Attendance Decline-It’s a GOOD Thing.

(Note the emphasis on GOOD, as in Martha Stewart’s famous catch phrase. Try to keep up. The joke’s not as funny if I have to explain it).
I will start, I think, a series of indeterminate length on church attendance in general. The most common question I hear among Christian Ghetto ex-patriots is “Do we really need to attend church?” this question is not often voiced by those with no Christian history – after all, we have cemented permanently in our culture the idea that religious people of all faiths attend church services of some variety, and the more often you attend, the more devoted you are to your particular belief set. But corporate Christianity refugees are wondering if, when, and how to even approach being part of a community of faith. There are a lot of really good reasons for this, and we’ll get to some of them as we go along (feel free to post the ones I miss in the comments).

But first we must discuss a recent cultural trend – the overall decline in church attendance in America. For about 10 years now I have been hearing this statistic in one form or another – a majority of Christian church denominations in America are plateaued or declining. What this means. or course, is that their attendance (or number of adherents, depending on the methodology of the group or denomination) is decreasing. If you slice the stats by generation, the younger they are, the less likely they are to regularly attend a church (www.barna.org has lots of these kinds of statistics).

This, or course, has led to a panic at the disco.

The customer IS the company

Back to Church topics – long gap – apologies – I didn’t say 60 CONSECUTIVE days :-).

I was reading an article a friend sent me about a super-hip new wave online t-shirt company called threadless. It was sent to me in the context of “the missional church could learn a lot from these guys.” And I agreed – both on the positive and the negative. Let me explain. No, there is too much. Let me sum up (thank you Mandy Pantnkin):

Threadless comes up with new t-shirt art by holding online design contests that their community votes on. The winning designs get printed, the designer gains strett cred and web immortality, and the shirts sell out because the consumers of the product are directly involved in creating the product. Super-cool and a great online community they have developed over there.

What will I tell them?

WARNING: Feeling fairly philosophical – this may get a bit prose-y  :-).

My twin daughters are just past 2 years old. They have another sister or maybe a brother joining them next year. And I’ve been thinking about what I will tell them.

About what? About everything. About life and death and pain and joy and hope and despair and the meaning of it all. Life comes comes at you pretty fast (thank your Ferris Bueller). It’s easy in the middle of being a husband and an employee and a father and a son and a citizen and another face on the planet to forget that we are written into the great Story of time. And it can’t be told without us.

Don’t Invite Jesus Into Your Life

...there are many variations on the theme, but they are all similar to the plea "invite Jesus into your life" or "make Jesus the Lord of your life." There are even clever diagrams we are taught to draw, showing Jesus on the throne of your life as opposed to you being on the throne of your life and how bad that is and if Jesus is your co-pilot, you should switch seats" (thank you bumper sticker and church sign dudes).