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Commentary: God wants younger, more diverse congregations
Sept. 20, 2006
A UMNS Commentary
By Bishop Robert Schnase*
The word “fruitfulness” keeps surfacing in church conversations these
days. Scripture is ripe with references to fields and harvests, vines and branches,
stumps and shoots, trees and figs. Indeed, the image of fruitfulness gives us
a powerful language for understanding effective ministry.
What is the fruitfulness God expects of us and of our churches? Fruitfulness
can take many forms. But we must be clear about the fundamental change we seek
to make in human life through our ministry. The most important fruits are growing,
vibrant congregations that are changing lives through Jesus Christ.
I was asked recently to imagine how the church
would be different in five years if all our goals, hopes and aspirations
were realized.
I thought of a
growing number of healthy, strong congregations of all sizes ?? congregations
clear about their mission, making disciples for Jesus Christ, and making a
difference in the world. I thought of confident congregations exhibiting radical
hospitality, passionate worship, intentional faith development, risk-taking
mission and extravagant generosity.
Then, I realized these hopes could be made clear
in very basic terms ?? churches
with more people, younger people and more diverse people.
For some reason, we often hesitate to express this so directly. But if we
believe that the Christian faith can help people grow in relationship to God,
if we believe it can make a difference in the world, why would we not hope
that more people experience the faith?
I pray for more people worshipping God in churches
and homes ?? more
people studying God’s word in classes and retreats, more people offering
themselves in service and mission to others locally and around the world, and
more people speaking out for justice on behalf of the vulnerable. I pray that
through our churches, more people will learn the stories of the faith, that
more people will grow in their understanding and experience of forgiveness,
compassion and love¬¬, and that more people will feel the sustaining
presence of Christ through times of joy and grief, of decision and hardship.
We should never apologize that we pray for and work for more people to experience
and share our ministry in Christ’s name.
Imagine a church that decides reaching younger people is vital. Does it form
a new committee? Maybe.
But what if the task of rethinking ministry with younger people became the
mission of every committee of the church?
We must become intentional about adapting all our ministries and our methods to become more relevant and helpful to younger
people. We
must invite younger
people into leadership and ministry with us. We have much to learn. But would
God have it any other way than for us to give our hearts full of Christ’s
love to those in succeeding generations?
So many congregations no longer match the communities they serve. Recently,
a church discovered that nearly 10 percent of households in its community were
headed by single mothers. But single moms composed only about 1 percent of
that congregation. Knowing just that much information gives us a clear notion
of how God might be calling that church to focus its ministry with greater
intentionality toward single moms.
The more a congregation slips away from matching
the community it serves ?? in
terms of median age, ethnic diversity, income and educational levels ?? the
more it turns in on itself and the smaller its impact for the purposes of Christ.
I realize that fruitfulness evidenced by more
people, younger people and more diverse people is no easy expectation. But
consider this
illustration that
another bishop recently shared with me. She explained, “Sometimes you
have to climb up the tree, shinny out onto a limb, and reach far out into the
branches to get just one apple. Other times, you simply have to shake the trunk
and pick up what falls. And at other times, an abundance of apples falls around
you without even shaking the tree.”
I cannot vouch for the accuracy of this description
of harvesting apples. But what the story suggests about discipleship is true.
I have been in situations
where every small step toward fruitful ministry in Christ’s name came
slowly and at the cost of great effort, careful strategy and high risk. I have
also been in situations where the harvest was so evident that I now ask God’s
forgiveness that we did not do more in a season of readiness.
In many places, the challenges of expanding ministry are great. But remembering
the Parable of the Sower, let us pray for those places where the ground is
hard, the weeds are thick and the rocks are real. Let us pray for those places
where soil is good and the conditions are ripe, that pastors and laity may
see the opportunities God entrusts to us.
Let us pray that in every place, pastors and congregations may see possibilities
and people whom God calls us to serve. And finally, let us pray that we may
trust the ultimate end of the story in which the hundredfold harvest is promised
as we work faithfully with an eye toward fruitfulness for the purposes of Christ.
* Schnase is resident bishop of the Missouri Area of the United Methodist
Church. This article originally appeared in Leading Ideas, an online newsletter
of the Lewis Center for Church Leadership of Wesley Theological Seminary and
available at www.churchleadership.com.
News media contact: Linda Green, (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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