Here in the Global North, churches are facing major challenges. The churches in the Global South, they're growing quickly. What were once mission receiving regions are now the mission-sending ones. Many of our congregations are a shadow of their former selves. Many that were once thriving congregations are now gone from our midst. The congregation I serve was once one of the largest and most influential in the denomination, while its pastors had a national following. We're not that church today. So, what is the future?
Wesley Granberg- Michaelson offers ten challenges he believes face Christianity, and which will reshape who we are. Much of what he shares I have known, some I've been living for the past thirty plus years of of ordained ministry. Fortunately, this is not simply a rehashing of old memes about how liberal churches decline and conservative churches grow. Truth be told, conservative churches are now facing the same challenges more liberal ones faced in years prior. We're just farther along. My sense is that with the apparent white evangelical embrace of Trumpism, they will face an increasing dilemma. Issues like same-sex marriage, which mainline churches have been working through for a couple of decades will hit soon, if it hasn't already among younger members. That is only one of many issues.
So, what of the ten challenges? The first is the challenge of revitalizing withering congregations. I've been trying, but without much success. There are, however, signs that new kinds of congregations are being planted within existing congregations that are promising good results. The second challenge is titled "Embracing the Color of the Future." The suggestion here is that our future is diverse. I found interesting his reference to the prevalence of so called "nones" in Portland, Oregon, noting that this phenomenon that has gotten a lot of press is largely a white one. But persons of color, they're more likely to embrace religious life, and diverse congregations may be the wave of the future (and the present if we allow it to happen). I do know that at least in my denomination what growth we have is among non-white and multi-ethnic congregations. The third challenge is titled "Seeing through Non-Western Eyes." When I look at my book shelves, most of my books were written by European and North American scholars, mostly white males. I was introduced to Liberation Theology a long time ago, and have tried to open myself to other visions, but still it's easy to look at faith through Western Eyes, but with the dynamic nature of the Global South, it's time to pay attention to other vantage points.
We live with the challenges of climate change, which has been impacted by industrial "advancement." The Enlightenment by and large de-sacralized the world, and that hasn't been good for the world. So maybe it's time for a change. It's time to again perceive this world as sacred, as created by God, and therefore good.
From the sacredness of our world, he moves to an affirmation of "spirit-filled communities." Here again, there is notice of patterns of growth, and around the world it is to be found in communities that are Pentecostal and Charismatic in orientation. Modern Pentecostalism is largely traced to the Azusa Street Revival in 1906, a revival that gave birth to a diverse movement of the Spirit that is expanding exponentially across the globe. Granberg-Michaelson notes that there are now six hundred million Pentecostals around the world, which is ten times the number as in 1970, making this one of the fastest growing Christian movement in history. So, what does this movement have to say to us?
Challenge six is truly challenging -- "Rejecting the Heresy of Individualism." This is one of the bedrocks of our culture, and yet it may have to go. We're not islands. We're created for community. So, how are we going to embrace this? Again he invites us to look to global Christianity, which is much less affected by Enlightenment individualism. With chapter seven, he really starts meddling -- the challenge of "De-Americanizing the Gospel." Here he takes note of the danger of Trumpism, and the way in which international evangelical leaders are concerned about its affect on the churches of this nation. "De-Americanizing the gospel requires listening intently to Christian voices that are not simply shaped by the American Church" (p. 152). It also requires greater grounding in the biblical faith. Challenge 8 involves the culture wars that continue to rage, and which are undermining the gospel. What issue more than any other divides? It is the question of same-sex relationships. These wars have become globalized.
Challenge nine has to do with "Belonging before Believing." Here is another challenge to our individualism. Faith is something more often than not that is developed as we become part of a community. The future belongs to those who discern how to do this well. He makes use here of the idea of bounded versus centered sets, so that communities that are centered set focus less on boundaries than on the center, which for Christians should be Jesus, but the focus is one of relationship rather than doctrine.
Challenge ten is titled "Saving This World." There has long been a debate within the Christian community as to whether we have any responsibility for saving this world. Aren't we supposed to separate ourselves? We can be light to the world, but saving the world isn't our job. Or is it? Perhaps our calling is to a holistic vision that is rooted both in our relationship with God, and engaging in work that touches the world. It is a vision to which I am committed, and which I believe is rooted in the Gospel. His suggestion is that this is also central to living out of our faith.
Again, the information isn't altogether new, but it the author has done an excellent job of drawing together a set of realities that stand at the heart of our lives as Christians. The future will look a lot different. Change isn't easy. Not all congregations will survive, but I don't think that Christianity will disappear. In fact, the Western World might be the next mission field, as folks from across the globe bring the faith to us in the Global North.