The message of the church will never change - it is eternal. However, the method in which we deliver that message must stay relevant in the ever-changing culture. Our friend, Carey Nieuwhof spends a lot of time speaking to pastors as well as studying and observing churches and church trends. Carey has found that numbers show attractional-model churches are slowing down in growth, while churches that are more charismatic in nature have recently experienced a faster speed of growth. We want churches to make growing disciples, but understanding some of the methods that are currently working in culture are fascinating. As you read these points, think about your community and the people your church serves. Does your church body reflect the community? What can you do to not only reach more people, but continue to grow the people that are already walking through your doors?

Here are 5 reasons to consider culture and relevance taken from Carey Nieuwhof's original post, "5 Reasons Charismatic Churches are Growing (and Traditional churches are Past Peak)".

1. The Foyer Moved

One of the great (and helpful) assumptions behind creating attractional churches is that Sunday morning is the first experience with church.

Guess what? That’s no longer true.

Now, almost everyone who attends your church for the first time has already been to your church…online. That’s the case whether you have a completely amazing online experience, a killer website and an on-point social media presence, or whether you have a website from 2008.

 

Trust me, people who are interested in Christianity or your church have already checked you out long before they visited you. Almost everyone who attends your church for the first time has already been to your church…online. All of which means, the foyer moved.And if you have an online service, they’ve been with you for at least a week, and sometimes months or beyond. Not convinced they’re checking out your channels? Well, there is the internet. Trust me: if they have spiritual questions, they’ve googled their way to spiritual answers (good or bad answers) long before they set foot in your door. All of which means…the foyer moved.

Over dinner recently, I had a great discussion about this with the senior leadership team at CrossPoint Nashville. We talked about how attractional church isn’t as effective as it used to be (both CrossPoint and Connexus, where I serve, have been changing along the lines of this post for a few years now), when CrossPoint’s Creative Arts Director, Drew Powell, simply stated that the foyer had moved. That completely crystallized something I was trying to put my finger on for years now. Thanks, Drew, for the clarity.

So yep, that’s it: the foyer moved.

 

The implication? When someone shows up at your church now, they’re likely to want a little more than they did a decade When an unchurched person visits your church for the first time these days, they're more likely to sample something real, want to experience something different, and are likely ready to engage faster... or two ago when their first visit was truly their first exposure to your church or to Christianity. They’re ready to go a little further somewhat faster because they’ve already taken their first step.

Will you still end up with some people at the back with the arms crossed wanting to hide out in the dark? Of course. But you likely have more who want to sample something real, who want to experience something different, who are ready to engage faster. That doesn’t mean you should bring them into a complete insider experience that’s impossible to understand or access. But it does mean they’re likely hungrier for more than they were a decade ago.

2. People Want Transformation, Not Information

 

Attractional church has seen thousands, probably millions, of people move into an authentic relationship with Jesus. Please hear that. But sometimes what we’ve done (I say “we” because I’ve done this) When people come to your church these days, fewer are looking for information about God; they're looking for an experience with God.is we tend to share information about Jesus or Christianity when we preach or host services. There was a day when that was really helpful, and that’s still not an entirely bad instinct. Who, after all, wants to lose people completely? But remember, we now have the full-on internet that swallows daily life whole. We are drowning in a sea of information.

Fast forward to church, and guess what? People aren’t looking for information. They’re looking for transformation. When people come to your church these days, fewer are looking for information about God; they’re looking for an experience with God.

Today, information is everywhere. Transformation is scarce. Too many people who have been to church know about God. Not enough know God. Numbers matter, because they represent people.  Discover which numbers will tell you a clear story of your ministry.

3. Transcendent is Connecting More Than Immanent Right Now

Both the digital explosion and the cynicism of our age have left people hungering for a transcendent touch. Think about the explosive rise of porn. People are looking for intimacy, but of course, in porn, get just the opposite. They’re looking for more.

People are hungry for true community, deeper experiences, and authentic transcendence. Which is why churches that are growing are focusing more and more on creating experiences that engage more than just the head on a Sunday…but also engage the heart and relationship.

 

In short, people don’t just want to know what’s true, It's a shame when people come to church looking for God and only find us.they want to know what’s real. And what’s real is deeper than just an idea—it’s an experience. They come looking for something bigger than themselves, and something frankly, bigger than us. They come looking for God.

It’s a shame when people come to church looking for God and only find us. God, in his nature, is both immanent and transcendent. A few decades ago as the culture slipped away from church, focusing on the imminence of God brought many back. But the cultural shifts of the last decade have left people (especially younger people) longing for the transcendent.

This should be no surprise because of course the heart naturally longs for God. Sometimes we just long for God a bit differently than our parents. I think the best future churches will have content that leans toward the immanent—practical, helpful and digestible. Again, being completely obtuse and incomprehensible or insider-focused helps no one. And future churches will also offer experiences that feel transcendent…a sense that you had to be there to experience what happened.

The best churches will offer both because that reflects the character and nature of God and the character of the Christian church at its best. GET THE NUMBERS GAME EBOOK

4. Downloadable Experiences Have Become Resistible Experiences

Church online is new, so we’re all trying to figure it out. Understood.

Some growing churches fuel inclusivity by not offering their services online (Hillsong is famous for this), and while I respect that, I think online provides a HUGE front door to everyone you’re trying to reach. Everyone you’re trying to reach with the love of Christ is online.

So how do you navigate that tension of having everything you do available online and in person? Why would people bother to come at all, is the question. Fundamentally, the consumption of content is also leaving people hungering for greater community, greater experience and greater transcendence. So here’s what many growing churches are doing: offering experiences that, when watched online, leave you longing for the real, in person thing.

How? Running through that list we started with, growing churches design their in-person experience to:

  • move people quickly from anonymity to a sense of belonging
  • focus on the engagement of the heart, not just the head, both in the message and the music and overall experience
  • offer more variety of services than three songs and a message
  • facilitate more passionate expressions of worship
  • create moments and additional space during the service for prayer
  • put more thought in the service to the engaging a variety of emotions

If everything your church does in the future feels downloadable, probably all you’ll get is a lot of downloads, not a lot of gathered people. If what your church does touches the soul, people will continue to gather. People are coming to church expecting to meet God. Don’t let them settle for meeting you or something they could have half-listened to while working out.

To put it simply, if people feel like they missed nothing when they missed church, they’ll keep missing church.

5. Passion's Beating Polish

If you’ve been around church world for the last few decades, it’s easy to think that you need polish to pull off effective ministry. Another $50,000 for lights or sound and you’ll be good. To be sure, charismatic churches have some amazing production. But if you’re sitting there thinking that you need a better soundboard, some new LEDs and a much better band to reach people, think again.

Passion is free. And passion beats polish.

The effective churches I’ve visited and seen recently by no means had the best lights, stage or production. Some had almost no stage and no lights, while others had a pretty decent package, but not nearly the level you see at some churches. What did they all have in common? Passion.

When it comes to reaching the next generation, passion beats polish. And passion is free.

It’s not that polish is bad (I’m all for great environments and seeing people fully use their gifts to create amazing experiences) but I think polish falls flat unless accompanied by a raw passion that exudes from leaders who love connecting people with God.

In some of the growing churches I’ve personally visited, smaller facilities and stage sets were more than compensated for by preachers, worship leaders and team members who exuded passion for the mission. One caveat: don’t fake passion—people can smell fake from a mile away. And don’t exaggerate it. Different people have different levels of passion. But if yours has faded, rekindle it. Pray about. Evoke what’s in there, and bring it to church. In an age where nothing seems real anymore, people are looking for authentic. Church, we have it.

A Few Reminders and Notes to Finish

Weird is still weird.

The attractional movement has done a great job reminding all of us that we have guests in the room. And while the foyer may have moved, someone’s first Sunday is still a huge deal. So that’s no excuse to be self-indulgently weird. Authentic doesn’t mean weird.

Emotionalism won't win the day.

Another trend I’ve seen is that the next generation of preachers (under 40s) seem to preach more than they teach. It’s always hard to define the exact difference between the two but simply put, preaching speaks more to the heart, teaching speaks more to the head.

Preachers facilitate an experience. Teachers convey information. I think the best pastors do both well. Preaching without solid teaching can become emotionalism. Teaching without preaching can become intellectualism. Preaching leads people to say ‘That’s right. I need to change.” Teaching can lead people to say “He’s right. That’s a good point.” I default toward teaching so this is a challenge for me.

Remember the people you're trying to reach.

The church is still one of the few organizations that exists for the sake of its non-members. Doubt that? Well, aren’t you glad someone didn’t decide the church was done before you were introduced to the love of Jesus.

For sure, you need to care for the people you have, but never to the exclusion of the people you’re called to reach. Churches that over-focus on the needs of insiders will eventually only have insiders. And when that happens, you missed the mission.

Read more about how to make church gatherings compelling in "Why Can't Jesus Be Enough For Sunday."

Find the original article "5 Reasons Charismatic Churches are Growing (And Attractional Churches are Past Peak)" by Carey Nieuwhof.