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Methodists Study The Hallmarks Of Healthy Churches

First Posted: 07/19/10 10:06 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:05 PM ET

Methodist Church Survey

By Alfredo Garcia
Religion News Service

(RNS) What is the key to a healthy church? United Methodists have paid big bucks to find out.

As the sour economy and aging buildings wreak havoc on church budgets, United Methodists are trying to get ahead of the problem and assess the health of their congregations in a bid to reverse declining fortunes.

The church recently concluded a study of more than 32,000 Methodist congregations across North America, seeking the "key factors impacting vital congregations." The study surveyed everybody from bishops to district superintendents to people in the pews.

Working with New York-based Towers Watson consultants, researchers constructed a "vitality index" to measure each church and concluded "that all kinds of UMC churches are vital--small, large, across geographies, and church setting."

The report identified four key areas that fuel vitality: small groups and programs; worship services that mix traditional and contemporary styles with an emphasis on relevant sermons; pastors who work hard on mentorship and cultivation of the laity; and an emphasis on effective lay leadership.

These four factors "are consistent regardless of church size, predominant ethnicity, and jurisdiction," the study concluded.

Illinois Bishop Gregory V. Palmer and Neil Alexander, co-chairman of the denomination's Call to Action Steering Team, said the project was prompted by the financial downturn but was expanded to assess measures of "robust health" in rank-and-file congregations.

Like other mainline Protestant denominations, the 7.8 million-member United Methodist Church has hemorrhaged members for decades. Its strongest growth has been overseas, home to an additional 3.3 million members.

Problems like the rising average age of both clergy and parishioners, and continuing downward trends in worship attendance and baptisms, prompted researchers to launch a more holistic study of church vitality, they said.

Of the many problems facing U.S. churches, "one is clearly economic pressure of the cost of the infrastructure, which is increasing at a rate that is greater than the giving," said Alexander, president of the Nashville-based United Methodist Publishing House.

A second, however, "is a creeping crisis of relevancy," which is signaled by "(the number of) young people not growing as a percentage of the participants" in the church, he said.

Palmer said the study cost "several hundred thousand dollars" and was geared to go "beyond the anecdotal." Because of its size and cost, this project should be considered a "once-in-a-decade kind of enterprise."

The study concluded that church health can't be pinned on any one of the four essentials identified by researchers, or even the size or scope of those programs. "An essential finding of the research was that it's the combination of factors that contribute to vitality, rather than any one or two," the report said.

The study did turn up some surprising results. According to the data, it did not matter whether ministers held seminary degrees; whether pastoral ministry was a first or second career; or how long the minister had been engaged in pastoral ministry.

In addition, the number and types (global or local) of outreach programs did not have a significant impact on vitality, so long as a congregation had some sort of outreach program.

Researchers were reluctant to say whether the findings could also be applied to non-Methodist congregations, but it appears some of them could. The Faith Communities Today survey released last September from the Hartford Institute for Religion Research found that 64 percent of congregations that switched to contemporary worship in the last five years saw an increase in worship attendance of 2 percent or more.

The report will now be released to Methodist bishops and elected lay and clergy leaders around the world for feedback. Palmer said he hopes the study will play a key role in reversing declining fortunes.

"This is not just a report that's going to get shelved," he said.

Alexander, too, said congregations can learn much from the report.

"What we are clearly interested in is churches that experience in a dynamic way the reality of Jesus Christ in their midst and bear witness to that love, grace, and mercy in their work and in their own communities," he said.

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By Alfredo Garcia Religion News Service (RNS) What is the key to a healthy church? United Methodists have paid big bucks to find out. As the sour economy and aging buildings wreak havoc on church bu...
By Alfredo Garcia Religion News Service (RNS) What is the key to a healthy church? United Methodists have paid big bucks to find out. As the sour economy and aging buildings wreak havoc on church bu...
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researcher
researcher
02:19 PM on 07/21/2010
why is it that in most chruchs the members love our wars for profits, our mega military size, our imperialism which they dont see as imperialism, most dont support universal health care but take their medicare and social security checks,.

also the idea that they alone are going to heaven and of course have no idea what heaven is.

believe this and get that agenda like a get into heaven free pass is running out of steam.

the idea that someone anyone had to die for our sins does not pass the simplist of logic tests.

as mark twain stated: god made man in his image then man returned the favor.

a good course to take created by the methodists is the course call living the question.

give it a try worth the effort.

most churchs wont touch it.

look close atheists are created not born.

also the world has come to worship scientism.

all the ism's are troublesome. ie like capitalism, communism, socialism, imperialism, religionism, etc.
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JohnFromCensornati
The End is near
07:37 PM on 07/20/2010
Here's what these moderate MainLiners say on their website under "Beliefs":

"We believe that all humans need to be in relationship with God in order to be fully human."

Maybe if they stopped preaching that other people were sub-human, their Z0mbieGod of Love would sell better. Maybe not.
jjtx
We need to look for the Third Way.
04:20 PM on 07/20/2010
I belong to a United Methodist Church whose outreach is amazing. We have a declining membership (we lose many to death from age) but we have a strong congregation in terms of their drive to help others. Our 400 members (that includes children) provide half the support of a inner city mission (clothing and food bank, youth and child programs, job programs) as well as providing workers, the only free medical clinic in our town of 230,000 is on our grounds and gets much of its support from us, mission trips to West Virginia and the Gulf Coast to repair homes, provide financial support to a battered women's shelter, an emergency shelter for children, and so many other things I can not list them all.

We continue to be guided by the Spirit in the decisions that we make. If our congregation continues to decline, we are still doing the best we can in a hurting world.
05:12 PM on 07/20/2010
You are very lucky. Last time I went the Pastor made a jab at our Democratic Governor in the sermon.
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sistersuperior
union made
11:16 PM on 07/20/2010
That would make me very angry. As possibly, the lone democrat in my United Methodist Church I expect the rest of the congregation to keep their political opinions home. This applies doubly to the pastor. So far, we are all behaving well. Folks are way too stuffy and traditional to be tea-baggers and that helps.
jjtx
We need to look for the Third Way.
12:53 PM on 07/21/2010
I do hear things like that at my church but not from the pastoral staff. But, then as good as these people can be, I do live in a southern state.

However, my pastor this past week called out those people who in any discourse, including political, who are not civil and who lie, hurl names, make innuendo and called upon everyone in the congregation to act more like Daniel who when confronted with injustice went about doing what he felt was right while still being civil (today it is termed civil disobedience). My pastor, in this sermon, criticized hateful partisanship.

I was proud of his boldness because he has been at our church only two weeks.
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chichel
Yep, that's my bleeding heart you see on my sleeve
11:46 PM on 07/20/2010
Friend! I should have known you were a United Methodist when we've joined forces on other threads! Me too!
jjtx
We need to look for the Third Way.
12:54 PM on 07/21/2010
good to hear from you - is that a new child in the family??? so, adorable
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12:39 PM on 07/20/2010
"In addition, the number and types (global or local) of outreach programs did not have a significant impact on vitality, so long as a congregation had some sort of outreach program."

I work in a faith-based nonprofit that counts 144 congregations in its membership. It may be anecdotal evidence, but that one sentence sums up our experience. A healthy congregation acts outside of its own walls.
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SocBeat
Bald and proud
01:04 PM on 07/20/2010
That's very interesting. So often you hear atheists (among whom I count myself) telling the religious that all we want is to be left alone by them; yet the mark of a healthy congergation is one that does exactly the opposite.
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01:14 PM on 07/20/2010
The term 'outreach' in this case may have a different meaning than you think. I'm talking about social mission - soup kitchens, food pantries, social justice issues and such. Congregations that have such missions tend to be more vital than those that don't.

I'm not a great fan of attempts at conversion, being a Jew working in a Christian charitable organization, and I must say that everyone here has been very sensitive to that.
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SayBlade
This micro bio intentionally left blank.
02:20 PM on 07/20/2010
The congregation of about 70 that I belong to operates a food bank, a free community lunch, provides space for community groups, grows a community garden, houses an educational campus for training counsellors and partners with other groups -- not necessarily Christian -- to do this work *outside* the church in the neighbourhood. We welcome the opportunity to work with those who believe and think differently. We do this on a annual budget of about $130K and have one full time and three part time staff. Our partnering means we are supplied food from secular groups and individual donations so the budget only covers staff (pastor, secretary, custodian and nurse) and building maintenance. Most of this financial support comes from the offering plate during our worship time *inside* the church on Sundays.

Psst! (and we're baptists.)
12:30 PM on 07/20/2010
As a lifelong Methodist, read this with great interest.
Have brought new people to the Methodist Church and had them turned away by the stif-necked political viewpoint spouted.
Frankly, I am less than happy with the Methodist Church now.
The thing is when I go back to where we moved from I find a Methodist Church I know and like better.
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bksrmgk
02:47 PM on 07/20/2010
The last time I went to my Methodist Church the pastor was preaching politics not ministering to my soul. My politics are not his concern. My soul should be.
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bweve05
03:01 PM on 07/20/2010
I think thats a problem in alot of churches...I know it is in mine. Wish they wouldnt talk so much on their views of caesars affiars...
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chichel
Yep, that's my bleeding heart you see on my sleeve
11:49 PM on 07/20/2010
That's unfortunate. I've been a United Methodist for years and my pastors have never said a word one way or another about politics.
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gun1934
75 years old fisherman
10:26 PM on 07/21/2010
hey---mightbesane---bless your little heart---i think its against the law for what you ask me---God said now ---we have to live by the laws of the land--
12:21 PM on 07/20/2010
This is one reason why christians are so against contraception & abortion. Since it's difficult to convert new people to the flock, as the beliefs themselves are obviously myth & fable, new converts need to be born into the church where they can be brainwashed from a young age. But it's inevitable that christianity will fade away...at least any semblance of orthodox christianity. Kids today are smart and have access to a lot of information. It's not as easy to indoctrinate them - the truth will eventually become apparent and the churches will continue to lose relevancy. If, on the other hand, churches focus on being a supportive social network, working with a social conscience (nixing the supernatural aspects of the religion), churches could become even more relevant. I think people are searching for a place to belong in this isolated culture, and people want to feel that they are making a difference. It seems clear that this is what churches need to do to survive.
12:31 PM on 07/20/2010
I am not sure this is entirely true. Don't think those against contraception and abortion have the ability to think that far into the future or that deeply. I call them knee-jerk Christians.
12:47 PM on 07/20/2010
Maybe not, but it makes sense to me that religions would promote "being fruitful & multiplying" to increase their numbers. I think the other reasons behind those rules are about control of women & property. But you may be right - the christian leaders enforcing these rules are probably just legalistic or traditional, just obeying what they believe god says without really using their intellect to figure out why their holy books say that.
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SocBeat
Bald and proud
12:47 PM on 07/20/2010
Whatever the motive is, Athena's absolutely right on the effect. A church that preaches in favour of birth control will absolutely not grow as fast as a church that preaches against birth control, because its members will have fewer babies. The motives of the members may or may not be conspiratorial, but the effect will be the same.

Quite darwinian, when you stop and think about it. Imagine another Christian church that started up the same day as the catholic church, with the same number of members. But this other church said, "Jesus had only one brother, so thou shalt have only two children per family." Which would be the larger church today?
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dawacu
Jesus loves you
01:48 PM on 07/20/2010
I don't think Methodists are against birth control. Also, the Churches who are getting the most adult converts tend to be the more conservative churches (probably because they proselyte). Several thousands of people convert to new religions every year. There is no evidence that Christianity is going to fade away anytime soon, just that mainline Protestantism is fading away.
02:18 PM on 07/20/2010
I guess it's hard to know, but apparently self-identified christians have decreased 10% in 10 years in America, the most "christian" nation. http://www.politicalarticles.net/blog/2009/04/09/god-is-not-great-christianity-fading-in-america/
12:08 PM on 07/20/2010
I attended a seminar of my new age-y church a couple years ago in Minneapolis, on the same weekend that an Islamic conference was going on. I compared the demographics of the two groups: my church - primarily middle aged and childless. The Muslim group - overwhelmingly young families, with lots of kids. Guess which church is growing?
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Hysterian68
bureaucrat/historian/ranter
06:23 AM on 07/20/2010
Only a rediscovery of early Christianity, ascetism, mysticism, the pure gospels, and a complete divestiture of the elaborate, expensive, growing organizational structures with it's self-serving bureaucracy run by and for the clergy will reinvigorate the Church.

The only path is one which returns to a faith based upon pre-Nicene Christianity and a return to living simple communal life styles , as Christ and His apostles did. Only this will save souls and the World.

From this there will come a flowering of the arts, education, music, literature, and the end of world hostilities. Without it, we simply continue irreversibly on the path to perdition, class warfare, and self-destruction.
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
08:35 AM on 07/20/2010
Elaborate and expensive - Have you ever visited a Methodist Church?
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
08:47 AM on 07/20/2010
I have. The church my grandparents attended all their life is a dying congregation of only about 70 members. So they always get a newbie pastor in the rotation. Still the preacher gets a 50 grand salary, a nice 5 bedroom house, with all utilities, a generous car allowance, book allowance, and 2000$ a year vacation allowance.

So much for using God's money to do good works.
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Hysterian68
bureaucrat/historian/ranter
07:33 PM on 07/20/2010
Don't be fooled by the simplicity of Methodist sanctuaries. They aren't without the bucks, but they may not put all of their loot into golden candlesticks, silk and damask paraments and vestments, or golden censers giving off sweet smells to go with the bells. I was referring, actually, to all churches where the golden candlesticks are important, but feeding the poor and dispossessed is ignored and the clergy browbeat gays and women who want to be priests: a whole lot of traditionl high churhc Anglican, most RCatholic churches, and the eastern/oriental Orthodox.
12:27 PM on 07/20/2010
What are the "pure gospels"? Are you including the gnostic gospels? If not, on what basis would you consider the ones in the bible more accurate or important than the ones that were excluded? Based on your comment it appears you do realize that the decision to include certain gospels was a political one - constantine & the council of nicea decided that a divine jesus would have more impact on the roman empire and would be more likely to convert the pagans.

Although I don't understand the relevancy of using jesus as a role model, or christianity in any shape or form, I'm with you on converting to a more simple lifestyle - I think that greed and consumerism is a cancer in society. Personally, I am an atheist but make an enormous effort to keep my life simple - it's very rewarding. I don't know if we have "souls" apart from our mind & body, and I certainly do not pretend to know what can save the "souls" of the world. Nobody knows that. I just know for myself - that when I realized that religion was not about truth at all, and that I was free to find my own way in this world - did I feel a sense of euphoria, freedom and wellbeing that I had never had as a christian. This is what saved my soul.
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SocBeat
Bald and proud
12:53 PM on 07/20/2010
That was very well written. Especially the part from "Personally, I am an atheist" to the end. Hold onto those words, you'll be able to use them again.
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Hysterian68
bureaucrat/historian/ranter
08:04 PM on 07/20/2010
I had the core teaching of Christ in mind. The gnostic gospels are not definitive in demonstrating the role of women in public worship. Women priests can be justified whether Paul or the Gnostic gospels approve or not.

Women were excluded from the Temple services and in the synagogue. The early Christians simply followed Jewish practice. This was a cultural bias. Social norms at the time which the clergyand the episcopate, trying to pattern themselves after the Levites and Temple priesthood. It also served as a control mechanism to make Christianity more attractive to Jewish converts and to placate those converts who wanted to maintain Jewish dietary and other laws.
10:47 PM on 07/19/2010
13 ¶ Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat:
14 because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.

There is one Church, and its success is never otherwise than in its submission to its head.
Like many supposedly Protestant groups, Methodists are studying instead how to get around the Church's certain precepts--emulating the world to find a business model for success, seeking a wide path, and inviting ruin. They might have got on course to the right goal long ago if they had only believed that Persecution and the world's disfavor are not so bad as destruction. See what they've chosen instead--the pews and brick structures are mostly empty, people are overweight, and one can tell the need uppermost in their minds is money.
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11:00 AM on 07/20/2010
551monroe:

The scripture you reference is pointed towards an individual Christian and their walk towards salvation. Weather they will " have the testimony of Jesus Christ and keep his commands" or just have the testimony of " Jesus Christ", Narrow vs. Wide.
Please expound on your " one church" spoken of in your second paragraph if you will?
Protestants long ago forgot the protest, by which they are called. It's up to individuals to find their own salvation with "fear and trembling". I think " Jesus's" church is yet to assemble, and is not yet, soon perhaps.
Anyway, interesting post, but I had trouble seeing what you were trying to say, so what is your point if I may ask?
12:31 PM on 07/20/2010
Hi friend! I have to comment on the "fear and trembling" part of your comment. I don't think fear and trembling have anything to do with growth or fulfilling our potential. In fact, fear is the enemy. When we are afraid, our logical brains shut down and we are unable to think critically. Rather, I think we need to meditate, follow our passions, and discover (and create) who we are and who we want to be - with optimism and excitement, NO fear. I realize that the bible is really big on fearing god - thousands of verses refer to god's sudden wrath resulting in torture or death of human beings. I can't tell you what a relief it was to discover that this was just a story.
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IzzyIdol
08:07 AM on 07/23/2010
That narrow gate is the gate of self examination. Few are willing to subject themeselves to honest self examination. Obeying 'the rules' has nothing at all to do with spiritual growth, In fact, it is a hindrance.