Friday, April 07, 2006

MORE WINDS OF CHANGE?

After reading the following from the Pastor's Weekly Briefing from Focus on the Family, I began to wonder if we are starting to see the winds of change blowing through our churches now. Are we in the beginning stages of a major revival in our land? For years now, I have felt that revival was roaring through our youth, as evidenced through the proliferation of praise and worship and contemporary music on popular radio and t.v. and the increased spirituality of our youth. Are we beginning to see the fruits of this outpouring of the Spirit in our churches now, as the youth have become young adults and started filling the pews in our traditional services?

From Focus on the Family's Pastor's Weekly Briefing:

"The most prolific jump in activity relates to Bible reading. Bible readership plummeted to a 20-year low of just 30 percent in 1995. But after several years of stalled growth, it has now hit a high of 47 percent of adults reading the Book during a typical week, other than when they are at church. This is the highest readership level achieved since the 1980s.

"Church attendance has increased slowly in recent years. While we have not returned to the 49 percent of adults who attended in a typical week as recorded in 1991, there has been a significant rebound from the 37 percent recorded in 1996, climbing to 47 percent in 2006.

"Involvement in small groups that meet for Bible study, prayer or personal relationships — other than Sunday school or Christian education classes — has reached a new high in 2006. Currently, nearly one out of every four adults (23%) is engaged in such a gathering during a typical week. A decade ago, one out of every six adults (17%) did so.

"Church volunteerism has returned to its 1991 level of 27 percent. Volunteering at a church has been one of the more stable measures during the past 15 years, ranging from a low of 20 percent to the current high.

"Adult Sunday school attendance has risen in recent years from 17 percent (recorded in 1995 and 1996) to 24 percent in this year's tracking survey.

"The only two religious behaviors which did not reflect significant change were prayer — slightly more than four out of five adults claimed they had prayed in the past week — and evangelism — with six out of ten Christians claiming to have shared their beliefs about Jesus with someone whom they knew believed differently."

These are exciting changes that Barna recorded and the Focus on the Family reported in this newsletter. Maybe we are in the beginning stages of a sweeping national revival?

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