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Growth
of A New Church
Relying upon
national research conducted over the past several years, Barna profiles a group of more
than 20 million adults throughout the nation labeled
“revolutionaries.” He noted that although measures
of traditional church participation in activities such as worship
attendance, Sunday school, prayer, and Bible reading have remained
relatively unchanged during the past twenty years, the Revolutionary
faith movement is growing rapidly.
“These
are people who are less interested in attending church than in being
the church,” he explained. “We found that there is
a significant distinction in the minds of many people between the local
church – with a small ‘c’ – and
the universal Church – with a capital
‘C’. Revolutionaries tend to be more focused on
being the Church, capital C, whether they participate in a
congregational church or not.”
“A
common misconception about revolutionaries,” he continued,
“is that they are disengaging from God when they leave a
local church. We found that while
some people leave the local church and fall away from God altogether,
there is a much larger segment of Americans who are currently leaving
churches precisely because they want more
of God in their life but cannot get what they need from a local church.
They have decided to get serious about their faith by piecing together
a more robust faith experience. Instead of going to church, they have
chosen to be the Church, in a way that harkens back to the Church
detailed in the Book of Acts.”
Big
Changes In the Making
One of the most
eye-opening portions of the research contained in the book describes
what the faith community may look like twenty years from now. Using
survey data and other cultural indicators he has been measuring for
more than two decades, Barna
estimates that the local church is presently the primary form of faith
experience and expression for about two-thirds of the
nation’s adults. He projects that by 2025
the local church will lose roughly half of its current
“market share” and that alternative forms of faith
experience and expression will pick up the slack. Importantly, Barna’s studies do not
suggest that most people will drop out of a local church to simply
ignore spirituality or be freed
up from the demands of church life. Although
there will be millions of people who abandon the entire faith community
for the usual reasons – hurtful experiences in churches, lack
of interest in spiritual matters, prioritizing other dimensions of
their life – a growing percentage of church dropouts will be
those who leave a local church in order to intentionally increase their
focus on faith and to relate to God through different means.
That growth is
fueling alternative forms of organized spirituality, as well as
individualized faith experience and expression. Examples of these new
approaches include involvement in a house church, participation in
marketplace ministries, use
of the Internet to satisfy various faith-related needs or interests,
and the development of unique and intense connections with other people
who are deeply committed to their pursuit of God.
Seven
Passions of the Revolutionary
In the effort
to increase their obedience and faithfulness to God, Barna discovered that
Revolutionaries are characterized
by what he identified as a set of spiritual passions – seven
specific emphases that drive their quest for God and a biblical
lifestyle. Although these are areas
of spiritual development that most local churches address,
millions of adults who are the most serious about their faith in God
were the ones least likely to be satisfied by what their local church
was delivering in terms of resources, opportunities, evaluation and
developmental possibilities. The consequence is that millions of
committed born again Christians are choosing to advance their
relationship with God by finding avenues of growth and service apart
from a local church.
Asked if this
meant that the Revolution he describes is simply a negative reaction to
the local church, he suggested that most Revolutionaries go through
predictable phases in their spiritual journey in which they initially
become dissatisfied with their local church experience, then attempt to
change things so their faith walk can be more fruitful. The result is
that they undergo heightened frustration over the inability to
introduce positive change, which leads them to drop out of the local
church altogether, often in anger. But
because this entire adventure was instigated by their love for God and
their desire to honor Him more fully, they finally transcend their
frustration and anger by creating a series of connections that allow
them to stay close to God and other believers without involvement in a
local church.
One of the
hallmarks of the Revolution of faith is how different it is for each
person. “It would be wrong to assume that all Revolutionaries
have completely turned their back on the local church,” the
researcher stated. “Millions of Revolutionaries are active in
a local church, although most of them supplement that relationship with
participation in a variety of faith-related efforts that have nothing
to do with their local church. The defining attribute of a
Revolutionary is not whether they attend church, but whether they place
God first in their lives and are willing to do whatever it takes to
facilitate a deeper and growing relationship with Him and other
believers. Our studies persuasively indicate that the vast majority of American churches are
populated by people who are lukewarm spiritually. Emerging
from those churches are people dedicated to becoming Christ-like
through the guidance of a congregational form of the church, but who
will leave that faith center if it does not further such a commitment
to God. They then find or create alternatives that allow that
commitment to flourish.”
How do most
Revolutionaries justify calling themselves devoted disciples of Christ while
distancing themselves from a local church? “Many of them
realize that someday they will stand before a holy God who will examine
their devotion to Him. They could take the safe and easy route of
staying in a local church and doing the expected programs and
practices, but they also recognize that they will not be able to use a
lackluster church experience as an excuse for a mediocre or unfulfilled
spiritual life. Their spiritual depth is not the responsibility of a
local church; it is their own responsibility. As a result, they decide
to either get into a local church that enhances their zeal for God or
else they create alternatives that ignite such a life of obedience and
service. In essence, these are people who have stopped going to church
so they can be the Church.”
Challenges
and Opportunities
While the
Revolution brings with it some very promising qualities – an
intense pursuit of godliness, new networks of believers supporting each
other, heightened financial giving to ministry endeavors, greater
sensitivity to the presence of God in the world, a greater sense of
freedom to be a genuine disciple in the midst of a secular society
– Barna also
pointed out that the Revolution brings great challenges to those who
choose that pathway.
“There
is the danger of exposure to unbiblical or heretical teaching. There is
the possibility of experiencing isolation from a true community of
believers and the accountability and support that can provide. It could
become easier to hoard one’s treasures rather than giving
generously. Some might find it more difficult to sustain a life of
worship without a place or means of expressing that praise to
God.”
Barna contends that
these are very serious challenges faced by Revolutionaries –
but that they are no more serious than the threats to the spiritual
health of regular church-goers.
“Objectively speaking, these are the very same problems that
we identify among people who rely upon the efforts of a local church to
facilitate their growth. We find plentiful evidence of unbiblical
teaching in small groups, Sunday school classes and other local church
venues. We know that few churched Christians give 4% of their income
back to God, much less 10%. We recognize that most people attending
worship services in a church sanctuary leave feeling that God was not
present and that they did not personally connect with the living God
through that experience. We have identified the relative absence of
accountability within most congregations. So
even though Revolutionaries face serious challenges in blossoming into
the fervent God-follower they hope to become, perhaps the main
difference is simply that they have a wider range of options for
achieving their faith goals than do people who are solely focused on
faith delivered through a local church. In either case, it is
ultimately up to the individual to make sure that they have their
spiritual priorities right, that they are investing themselves in
activities that draw them closer to God, and that they stay focused on
pleasing God more than themselves or other people.”
The explosion
of Revolutionaries in the
An
Introduction to the Revolution
Having written
three-dozen previous books about faith and culture, Barna feels that this book may
ultimately wind up being the most significant volume he has written. In
the course of doing his customary national research studies, he
stumbled onto the Revolution. “Having been personally
frustrated by the local church, I initiated several research projects
to better understand what other frustrated followers of Christ were
doing to maintain their spiritual edge. What emerged was a realization that there is a
large and rapidly-growing population of Christ-followers who are truly
want to be like the church we read about in the book of Acts. We began
tracking their spiritual activity and found that it is much more robust
and significant than we ever imagined – and, frankly, more
defensible than what emerges from the average Christian church. But,
because the Revolution is neither organized nor designed to create an
institutional presence, it typically goes undetected.”
Revolution, published by Tyndale House, is what the
author calls “a brief introduction to the most important
spiritual movement of our age.” He believes that fifty years
from now historians will look back at this period and label it one of
the most significant periods in
Source
of This Material
The Barna Group, Ltd. (which
includes its research division, The Barna
Research Group) is a privately held, for-profit corporation that
conducts primary research, produces audio, visual and print media, and
facilitates the healthy development of leaders, children, families and
Christian ministries. Located in
© The Barna Group, Ltd, 2005.
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