Eight out of ten students
participate in church during their teenage years, but most of them will take a
permanent detour from active faith at some point soon after they get their
driver’s licenses. That’s right: only two out of ten of those celebrated
teenage converts maintain Christian belief and practice between their teens and
the end of their twenties.
The vast majority will
cross over to the other side: pronouncing Christianity boring, irrelevant, and
out of touch. We’ve tried too long to
educate their minds instead of engaging their lives. The more we try to
change the way we do church so this generation will join us, the more they seem
to stay away. Although we’ve tried many ways to keep church from being boring,
our best efforts are doing little to improve the image of the church.
Some of us are convinced
the system is fundamentally flawed because we don’t know what our goal is. We creatively
market our programs, design innovative and relevant productions, and organize
events that will capture the student imagination so we can get them into
church. What if our goal should be not to get them into church? What if the
same energy could be applied to mobilize them to be the church?
We have discovered a short
window of time during the teenage years when students need to experience
something beyond church as a spectator sport. If a young person is not challenged by hands-on personal ministry,
their faith will likely be side-tracked and even sabotaged. For some, that
hands-on experience is a mission project across the ocean. For others, it’s a
role in a family production or a place behind the ladle at a soup kitchen.
Students moving from the
teenage years to their own college and post-college lives want to try out what
they’ve been learning. They don’t want to practice being better church people
for when they grow up; they want to start now. We all know that our faith grows
when our faith is challenged to do something (for Christ).
Reggie Joiner
Founder, ReThink
Quote from Unchristian by David Kinnaman and Fermi
Project (Baker Books, 2007) pg. 142-143
Original title as ‘Do Something’
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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