Christ’s birth on December 25 are because they feel what matters is what we do now with the date, not what happened back then. And others seem to think that sharing a date with a pagan festival makes Christmas pagan in and of itself.

William J. Tighe, Professor of History at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA has a very helpful article on this whole issue in Touchstone  magazine. Tighe writes, “… it is perhaps interesting to know that the choice of December 25th is the result of attempts among the earliest Christians to figure out the date of Jesus’ birth based on calendrical calculations that had nothing to do with pagan festivals.”

I will not summarize Tighe’s explanation of how the early Christians attempted to calculate the date of Christ’s birth here, but I will note that many Christians celebrated the birth of Christ on December 25th BEFORE the date was used as a pagan festival by Emperor Aurelian.

So the next time you hear someone say that Christmas has some kind of pagan origin, point them to this article by Tighe.

UPDATE:  See Dr. Walston's Coffee Talk  article about folks who get fussy about celebrating Christ's birth on Dec. 25 due to the fact that his actual birthdate is disputed.  His article contains a link to Daniel B. Wallace's article about the dating Christ's birth at Bible.org, which you can go directly to here .

July 10, 2007

Changing of the Free Methodist Guard

Moments ago the Free Methodist Church of North America  made big changes at its General Conference in Spring Arbor, MI.  The big changes involve reducing the number of bishops from four to three, electing a "lead" bishop, David Kendall (who came in last year to fill and finish exiting bishop Krober's term), and electing the other two: David Roller and Matt Thomas.

My present bishop, the one who leads my area, Joe James, a fine leader, was not re-elected.  I miss him already.  It will be an interesting transition for the FMC now that the only returning bishop does not have even one full term of experience under his belt.

David Roller is presently the Latin America Area Director for Free Methodist World Missions and has a great reputation as a missionary and leader.  Matt Thomas is someone I know nothing about.

Which bishop will be in charge of my area?  My guess is Kendall.  As lead bishop, Kendall will most likely be headquartered at the FM World Ministries Center, which is in Indianapolis, which is in my conference.  Thus it would be natural for him to preside over my area. 

 

Change can be very painful.  This one certainly is.  Even when change is needed and the right path is chosen can still be painful.  But when the wrong path is chosen, the pain goes beyond that of personal adjustment to long-term negative consequences.  I don't know if our delegates at General Conference did the right thing or not in making these huge changes.  Only God knows.  But whatever be the case, painful change is here.

Let's pray for our new Bishops, for retiring bishop Snyder, and for outgoing bishop Joe James.

April 24, 2007

Evel Knieval Gets Saved

Did you see him on the Hour of Power?  I don't normally watch Robert250pxevel_knievel_1968_meridian_s_2 Schuller's program, but Saturday night as I was flipping through the channels in Clay City, IN, I heard Evel Knieval's name mentioned and stopped.  I remembered him from the '70's, wanted the Evel Knieval stunt cycle as a child, and was curious as to just what in the world he was doing on the Hour of Power?  A stunt?

Well, there was the daredevil himself on the platform of the Crystal Cathedral in California.  He spoke heartily of his very recent conversion to Christ.  His  testimony was beautiful and passionate even as he rambled and at times struggled for the right words.  And then, right there on national television, Evel was baptized.  It was an inspiring moment, and probably the most clear presentation of the gospel heard on the Hour of Power for a long time.

Seizing the moment after Evel's testimony and baptism, Robert A. Schuller offered baptism to anyone in the congregation that wanted it.  I watched as some 400 people spontanteusly lined up for baptism. 

Here is my question for discussion: should churches offer on-the-spot baptism to people without first requiring basic teaching and interviews of the candidates?  Here are a few problems with offering baptism with no teaching and evaluation of those interested.  (1)  Some folks will be baptized who greatly misunderstanding baptism - thinking it is a requirement to get to heaven.  (2) Some folks, misunderstanding its once-for-all nature, will come forward for their 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc. baptism for whatever reason.  I've met people who want to get rebaptized every time they feel guilty about something. (3) Some will request it without evidence of a genuine conversion.  Schuller asked each candidate, I believe, if they had faith in Christ before baptizing them, but that is a far cry from taking the time with them to see if they grasp at all what it truly means to have faith in Christ.

For certain, proper catechesis of baptismal candidates never eliminates the possibility of people getting baptized who should not be, but it certainly reduces their numbers and upholds the integrity of the sacrament.

What do you think?  Should churches offer baptism with no catechesis?







December 19, 2006

Is Christmas a Pagan Holiday?

Off and on I have heard people say that the date on which we celebrate Christ’sTree_1 birth is somehow connected to paganism. Some say that early believers chose to celebrate Christ’s birth on December 25 as an alternative to a pagan festival, or that, far worse, early believers blended a pagan festival on that same date with a celebration of Christ’s birth. Some folks, of course, don’t care what the origins of celebrating Christ’s birth on December 25 are because they feel what matters is what we do now with the date, not what happened back then. And others seem to think that sharing a date with a pagan festival makes Christmas pagan in and of itself.

William J. Tighe, Professor of History at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA has a very helpful article on this whole issue in Touchstone  magazine. Tighe writes, “… it is perhaps interesting to know that the choice of December 25th is the result of attempts among the earliest Christians to figure out the date of Jesus’ birth based on calendrical calculations that had nothing to do with pagan festivals.”

I will not summarize Tighe’s explanation of how the early Christians attempted to calculate the date of Christ’s birth here, but I will note that many Christians celebrated the birth of Christ on December 25th BEFORE the date was used as a pagan festival by Emperor Aurelian.

So the next time you hear someone say that Christmas has some kind of pagan origin, point them to this article by Tighe.

December 06, 2006

Clueless in Academia

I was scrolling through Dr. Al Mohler's blog  entries for this past November and stumbled upon three posts that caught my attention with a common theme: cluelessness. Socrates_1

Mohler discusses Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology at Harvard University, who shared some of his views on the univeristy's plan to offer a course on "faith and reason." Pinker wrote,

My second major reservation concerns the "Reason and Faith" requirement. First, the word "faith" in this and many other contexts, is a euphemism for "religion." An egregious example is the current administration's "faith-based initiatives," so-named because it is more palatable than "religion-based initiatives." A university should not try to hide what it is studying in warm-and-fuzzy code words.

Second, the juxtaposition of the two words makes it sound like "faith" and "reason" are parallel and equivalent ways of knowing, and we have to help students navigate between them. But universities are about reason, pure and simple. Faith--believing something without good reasons to do so--has no place in anything but a religious institution....

In another November post Mohler discusses the idea of E.O. Wilson to unite secular scientists and evangelical Christians together in a new form of environmentalism.  Problem is, E.O. Wilson thinks evangelicals are idiots, but needs their numbers and drive to achieve his goals.  Wilson's worldview is made clear:

The impact of the theory of evolution by natural selection, nowadays grown very sophisticated (and often referred to as the Modern Synthesis), has been profound. To the extent it can be upheld, and the evidence to date has done so compellingly, we must conclude that life has diversified on Earth autonomously without any kind of external guidance.

We MUST conclude ...?

In the third November post Mohler discusses Elton John, who is no friend of Christianity.  Elton would "ban all religion" if it were in his power to do so, for
"It turns people into hateful lemmings and it's not really compassionate."

The theme of cluelessness is evident within all three of these posts.  Pinkerton believes that faith involves believing without  good reason to do so.  Apprently he is unaware of the countless books on Christian apologetics that have converted, strengthened and emboldened countless lives, as these texts set forth logical, compelling reasons and evidences to believe all aspects of the Christian faith.  Wilson has bought into the secular belief that evolution is an irrefutable law of nature, not a theory with huge problematic holes exposed by authors like Philip Johnson and many, many scientists whose books take evoluvtion head-on with compelling reason and evidence.  Elton John's ignorance is just as profound, as he is unaware that conservative Christians statistically give more, serve more, sacrifice more and testify to inward and outward transformation through Christ than any other people group on the earth.  Consider such books as What if Christ Had Never Been Born?  and Rodney Stark's The Victory of Reason: How Christianity Led to Freedom, Capitalism and Western Success  that demonstrate that the spread of Christianity led directly to the rise of medical science, compassion ministries, democracy, the strengthening of families, etc.  In short, the positive impact of Christianity outweighs by far some of the negative and sinful behavior of some folks who have claimed the name of Christ.

What accounts for this cluelessness?  Bubbles.  These three men, along with many others in academia and the "entertaining elite" only read, talk and discuss issues within their own circles or bubbles, never considering that outside the Ivy League or the Democratic Party or jet-setters that there are people with lives, long lists of reasons, materials and other things that point to the validity of Christianity. They operate as though all that is worth knowing is within their bubbles.  It is a terrible case intellectual inbreeding that promotes ignorance. 

May God keep Christians from the same kind of bubbles.  We need to be people who are firm in our convictions because we know and meaningfully dialogue with the world's ideas but have found the truth of Christ and the Bible spiritually and intellectually superior.

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