In this first article, we’ll focus on some of the basic demographics of who took the survey and their responses to 10 key questions about their feelings toward returning to church.
All in Church
In this first article, we’ll focus on some of the basic demographics of who took the survey and their responses to 10 key questions about their feelings toward returning to church.
I’ve heard stories of churches and ministers figuring out how to take steps forward despite the challenges. I have also seen churches and ministries frozen, and that concerns me greatly.
The elders in most of our churches today are deeply devout individuals with amazing spiritual maturity.
The answer is not for your female ministers to be less; it’s for all of us to lead in such a way that only God’s name can be praised.
The pandemic is ushering us into liminal space – one that differs from the immediate past but is not yet whatever the future may eventually be.
Despite what many organizational leadership books suggest, leadership – especially ministry – is much more than just being a non-anxious presence.
When I asked my fellow female ministers what they want their elders to know, here are a few of the responses they shared.
They wanted to go beyond simply writing a monthly support check to local and foreign missions or benevolent efforts. They wanted to put their Christianity to work.
The fact is the church sits in the middle of a world needing restoration, and our next generation sits in the middle of the church.
It’s 2020 and I have to acknowledge that our credibility, along with how we tell our story as a church family in this digital age, hasn’t merited the attention it justly deserves.
The most painful thing we do is talk with husbands or wives whose marriages are not being healed.
Everyone knows each other in rural towns, but I have come to know that there is a difference between knowing of someone and actually knowing them.
I think it’s time to think creatively about how to reopen churches in a way that honors both God and neighbor.
Is going back to what used to be really possible? And – listen closely, church leaders – is going back to what used to be really desirable?
Is there something we are not experiencing now (online)? If so, what is “it”? Given that “it” comes with potential costs, how do we decide if and when “it” is worth it?
As if things couldn’t get any weirder, it seems that coronavirus is proving to be quite the surprise on-ramp for gender inclusion.
What is church supposed to look like when the primary expressions of congregational life and ministry and mission are no longer available to us?
If you share a house with family members or roommates, then do family church instead of (or in addition to) online church.
One of the most powerful spiritual gifts a leader can possess is the ability to make each member feel essential.