Saturday, April 30, 2022


Martin Buber said: “All real meaning in life is in meeting”. What’s the most revealing meeting at church? Read More
This articles assumes that every church has a prayer meeting that is open to the church members and attendees. None of churches with which I am acquainted have such a meeting.  They may have a prayer group that meets weekly but its meetings are generally closed. One of the reasons that these churches have no prayer meeting is that prayer meetings have lost the popularity that they once had, largely in part to--you guessed it--poor attendance. So prayer meetings may only be the most revealing meeting in churches that have prayer meetings.

As Pastoral Credibility Erodes, How Can We Respond?


Perhaps God wants to reshape our view of authority.


Pastors do not hold the place of community esteem they once did. According to Barna’s State of Pastors report (2017), only about one in five Americans thinks of a pastor as very influential in their community, and about one in four doesn’t think they’re very influential or influential at all. The truth is, influential or not, many Americans don’t want to hear what pastors have to say. In 2016, Barna found that only 21 percent of Americans consider pastors to be “very credible” on the “important issues of our day.” Even among those Barna defined as evangelicals, the number only rises to slightly over half. Think about it: Nearly half of American evangelicals don’t see their pastors as being an authoritative voice for navigating current affairs.

In a new study Barna and I did in 2020 for my book The Resilient Pastor, we learned that the picture might be getting worse. Only 23 percent of Americans said they “definitely” see a pastor as a “trustworthy source of wisdom.” Even among Christians, that number only rises to a mere 31 percent. Less than a third of Christians said they “definitely” consider a pastor a “trustworthy source of wisdom.” As you might expect, a mere 4 percent of non-Christians think of pastors in this way. That’s a pretty bleak picture. Read More

Image Credit: Anson Chan

Unrealistic Expectations: 4 Things Pastors Need to Stop Talking About


As a church leader, you’ve felt the expectations mount over the last few years.

You’ve found yourself weighing in on complicated issues for which you had pretty much zero training.

Epidemiology, opening and closing buildings according to public health guidelines, masking v. not masking, vaccines, deep political social divides, conspiracy theories, and ideological divisions are all things church leaders are expected to weigh in on and navigate.

All of this has been utterly exhausting.... Read More

What Happens When a New Denomination Launches?


Key Points:
  • The Global Methodist Church, a theologically conservative breakaway denomination, has set May 1 as its official start date.
  • However, it will take time for any potential separation from The United Methodist Church to take place
  • Don’t expect The United Methodist Church to look much different come May 2.

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (May 1, 2022) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

In his admonitions to Peter in today’s gospel reading, Jesus ties loving him to helping others grow as his followers. How many of us can honestly say that we are doing that, helping others to live their lives according to his teachings and example?

The Scripture reading for this Sunday is John 21: 1-19 Jesus Appears to Seven Disciples.

The homily is titled “Breakfast Beside the Sea of Galilee”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/04/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_30.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Friday, April 29, 2022

Sunday School Paused During the Pandemic. Will It Come Back?


A new report shows dramatic disruptions to religious education classes as fewer attend or volunteer.

When Tracey Fixen volunteered to serve as the Sunday school superintendent for her church, she had a clean slate. There had been no religious education programing at Our Savior’s Lutheran in Colefax, North Dakota.

“I started saying, ‘We’re going to watch videos so we have some sort of adult education,’” she said. The 200-person church now offers lessons during a coffee hour prior to the Sunday service each week.

Many of the materials they have are “outdated,” Fixen said—it’s not in the budget to invest in new ones right now—but putting on some kind of Sunday school is more than a lot of churches are doing.

As US church attendance remains stagnant and congregations move toward a focus on Bible studies or small groups, religious education classes on Wednesday nights or Sunday mornings have largely fallen away.

Plus, those extra gatherings were put on hold during the COVID-19 pandemic. Will they ever come back? Read More

Before the COVID-19 pandemic a number of surveys of Americans who identified themselves as Christians found that a large number of them were biblically-illiterate, theologically-illiterate, and poorly-discipled. Among the reasons for this state of affairs was the disorganized, scattershot approach of many churches to the discipling of new believers and the ongoing formation of church members and attendees. The pandemic's disruption of religious education classes has exacerbated the problem. Churches have also not given enough emphasis to spiritual formation for youth and adults. A pastor's sermon, as important as it may, be cannot by itself carry the weight of forming church members and attendees as disciples of Jesus. 

The Encore Problem


In Nashville, it's called the encore problem. Here's how the story goes. An artist comes to Nashville with a boxload of songs and dreams. They've been writing songs over the course of their life and if they're lucky, they get a record deal. They put their best material on their first album -- their best songs written over years of perfecting their craft. If they're a little more lucky, their album sells well and the record company wants another record.

What does the artist do now? All of their best songs are on the first album. Where are they going to get more songs? Do they have the talent and the discipline to produce another album? Can they do it again? Can the artist duplicate the depth and honesty that required a lifetime to write over the next six months?

Once you have a hit, what do you do for an encore?

No one had a bigger encore problem than the early followers of Christ. What do you do after the resurrection? How do you top what Jesus did on Easter?

That had to be the question on every disciple's mind as they gathered with Jesus before the Ascension. What do we do now? Are we going back to the way things used to be? Is Jesus going to start teaching again? Are we going to walk around following Him again? Are we going to find one place and stay there? And what will we do as disciples?

Jesus was blunt in His answer -- GO! Go and make disciples of every people group in the world. Go! Read More

Planting Glocal Churches for the World


As followers of Christ we have been called to make disciples and to bring life and hope to a world of decay, disease, and death. The New Testament is a wonderful example to us of the kind of disciples that are needed for our world. As we read the Sermon on the Mount and follow the ministry of Jesus, we cannot escape what he did and how he engaged the poor and hurting while, at the same time, dealing with the rich and religiously pious. Jesus engaged the whole person and all of society.

If we focus on societal transformation, converts are essential. However, now we are also defining their focus and their drive. This is how the early church operated in Antioch. This is also how the church in history grew, as it worked where there were tragedies and issues to be confronted. If we truly care about our communities and want to see all domains of society impacted by the church, then that should lead us to active engagement of churches within our communities and in the world at large.

What exactly does that look like? You can start churches, build buildings, see baptisms, start programs, and do mission work—and still see your community degenerate. If, on the other hand, you want to see radical transformation, then the church must be active. The primary place of ministry is in the domains of society, rather than the church on the corner. Engaging the world is the Father’s comprehensive response to a lost world.

When that happens, we are connected with God at a deep level in terms of his will, his mission, and his passion. he begins to multiply that which he wants to multiply, and he does so incredibly quickly. We need to plant churches that see what the Father sees, and watch those churches explode. Read More

A Challenge to Pastors, and 5 Reasons We Often Don’t Accept the Challenge


I realize many debate the nature of a call to gospel ministry, but God does call people to serve Him in unique ways. I know without question, for example, that God called me to preach His Word—and He still calls out people today.

At the same time, I’m convinced it’s the pastor’s responsibility to help believers recognize their calling, guide them toward obedience, and then launch them into His work. We must call out the called. Too often, though, we don’t fulfill that calling. Here’s why.... Read More

8 Ways to Maximize Bible Impact upon Your Life


Most believers want to grow spiritually. But often we stumble in our efforts to grow. Is there a key or a silver bullet that catalyzes our spiritual formation? Willow Creek’s Reveal survey of several thousand churches revealed not a silver bullet, but the number one catalyst that believers said contributed most to their growth: Bible reading and reflection. The great leader Nehemiah shows us 8 ways to engage with God’s Word for maximum inpact.

The wall had been built and Ezra gathered the people together and read God’s word to them. Chapter 8 shows us these 8 concepts. Read More

The Pastor Who Teaches the Congregation to Pray


Now, it came to pass, as He was praying in a certain place, when He ceased, that one of His disciples said to Him, ‘Lord, teach us to pray as John also taught the disciples.’ (Luke 11:1)

The Lord’s people want to pray.

Most of the Lord’s people want to learn to pray.

You are the one to teach them effective praying, pastor.

You do know how, don’t you?

Granted, none of us do it very well. Even the great Apostle Paul said, “We do not know how to pray as we should” (Romans 8:26). So, we are not saying any of us do it as well as we should, only that we know enough to be able to help others.

Here are some thoughts on the subject…. 
Read More
During his career Joe McKeever has served as a pastor, writer, director of missions, and cartoonist. Recently he donated his archives to New Orleans Baptist Seminary

Church of Scotland Ready to Approve Same-Sex Marriage

 


Traditionalist minority worry disagreement on the issue will make it harder to work together on mission.

The Church of Scotland—the largest Protestant church in the country—is another step closer to allowing its ministers to officiate same-sex weddings.

The majority of the denomination endorsed draft legislation to let clergy marry same-sex couples, with 29 presbyteries in favor and 12 opposed. The proposal will go before its General Assembly gathering in Edinburgh in May for approval.

While clergy will not be required to marry same-sex couples, the move makes the minority who oppose the national church’s involvement in gay marriage worried about further division.

“There’s still a continued struggle within the Church of Scotland,” Mike Goss, a minister in the presbytery of Angus who opposed the change, told Premier Christian News. “The group of folk are called traditionalists, folk who stand by the Bible, we’re not going away. We’re still there.”

The traditionalist wing of the church has debated its response to the moves toward affirming same-sex marriage for years. Even as the Presbyterian church prepares to allow the practice, the denomination’s official stance recognizes the tension. Read More

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (April 30, 2022) Is Now Online


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Some folks can tell us the specific occasion on which they decided to follow Jesus. Others cannot pinpoint a particular day or time when they began to follow him, but they are able to say that his place in their lives has grown larger and larger. And if we look at their lives, it is evident that what they are telling us is indeed the case.

The Scripture reading for this Saturday is Acts 9: 1-20 Saul’s Conversion.

The homily is titled “Agents of God’s Love.”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/04/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_29.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Thursday, April 28, 2022

What's On The Web: 'Global Methodist Church Launches, Though African Leaders Wait' And More


While departing US congregations begin the process of joining the new, leaner denomination, many conservatives in Africa are holding out for the much-delayed 2024 conference vote.

5 Essentials For Today’s Church To Thrive
The essential question is — Are people experiencing the difference in your church that you want them to experience?

5 Short-Timers Who Don’t Really Help Church Attendance
Sometimes, no matter what you do, people are going to leave. In my experience, there are five types of individuals who are most likely to not stay very long.

Half of churches say Sunday school, other education programs disrupted by pandemic
Overall, evangelical churches reported experiencing the least disruption to their educational programs, while mainline churches reported the most, followed by Catholic and Orthodox congregations.

Something That Recently Scared Me in Children’s Ministry
We are raising a generation of children who are biblically illiterate. This is reflected in the number of children who grow up and walk away from the church and even the faith.

Pastor: Define Small Group for Your Church
A word of caution--a group that is small in not necessarily a small group. What sets a small group apart from other groups is not just its size but its dynamics.

The Lost Art of Courage
Why holy boldness is not the same as being mean.

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Three Goals Every Church Must Have


Earlier this year, when the Winter Olympics were going on, I read about the most decorated Olympic athlete of all time, the swimmer Michael Phelps. It’s hard to overstate his Olympic dominance. He’s won a total of 28 medals (23 of them gold), which means that by himself, he’s won more medals than 91 nations have won in their entire histories.

But these victories weren’t without cost.

During his peak training season, Phelps would swim 12 miles a day. To fuel that intense training, he would eat 12,000 calories—daily. For over a decade, every moment of every day was structured around one goal—become the best Olympian ever. And to his credit, he did it.

Maybe Phelps will remain on top of the Olympian leaderboards forever. Probably not. One day many, if not all, of his records will be broken. Our children won’t recognize his name. And his medals will decay. But his example of discipline prompts a question for us.

Here’s how Paul put it In 1 Corinthians 9: If athletes train with this kind of intensity and discipline, how much more should we, God’s people, be willing to discipline our lives for the souls of people that last forever—the souls of our neighbors, our coworkers, and our grandkids?

This call to discipline impacts how the church should think about and organize itself in three ways. Read More

8 Easy and Affordable Children’s Ministry Area Update Ideas


It doesn’t take a huge budget to make a children's ministry area kids and parents will love.

Does your children’s ministry area fill the kids in your church with delight? Are they excited to show up every Sunday and spend an hour or two learning about Jesus in the space you’ve designed for them? Are you looking for fresh new ideas on how to decorate a children’s church?

Hopefully the answer is yes, but we know budget restrictions often mean updated children’s ministry areas get pushed to the backburner. Most churches want their children’s ministry space to be fresh and exciting for kids, but don’t always have the dollars to turn dreams into reality.

We understand! That’s why we’ve put together a few ideas for refreshing your children’s ministry area on a budget. Choose one, some, or all to give your space a boost and put a smile on your little ones’ faces. Read More

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (April 27, 2022) Is Now Online

All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Take a look at yourself in a mirror. What do you see? Do you see a building block? If you are a follower of Jesus, you are one. A priest too.

The Scripture reading for this Wednesday evening’s service is 1 Peter 2: 4- 12 Living Stones for God’s House.

The homily is titled “A Temple of Living Stones, Priests to Serve God.”

The link to this evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/04/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_27.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab. If a song begins partway through the video, move the slider back to the beginning of the video.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

What's On The Web: '5 Trends That Are Driving Deconstruction in the Church' And More


5 Trends That Are Driving Deconstruction in the Church
And what do we mean when we talk about deconstruction?

Consider the Least of These: Sternberg’s Three Principles of Love and COVID-19
Making a neighbor out of a stranger requires an intimacy that is impossible without Christ-like passion.

As Pastoral Credibility Erodes, How Can We Respond?
Perhaps God wants to reshape our view of authority.

Summer Church Activities: 18 Fun Fellowship Ideas
A great way to reach families is with summer church activities! After all, God doesn’t take a sabbatical during summer months. How can your church seize the unique evangelism and fellowship opportunities of the season?

In a Cluttered World, Do You Stand Out?
In a world of interchangeable people, you need to stand out.

Don’t Change People – Love Them
Our calling is to simply share The Gospel in love and truth, showcasing the character of Jesus through our everyday lives.

Spiritual Gifts Are How Jesus Continues His Ministry
Just like Jesus was doing the work when he walked around Jerusalem, so now he’s doing the work through us, by the Spirit.

Keep It Simple
Keeping it simple is excellent advice for discipling.

Jesus, Friend of Sinners
Do your words convey compassion or contempt for sinners—grace or grumbling?

Monday, April 25, 2022

What's On The Web: 'Disunity in the Church and Among Christians Destroys Evangelism' And More


You cannot be a fighting church and be effectively evangelistic. You cannot be snarky and argumentative on social media and be effectively evangelistic. That divides Christians before the watching world. Unity is imperative for the Great Commission.

Giving Everyone a Chance to Hear the Gospel
Finding common ground with people of every stripe.

2 Enemy Attacks We Must Recognize
Chuck Lawless takes a look at two particular attacks of Satan and his forces on believers, division and isolation, which he increasingly sees in local churches and in pastoral ministries today.

Christian Empathy Imagines Neighbors as Ourselves
Stories like the Good Samaritan foster an awareness of others that cures our near-sightedness.

Responding to Homosexuality: Culture of Care versus Culture of Cure
Review: ‘Still Time to Care’ by Greg Johnson

DHS Official Marcus Coleman Offers Security Tips for Houses of Faith Marking Holidays
Coleman advises congregations to keep a watchful eye as they open their doors for in-person gatherings marking special occasions, traditional worship and everyday work.

Mindless Worshippers
If our church services convey that worship starts when we start it and ends when we end it, if all worship resources and energies are spent preparing for and presenting a single hour on Sunday, if we aren’t exhorting our congregation and modeling for them how to worship not only when we gather but also when we disperse, then we are enabling mindless worshippers.

7 Truths About Following Jesus That Will Change Your Life
Let me share with you a passage from Peter’s second letter that changed my life forever. Following Jesus no longer seems like an impossibility. Now it feels like God is empowering me to do it!

Jon Owen’s 9 Instructions for Killing Sin
Too many people play with sin instead of putting it to death.

The Bible's Strange Reasons for Generosity: Giving is a Grace
In this series, we’re going to unpack four transformative reasons for generosity and then unpack Paul’s instructions for how we ought to give.

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Saturday Lagniappe: 'Spider-Man, Jesus, and the Ripple Effect of Free Will' And More


Every event in life, whether good or bad, is like a rock thrown into a pond—the ripples spread out and impact everything else around it.

Hope for the Doubting Thomases of the World
Culd it be that we’re selling Thomas short?

Why Churches Should Be Talking About the Environment
When did you last preach or hear a sermon on creation care or the stewardship of our natural resources for future generations?

Good Worship?
What does it mean to have a “good service”?

A Simple Method to Encourage Scripture Engagement
The 2022 American Bible Society survey finds that few Americans are engaged with Scripture. Joe Carter offers a suggestion for how to change that trend.

Jesus Who or Jesus Woohoo? Americans Share Opinions on Christ
Only 20% of the Americans who identified themselves as Christians and who were surveyed said that they found Jesus as Lord one of his most meaningful aspects. Does that explain why so many self-identified Christians in the United States do not act like disciples of Jesus?

South Carolina Property Ownership Is Scrambled Again
What one South carolina Supreme Court giveth, another taketh away.

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (April 24, 2022) Is Now Online

 


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Poor Thomas. He has long been remembered as a doubter. Hence the expression, “Don’t be such a doubting Thomas,” which is not heard much these days but was more common in the days of my youth.

I don’t believe that we should be too hard on Thomas. Many of us have hesitated before we took the first step on faith’s journey. Like Thomas we needed a nudge to take that step.

The Scripture reading for this Sunday is John 20: 19-31 Jesus Appears to Thomas.

The homily is titled “Believing What We Have Not Seen.”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/04/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_23.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Friday, April 22, 2022

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (April 23, 2022) Is Now Online

 


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

The Acts of the Apostles is the sequel to the Gospel of Luke. While it is separated from Luke’s Gospel in the New Testament, it forms a single narrative with Luke’s Gospel. It describes the events that followed the resurrection of Jesus from the dead. The Revised Common Lectionary used in a number of churches and denominations include passages from Acts among the Sunday readings during the season of Easter.

The Scripture reading for this Saturday is Acts 5:27-32 Peter and the Apostles Are Brought Again Before the High Council.

The homily is titled “Our Principal Task.”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/04/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_22.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Earth Day 2022 - April 22


It's about Creation Care

Today is the 52nd Earth Day since Earth Day was created to raise awareness of the effects of human activity on the environment.

The theme of this year's Earth Day is “Invest in our Planet” with a focus on encouraging individuals, businesses and world leaders to invest and switch to greener technologies and practices.

Every year, Earth Day offers people in the United States, Canada, and around the world a chance to focus on the planet and the challenges facing it. There is no dearth of issues to tackle.

Our oceans are filled with all kinds of plastic waste. A changing climate is affecting not only the diversity of animal life on the planet but sea levels, growing seasons, and the global food supply. It is producing serious droughts in some parts of the world.

We have seen in the last two years and more recently how a pandemic, a war in Ukraine, and an outbreak of avian flu can impact food production and distribution.

Climate change, if it is not addressed, will have greater consequences.

Christians have a positive role to play in environmental action as does everyone else. God has charged us with tending and caring for the planet which he has entrusted to our keeping.

The dominion that God has given us over the Earth is not license to despoil the Earth and foul it. God will one day renew the Earth but that knowledge is not reason to show indifference to how we treat our planet home in our generation.

What's On The Web: '10 Keys to Leading Change in a Church' And More


10 Keys to Leading Change in a Church
"We don't like change!!" is the death rattle of too many churches.

Women in Ministry Need More Than To Be Told They Can’t Be Pastors, Says Kristen Padilla
Whatever you believe about women holding leadership roles in the church, all women in ministry have needs that are easy to overlook. This was a point Kristen Padilla emphasized in a recent interview on the Stetzer ChurchLeaders Podcast.

We All Can Help Right Now. Three Simple Ways to Serve With Impact.
A congregation expanded their capacity to serve by starting with what they were throwing away.

The Theology We Claim versus the Theology We Live
It is not just that Christian leaders are living badly. Ordinary Christians are living that way too.

What We Do When We Pass the Peace
Not a meet and greet time but a physical gesture of reconciliation.

A Stressed Out Generation
Something to keep in mind when ministering to today's youth.

Is Your Kids’ Ministry Doing Childcare or Soul Care?
Jared Kennedy answers the question, "What are the most important things to do in children’s ministry?"

Thursday, April 21, 2022

4 Practical Steps for Recruiting a Church Plant Team


Preparing to start a church plant can be a daunting task. There are so many needs to fill and sometimes the enormity of it all can feel paralyzing. One of the keys to successfully planting a church is to recruit a good launch team. (Remember, in our language today, a launch team and a core group are a little bit different. A core team is the team at the onset of the church who typically sticks around for the long term, contributing once the church has already been started. A launch team is developed before the church plant and in preparation for the core group.)

Below are four tips for recruiting launch team members for an upcoming church plant. Read More

Most Churches Are Not Ready to Be Ethnically Diverse: What You Can Do to Prepare Your Church



Is it real? Is the United States really becoming more diverse? I’ve had well-meaning people ask me these questions. They don’t see ethnic diversity in their circles. First, it’s possible to live in an area of the country that is largely homogenous. Second, and more likely, it’s easy to miss the growth of ethnic diversity. If you happen to be in a place that is largely homogenous, then it’s unlikely to remain so in the future because the demographic landscape in the United States is reaching a tipping point. We will soon become minority white.

The graph below reveals a striking trend. My grandparents came of age when the United States was 87% white. My future grandchildren will grow up in a nation that is minority white. Sometime around 2040, the United States will become minority white, but preschools are already minority white. In short, diversity is spreading out and getting younger. Ethnic diversity was once limited to large urban centers (New York, San Francisco, and Miami). Now people of ethnic backgrounds are moving everywhere. Additionally, the birth rates of immigrants are driving much of this change, which is why this shift is now evident in preschools. Read More

Report: 26 Million Americans Stopped Reading the Bible Regularly During COVID-19


Sharp decline may be connected to drop in church attendance.

When researchers for the American Bible Society’s annual State of the Bible report saw this year’s survey statistics, they found it hard to believe the results. The data said roughly 26 million people had mostly or completely stopped reading the Bible in the last year.

We reviewed our calculations. We double-checked our math and ran the numbers again … and again,” John Plake, lead researcher for the American Bible Society, wrote in the 2022 report. “What we discovered was startling, disheartening, and disruptive.”

In 2021, about 50 percent of Americans said they read the Bible on their own at least three or four times per year. That percentage had stayed more or less steady since 2011.

But in 2022, it dropped 11 points. Now only 39 percent say they read the Bible multiple times per year or more. It is the steepest, sharpest decline on record.

According to the 12th annual State of the Bible report, it wasn’t just the occasional Scripture readers who didn’t pick up their Bibles as much in 2022 either. More than 13 million of the most engaged Bible readers—measured by frequency, feelings of connection to God, and impact on day-to-day decisions—said they read God’s Word less.

Currently, only 10 percent of Americans report daily Bible reading. Before the pandemic, that number was at about 14 percent.

Plake thinks the dramatic change shows how closely Bible reading—even independent Bible reading—is connected to church attendance. When regular services were interrupted by the pandemic and related health mandates, it impacted not just the corporate bodies of believers but also individuals at home. Read More



Wednesday, April 20, 2022

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Wednesday Evening (April 20, 2022) Is Now Online

 


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Loving one another is supposed to be the hallmark of a disciple of Jesus. How well does loving our brothers and sisters in Christ characterize our walk with our risen Lord? Would outsiders know that the members of our church are Christians by our love for each other?

The Scripture reading for this Wednesday evening’s service is 1 Peter 1: 13-25 A Call to Holy Living.

The homily is titled “Deeply with All Your Heart.”

The link to this evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/04/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for_20.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab. If a song begins partway through the video, move the slider back to the beginning of the video.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

What's On The Web: 'Simple Shifts: Are the Changes Your Church Needs to Make Really That Big?' And More


Do we really need to become a new church for a new normal?

Want Better Relationships with Young Donors? Change Your Priorities.
New research tells us what motivates younger generations' giving.

Do School Administrators Hate Small Groups?
Good news: Old calendar habits are hard to break.

To Dip or Not to Dip? The Case for Intinction
The scarcity of biblical instruction concerning the sacraments is particularly apparent in the case of the Lord’s Supper.

To Dip or Not to Dip? The Case Against Intinction
By the same logic, we should be reclining around a table as were Jesus and the disciples at the Last Supper when Jesus instuted the sacrament of the Lord's Supper.

Social Media: A Downgrade of Culture
Today, we often consider a cultural expression a “classic” simply because millions of people like it, not because it was necessarily good. How does this play into the phenomenon of social media? Do millions of people use it because it is good, or is it considered good because millions of people use it? Where does social media fit in the cultural spectrum?

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

What's On The Web: 'Christianity's Unanticipated Surprise' And More


Christianity is still so much here with us that it is utterly familiar and has receded from us so far that we do not know what it is.

Dear Pastor . . . Rely on Your Congregation in Ministry
When laypeople are taught that they are spiritual priests and understand their duties and opportunities, then the burdens and joys of the local church are shared more equitably and the church prospers. When laypeople are taught that they have spiritual gifts to exercise in the church, then they begin to realize how important their own contributions are to the ongoing work of Christ.

Four Things We Proclaim When We Take Communion
No matter what kinds of failures or struggles you bring into this moment. Jesus has saved you a seat at his table and invites you to sit with him.

3 Difficulties in Starting Groups After Easter
Allen White shares the ways that he discovered to keep 80 percent of new groups launched in the spring going through the summer and into the fall.

Prepare Kids for Uncertain Times
Teach kids that their enemy isn’t the unbeliever or the person who thinks differently, but rather it’s the devil.

Five Points to Consider When Telling Bible Stories to Children
When God made us, he hard-wired us to listen to, tell, repeat, create and absorb stories. It’s no surprise then, that when our creator chose to reveal himself to us, the book he gave us—the Bible—is packed full of profound, intriguing and emotionally-charged stories. And when he sent his son into the world as his ultimate revelation—guess what? He was a storyteller who kept vast crowds entranced by the powerful stories that we read in the Gospels.

Monday, April 18, 2022

What's On The Web: 'For Many, Easter Sunday Marks a Return to In-Person Worship' And More


For many U.S. Christians, this weekend marked the first time since 2019 that they gathered in person on Easter Sunday, a welcome chance to celebrate one of the year’s holiest days side by side with fellow congregants.

Five Ways to Reach and Keep Guests in a Post-COVID World
While culture was moving away from Christianity before COVID, the gap in a post-COVID world is even bigger. We certainly cannot expect the unchurched to attend because it’s the perceived cultural thing to do.

Rediscovering the Bible
Our research at American Bible Society supports what I discovered in this conversation: People today are starting at a different place than in the past but are still open to the teachings of Scripture.

Virtual Bathtub Baptisms Help Maryland Megachurch Gain Online Members during Pandemic
'This pandemic has pushed me to understand that there are things that I never thought we could do that we can do,' said Pastor John K. Jenkins Sr.

8 Spiritual Growth Questions for Small Group Members
Whether you find yourself as a small group leader, point person, or pastor, I want to share a few questions that small groups can regularly ask to identify a next steps of spiritual growth....

Strategically Small
Jesus made a significant impact by making a small imprint. The gospels reveal that he did not spend his time chasing the crowds. Jesus invested the most amount of time with a small amount of people—his 12 male disciples and the group of faithful women who supported his ministry.

The Secret to Writing a Great Youth Ministry Talk
What’s the secret sauce that top speakers have that the rest of us don’t? The secret to a great talk is in the editing, not the writing.

10 Quotes from Before You Share Your Faith
Matt Smethurst is lead pastor of River City Baptist Church in Richmond, Virginia; editor at The Gospel Coalition; and author of several books, including Before You Open Your Bible.

Full Communion Plans with Episcopalians on Hold
General Conference’s postponement means a delay on a vote on full communion between United Methodists and Episcopalians.The Episcopal Church plans to wait on a vote until after United Methodists get first crack. One concern among Episcopalians is where the future United Methodist Church will stand on LGBTQ inclusion.

Sunday, April 17, 2022

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Sunday Evening (April 17, 2022) Is Now Online

 


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

Whether we call it Easter Sunday, the Feast of the Resurrection of our Lord, or Resurrection Sunday, it is a reminder that Christians do not follow a dead teacher whose bones are lying in some forgotten grave. We serve a living Lord who rose from the dead and calls his followers friends.

The Scripture reading for this Sunday is John 20: 1-18 The Resurrection.

The homily is titled “Bearers of Good News.”

The link to this Sunday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/04/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-sunday_17.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Bulgaria-Romania United Methodists vote to leave


The Bulgaria-Romania Provisional Annual Conference has voted to leave The United Methodist Church and join the Global Methodist Church when that new, traditionalist denomination begins operations on May 1.

Over their bishop’s objection to the process, Bulgaria-Romania conference members unanimously approved a disaffiliation resolution on April 1, during the conference’s annual session, held in Varna, Bulgaria.

The resolution speaks of “the current crisis of The United Methodist Church” and describes the Global Methodist Church as one that “upholds the authority of Scripture and seeks to live in obedience to the Lord’s commands, as we understand them.” Read More

Also See:
Bishop Streiff discusses Bulgaria-Romania move

Image Credit: Bulgaria-Romania Conference

How Easter Unites the Global Church


On Sunday, Christians around the world will celebrate Christ’s resurrection from the dead. While Easter is an incredible apologetic to the non-believing world, it is also the foundation of Christian unity.

The past year has been full of suffering for Christians across the world, but this week serves as a timely reminder of our eternal hope in Christ. This year, we watched as the Taliban overthrew the Afghan government, Russian forces invaded Ukraine, and tensions between China and Taiwan intensified

As Christians across the world gather this weekend, we ought to remember how Easter unites the global church around the gospel. Read More

Sexual Behavior Isn’t the Most Important Issue


The most common question I’m asked during a Q&A session on sexuality goes something like this: My friend is transgender (or bisexual, gay, etc.), and I want to know what I can tell her to make her reconsider. I’m sympathetic to this question, and I understand why they are asking. The backstory is usually some variation of the following. When they’ve spoken up to their friend in the past, they’ve been vigorously rebuked for judging other people. To never say anything, however, feels like they’re holding back and not sharing their convictions with someone who is close to them. They don’t know what to do.

There are two faulty assumptions with this question. The first is that this question presumes that the relevant topic to discuss with your transgender friend is their sexuality. Sure, that subject is important, and I’m not saying to avoid it when the subject comes up. I just don’t think that’s always the most pertinent topic to raise. Read More

All Hallows Evening Prayer for Saturday Evening (April 16, 2022) Is Now Online

 


All Hallows Evening Prayer is a service of worship in the evening for all pilgrims on the journey to the heavenly city.

With the celebration of Jesus’ resurrection from the dead on Easter Sunday only a few hours away, Holy Saturday is a good time to reflect upon what Jesus really mean to us.

The Scripture reading for this Saturday is John 19: 38-42 The Burial of Jesus.

The homily is titled “How Much Do You Esteem Jesus?”

The link to this Saturday evening’s service is—

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/2022/04/all-hallows-evening-prayer-for-saturday_16.html

Please feel free to share the link to the service with anyone whom you believe might benefit from the service.

If an ad plays when you open a link to a video in a new tab, click the refresh icon of your browser until the song appears. An ad may follow a song so as soon as the song is finished, close the tab.

Previous services are online at

https://allhallowsmurray.blogspot.com/

May this service be a blessing to you.

Friday, April 15, 2022

What's On The Web: '“One Another” Ministry for the Homebound ' And More

Rural Kentucky

“One Another” Ministry for the Homebound
How do we minister to the homebound in our local churches? How do we care for members who face prolonged isolation from the church due to chronic illness, physical disability, caretaking, or other factors? How does the persecuted church continue to flourish when meeting altogether is neither safe nor wise?

Rethinking Pastoral Ministry Post-Covid
It may be premature to talk about post-COVID-19. Health experts are anticipating a surge of new infections in the fall as the latest COVID-19 mutation spreads in the US population. The need for annual COVID-19 vaccine booster is a very real possibility.

Will the Sunday After Easter Be a Letdown?
We don’t have to wait until the next big holiday to expect God to do amazing things in our Sunday service. All the elements we really need—the Word of God, the gospel and the Holy Spirit—are available to us 52 Sundays of every year.

One of the Most Overlooked Arguments for the Resurrection
This article and the next one consider arguments for the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.

Meat from the Sky and the Resurrection’s Plausibility
Tiothy Paul Jones Jr. offers 2 reasons for trusting that Jesus rose from the dead.

What Atonement Theories Tell Us About Our Politics
They were developed in their historical contexts. What does that mean for today?

Dances with Calendars: 4 Tips When Calendering Your Small Groups
Of all the most frequent things we do, scheduling and working with calendars seems like it wastes more time than anything else. No matter what we do, no matter how hard we try, scheduling meetings is just an empty hole that we pour our limited time and energy into.

3 Steps for Church Leaders to Renew Our Passion for Evangelism
How to make the lost a priority in your church’s heart and ministries.

4 Steps to Lead Your Church to be Evangelistic
Do you want your church to be evangelistic? Check out these four strategies for moving your church in this direction.

3 Keys to Telling Better Stories That Reach Others
Christians bear the responsibility of courageously telling our stories, but we should also hold ourselves accountable for telling our stories creatively. How you tell your story matters.

Thursday, April 14, 2022

Called to a Life of Compassion


In his noon sermon on Maundy Thursday the pastor of my church drew attention to three examples of compassion in the gospels. First was when Jesus felts compassion for the widow of Nain and raised her son from the dead. The second was when the Samaritan tended the wounds of the man beaten by robbers and left for dead, put him on his donkey, brought him to a hostelry, and paid for his care at the hostelry in the Parable of the Good Samaritan. The third was the compassion that the father showed to the younger son in the Parable of the Prodigal Son.

In all three examples same Greek word for compassion is used. He noted that some translations of the Bible substitute “pity” for “compassion.”

Compassion is derived from the Latin word, “compati,” literally “suffer with” or “suffer together.” It is the feeling that arises when we are faced with someone else’s suffering and feel motivated to relieve that suffering.

Pity does not mean quite the same as compassion. When we feel pity, we feel sadness or sympathy for someone else’s unhappiness or situation. What we feel, however, may not motivate us to do anything to help them.

The phrase “to take pity on somebody” is closer to compassion than the word “pity” by itself. When we take pity on somebody, we feel sorry for them and do something that shows it.

For example, when may feel pity for a homeless man with a sign at the entrance of the parking lot of the supermarket where we do our grocery shopping? “That poor man,” we think to ourselves and drive into the parking lot or out of it as the case may be. We show him compassion if we stop and give him money or food or both. We do something to alleviate his situation.

When Jesus told his disciples to copy God and in doing show themselves to be children of God, he meant that they should imitate God’s compassion. This requires that we recognize that the suffering of others and are moved to do something about it. It does not mean taking no interest in other people and paying no attention to them, refusing to recognize their suffering, much less to give any thought to it.

It also requires that we take the view that the suffering of others is our business, something about which we should do something. It does not mean living by the principle, “Everyone for themselves and the devil take the hindmost.” In other words, everyone puts their interests first, leaving the unfortunate to their fate.

Being compassionate toward others requires an attitude with which many of us may be uncomfortable. We are accustomed to taking care of our own but that is about it. Being compassionate to others, however, means caring for more than our immediate family and a handful of relatives and close friends. It means being generous, helpful, and considerate to people whom we do not know or whom we may not like.

But it is to a life of compassion that Jesus has called us, compassion like that which God shows us.