USA: Four Positive Signs We’re on the Cusp of a Church Revitalization Movement

Source: Sam Rainer, Church Answers, via The Christian Post, April 4, 2021

I believe we are on the cusp of a church revitalization movement. The signs are there. Will churches follow them? On the road, a sign is no good unless it helps you travel to your destination. The signs point in the right direction for a church revitalization movement, but for it to happen churches will need to move.

1. Almost every church is smaller, but the core is stronger than ever. The return rate of people in churches is highly localized right now. Additionally, larger churches have lower return rates, while smaller churches are recovering more quickly. By this fall, Church Answers expects most congregations to be at 80% pre-pandemic levels.

2. The number of church adoptions [mergers] has the potential to catch the number of church closures. When a church is adopted, a healthier and stronger congregation receives a more vulnerable congregation into the family. Two families are brought together.

3. Pastor tenure will be longer after the great reshuffling. Like people in other professions, pastors are exhausted and struggling with decision fatigue. A great reshuffling is occurring. Over the long term, we expect pastor tenure to lengthen and get better, especially as Millennials enter the prime of their careers. With longer pastor tenures, revitalization is more likely.

4. The neighborhood church movement is primed for a launch. The neighborhood church is associated with a particular neighborhood. It is common for them to carry the name of the community. They were originally started in the community and for the community. For years, we have dismissed the potential for these churches. I believe they are primed for a comeback.

The full article includes links to a new “master class” and conference about church revitalization.

Also worth noting: As various sources report, less than half of Americans now claim a formal congregational membership (Baptist News).

Resurrection & Beyond: Resource Reviews

Image: Wycliffe Bible Translators. See below.
  1. Letter from the Editor: Resurrection Resources
  2. Prayer Guides: More on Praying for Muslims
  3. Event: Five Days of Prayer for Sikhs
  4. Article: Caring for National Partners
  5. Infographic: The Most Linguistically Diverse Countries
  6. Events: Conferences, Courses, and Webinars

See the email edition or scroll down for individual articles.

Resurrection Resources

Dear readers,

Easter is almost here, and I want to take this chance to let you know about a few Easter-related resources you may want to check out.

1. Wycliffe Bible Translators published a fun article describing unique ways this holiday is celebrated in different parts of Africa, Asia, Europe, and the Americas. Maybe you want to try a few!

2. In Discovering Jesus’ Identity on Easter, Christianity Explored suggest that instead of hoping someone grasps the fullness of the gospel in a single church service, who not use your Easter service to invite spiritual seekers into something deeper: a place where they can explore Scriptures and understand for themselves who Jesus is? It may be too late to rewrite that Easter message now, but keep this in mind as a way to follow up with a friend who joins your celebration.

3. Who is Jesus? What did he do? And why do those things matter? George Murray’s booklet Remembering Jesus is simple, straightforward, and cuts to the heart of every person’s most desperate need—Jesus. He is the way, the truth, and the life-giving hope that we all need. Now until Sunday, William Carey Publishing is offering a buy-one, get-one-half-off deal on packages of these booklets.

Happy Easter!
Marti Wade

Prayer Guides: More on Praying for Muslims

Sources: Various

Last month we featured materials from the 30 Days of Prayer campaign. Note that there are two different sets of material being distributed under that banner this year (with somewhat different topics) and designed for use April 13 to May 12.

You may also have seen that Global Gates is offering those who join their mailing list a free downloadable version of the booklet they created in partnership with World Christian. That’s the one about the Muslim diaspora in North American cities.

A few more ideas:

  1. Open Doors would love to email you a guide to praying for Muslims during this time. They have also created some memes you can share on social media.
  2. Frontiers USA is distributing an email series to help you pray for Muslims during this time: Open the City Gates.
  3. Prefer visual communication? You may like the email series from Prayercast best. Their emails will include a new prayer video for each day of Ramadan.

Readers may also be interested in a new book coming out this month, Pillars: How Muslim Friends Led Me Closer to Jesus, by Rachel Pieh Jones. We learned about it through an item from A Life Overseas.

Event: Five Days of Prayer for Sikhs

Source: Lausanne Sikhism Working Group

Just 500 years ago, Sikhism began in the land of five rivers—Punjab—and its members carry five symbols and pursue five stages of spiritual development.

Can you take five days (April 11-15) to join others in praying for Sikhs, the followers of the world’s fifth largest religion?

Learn more or purchase a 12-page full-color booklet for US$2 from World Prayer Guides.

See also Leading Sikhs to the “Ultimate Guru” (Lausanne Global Analysis) or watch the short video Sowing Among Sikhs (Pioneers).

Article: Caring for National Partners

Source: Catalyst Services

While many churches are expanding their care for missionaries, they may remain unaware of the care needs of their national partners and other national Christian leaders working alongside them. It’s easy to falsely assume that nationals either don’t need care or have caring support systems within their own community.

This issue of Postings highlights the very real care needs of our national brothers and sisters and presents seven ways your church can help them flourish.

Read Caring for National Partners: How Western Churches Can Help Them Flourish and see also Missionary Care: Where Does a Church Began?

Events: Conferences, Courses, and Webinars

Source: Missions Catalyst Events Calendar

All those listed below are online events. The shortest ones are often free or low cost. A few training organizations are offering small, face-to-face events, some of which are listed on our website.

April 1 to May 1, Strategic Storytelling for Movements. Mentored course by Mission Media U on applying elements of story to your outreach.

April 5 to August 8, Perspectives on the World Christian Movement. New online classes begin regularly.

April 6, How to Tell Dangerous Stories. Virtual gathering for mission marketing/communication staff, provided by Missio Nexus.

April 6-8, Support Raising Bootcamp. Similar events held throughout the year in various locations by Support Raising Solutions, but provided virtually as needed.

April 7, Short-term Missions and the Local Church. Virtual gathering for church mission leaders from Missio Nexus and Sixteen:Fifteen.

April 11-15, Five Days of Prayer for Sikhs.

April 12-13, People Raising Conference. Be equipped for raising personal support.

April 13, Optimize the Effectiveness of Your Board. Webinar from Missio Nexus.

April 13 to May 12, 30 Days of Prayer for the Muslim World. An annual prayer campaign. This is the 30th year.

April 22, Essentials for Fundraising and Development for Missions Agencies. Webinar from Sixteen:Fifteen.

April 22, The Blessed Alliance: Men and Women Serving God Together. Webinar from Missio Nexus.

April 22, Setting A Good Example: Training Other Disciples. Nugget training from Beyond.

April 22-23, Spiritual Care Symposium. Provide by the Christian Community Health Foundation.

April 28-30, BAM Global Congress. Rescheduled from 2020, now moved online for greater global access. A series of related webinars will precede the event. Prefer a face-to-face conference? One is planned for Chicago in late 2021.

View complete calendar. Corrections and submissions are welcome.

Let Us Praise Valiant Women

By Shane Bennett

At one of the lowest points in my life, a colleague in the cause conspired with her tribe to invite me out to spend Christmas with them. It may have been the kindest thing anyone has ever done for me and I suspect I’ll never forget it. This act, added to Sarah’s track record of coordinating Perspectives classes and leading her church’s missions efforts, sealed my respect and admiration for her. 

Since one of the stated goals of Monday’s International Women’s Day was to “celebrate women’s achievements,” I thought I’d use this month’s edition of Practical Mobilization to raise a toast to women who’ve sparked and shaped my global journey. Some I’ve known, some are from history, and one is fictional. 

As I reminisce, I pray that God will bring to mind similar women in your life. Perhaps you could send them this brief article, buy them a coffee, or symbolically place some flowers on their grave. 

A Youth Grouper Who Told Me to Go

The first woman who encouraged (nagged?) me to become a missionary was a fellow youth grouper, Beth Brosher Hasz. I don’t know where Beth got her fiery passion, but her frequent words to me made me determined to flee the call! I suspect her words to her Father, though, were instrumental in my eventual inability to avoid it. I saw her work similar magic on a pastor we had in common. Beth went to be with Jesus early, but her influence ripples on.

A Praying Grandmother

My decidedly non-charismatic grandma used to pray and worry for me when I traveled. At least that’s how it was until Jesus showed up at the foot of her bed one night and told her to keep praying but let the worry go. To her credit, she obeyed on both counts.

A Global-Minded Teacher

My hands-down best professor through four years at Ball State University was Dr. Alba Jean Rosenman. She wagged her cosmopolitan finger and challenged me and twenty other sophomores, “Before you marry, buy a house, and settle down in Muncie, Indiana, you need to get out of America for a while!”

Her nominally Jewish, Argentine hackles were raised when I took her up on that and spent a summer learning to sympathize with Palestinian refugees in Jordan. 

Two Hospitable Hostesses

I was first introduced to Islamic hospitality by one of those Palestinian refugees; an unnamed and unseen (she hid behind a curtain) wife who served cubed, seeded watermelon to me and my friends in the pre-dawn hours when her husband invited us over after early morning prayers.

Later I enjoyed more examples of Muslim hospitality in the tiny apartment of a Memon family in Bombay. I enjoyed the food offered whenever we visited, but looking back, I appreciate the resilience and innovation that Memon mom exhibited as she kept her household afloat with three kiddos. When we asked the daughters about their father, they simply replied, “he is deceased.” 

A Capable Co-laborer

I once led a team of bright North Americans for a summer of cultural research in Turkey. My assistant team leader was a Canadian woman named Ann Marie. Her responsibility was to coordinate the actual research and she did it brilliantly. In truth, she could have done my job as well as hers, while there’s no way under the sun I could have handled her role. 

A Mentor Who Opened Doors

When the small mobilization agency I worked for decided to move from the Netherlands to the UK, Linda Harding, a national-level mobilizer in her own right, kindly and boldly agreed to vouch for us, open doors, and help us find a place for our ministry.

During an early visit to Liverpool we stopped by a sandwich shop and I had no idea what the proprietor was saying, even though he was speaking English. Linda graciously confessed, “I can’t understand Liverpudlians either.”

By generously lending her credibility to our youthful, outsider efforts, Linda gave us life!

A Model of Ministry Faithfulness

With Linda’s wisdom, we settled in lovely Bradford where my family began attending the parish church five minutes down the hill from our house. Our neighborhood was probably 90% Pakistani-British. St. Margaret’s Church was a lovely example of living out and giving out the gospel in a largely Muslim community.

There was no greater example than the woman who ran the weekly homework club. For a good portion of each evening, the classroom looked like it could have been the set for the tornado scene in a live production of The Wizard of Oz. But she stuck it out, giving her all to help neighborhood kids of all creeds and colors succeed. 

Two Weary Women Who Didn’t Give Up

Likewise, two winsome, but weary saints, nameless to me, but not to God, ran a Catholic help center for refugees in Catania, Sicily when I first visited. They graciously gave of their valuable time, helping us understand the migrant dynamics in the city. As they turned out the lights and locked the door at the end of one visit, I sensed both their fatigue and the realization if they could just stay awake a couple more hours, they could help more refugees.


An Intrepid Influencer

My respect and love for Melanie Mitchell, Louisville legend and Perspectives leader extraordinaire, is also immense. She and an intrepid corp of women across the US have argued winsomely and effectively with predominately male missions pastors and gatekeepers to bring the life-changing Perspectives course to new places all over. 

Several Smart Strategists

Melanie also blessed me with an introduction to Dr. Florence Muindi, one of the smartest people I know. Florence knows Jesus, she knows lots of stuff and she knows how to get things done. If she wasn’t living in Kenya and changing the face of cities throughout Africa, I’d be asking her questions every day! 

Closer to home, but just as smart, Carol Davis has been over the past several decades an unassuming but brilliant, low-key but relentless strategist for the advance of the kingdom of God among unreached peoples. I am one of many who have falteringly put her ideas into action to good result.

Finally, my regard is so high for Marti Wade, my friend, colleague, teammate, editor, and encourager. When I grow up, I’d like to be able to think and execute like Marti.

And Many More

I lack the time, space, and expertise for an adequate look back at women’s remarkable impact on the advance of God’s kingdom over the 200 years. Think Lottie Moon, Amy Carmichael, Susanna Wesley, and so many others. Even Rachel Lane, the missionary heroine of John Grisham’s book The Testament. (If you haven’t read it, can I suggest giving it a go?)

I am so grateful for these moms and missionaries. I celebrate the God-empowered achievements of these pastors and pioneers.

Grateful for You!

And you, women readers of Missions Catalyst, I celebrate you—both who you are and the wonderful things God is giving you grace to accomplish. You are not overlooked today. You are a co-heir with Jesus, a force to be reckoned with, an agent of the Most High’s kingdom from the end of the block to the very ends of the earth.