Written by Brady Boyd
In the past ten years, I have witnessed remarkable changes in the local church and the coming decade will usher in even more transformations.While the ancient Sacraments will remain, everything else is up for debate. How we worship, when we gather, what is said, who is leading and where the gatherings happen will all undergo scrutiny and debate.
In the past ten years, I have witnessed remarkable changes in the local church and the coming decade will usher in even more transformations.While the ancient Sacraments will remain, everything else is up for debate. How we worship, when we gather, what is said, who is leading and where the gatherings happen will all undergo scrutiny and debate.
I have four predictions for the next decade of
local church.
1. The places where we gather will become
smaller
Every social and cultural trend is leaning toward the
smaller, more intimate gatherings and away from the stadium worship experience.
Mega churches that purposely create numerous worship settings that promote
intimacy and community will see the most significant growth. There will
always be a group of church people who will come to the big building, but if we
want to see significant growth among skeptics and seekers, we must create less
threatening venues for them to explore the issues of faith.
2. The church will be launched into real
mission
The local church is hungry to embrace the mission
of the New Testament and this will only increase in the next decade. This next
generation is tired of the hype of events and is eager to give their lives to
something that requires sacrifice and results in biblical justice. They
want to get their hands in the dirt of humanity and see real change in the
communities where they live. They will come to the church building for some of
the attractional events, but will get disillusioned quickly if these events do
not result in real opportunities to serve their world.
3. The church will return to its ancient
roots
If it’s new, it’s probably not truth. If its truth,
it’s probably not new. I believe the ancient, yet simple recipe of local
church will return. We will gather often, read the Scriptures, worship
intently, pray fervently, be led by servants, live authentically, and honor the
Sacraments. For sure, we will continue to be creative and inventive, but
not at the expense of the ancient structure which has transcended all
generations for over 2000 years.
4. The church will return to wonder and awe
The churches that embrace the miraculous nature of God will see the most
growth and have the most influence in the coming decade. Good preaching, trendy
stage sets, and clever videos will not be enough in the next ten years because
people want to see God intervene more and more in the affairs of the earth with
miracles and healings. Sound theology must prevail and we must not return
to our sloppy Charismatic tendencies, but we must also embrace the mysterious
and risky nature of God and not be afraid of wonder and awe. While the Holy
Spirit may be unpredictable, the results are always predictable – people will
find God, people will be healed and people will discover real freedom.
No comments:
Post a Comment