Is the Future of the Church  Doomed Without  Millennials?






By _Kevin Porter_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/kevin-porter/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter
August 1, 2016|9:09  am








 
 
 

Can a church survive without young people? 
On the face of it the answer seems to be "no,"  according to the 
_Leadership Network_ 
(http://leadnet.org/a-church-without-millennials-is-a-church-without-a-future/) 
, a Christian nonprofit ministry headquartered in Dallas, 
Texas, that  says engaging millennials is the most important decision a church 
can make  regarding its future. 
Millennials make up 20 percent of the entire U.S. population with 83 
million  people — even more than Baby Boomers — and by 2020 will make up 30 
percent. 
This group is a progressive bunch who are the most racially diverse  
generation with 60 percent Anglo and 15 percent immigrants; the most educated  
with more college degrees than any generation in history, and the most  single. 
The following are Leadership Network's Eric Swanson's Six Discoveries to 
help  churches reach, retain and grow millennials. 
1. Only 4 percent of millennials have a relationship with  Christ 
Of 1,300 people interviewed in 2000, Thom Rainer, then a dean of the Billy  
Graham School of Ministries, Evangelism and Church Growth at Kentucky's 
Southern  Baptist Theological Seminary (now president of LifeWay Christian 
Resources of  the Southern Baptist Convention), noted an alarmingly low 
percentage of people  who considered themselves to be Christians based on 
having 
accepted Christ. He  categorized these people into four groups: 
Builders (born before 1946), Boomers (born between 1946 and 1964), Busters  
(born from 1965 to 1976) and Bridgers, or millennials, (1977-1994). 
Sixty-five percent of Builders were Christian, 35 percent of Boomers were  
Christian, 15 percent of Busters were Christian and 4 percent of Bridgers 
were  Christian, demonstrating a significant drop in the percentage of people 
who are  Christian, from one generation to the next. 
Rainer said, "Of these people, 75 percent of them became Christians before  
the age of 14. ... If we really look at the data and are objective, we will 
look  at our preschoolers and children and become  intentionally 
evangelistic. If you don't have a plan to reach these children,  you've blown 
it," he 
concluded. 
2. Millennials don't want to work for you, they want to work with  you 
Linda Hill, a Harvard professor and co-author of the book Collective  
Genius, said in a recent TED Talk, "Talented people don't want to  follow me 
anywhere. They want to co-create, with me, the future." 
Leadership Network's Eric Swanson said millennials don't want a "guided  
discussion" where the conclusions are already predetermined, and since they  
don't subscribe to the concept of lifetime employment  with a company they 
want to be able to contribute from day one, which is a very  positive thing 
when developing a leadership pipeline, he  explained.







 
 
 

3. Millennials are different than portrayed 
Swanson said millennials are often mischaracterized as entitled and  
self-centered, and are often said to represent what's wrong with America. 
"Considering the fact that they graduated in which some say was the worst  
economy since the Great Depression," and have more college degrees than any  
generation in history, Swanson said they are a resilient bunch. 
Here are a few stats about millennials that dispel some negative  
stereotypes: 
    *   63 percent donate to charity 
    *   43 percent actively volunteer 
    *   70 percent of millennials said their career is central to their  
identity 
    *   54 percent want to start their own business or already have done so 
    *   Millennials comprise one-third of all entrepreneurs in the U.S. 
    *   64 percent said they would rather make $40K a year at a job they 
love than  $100K
a year at a job they think is boring. 
    *   50 percent would rather have no job than one that they hate
4. Based on Discovery No. 3, millennials will actually cause churches  and 
pastors to be more authentic, participatory, externally focused, inclusive  
and more diverse 
Swanson asserted that the church has more to learn about authenticity,  
inclusion, entrepreneurship, diversity, and living on purpose than it has to  
teach. He added that the Church should not presume that as millennials age 
they  will simply assume the roles of the Boomer and Gen X worlds. 
5. Nearly 25 million millennials said, "Church is very important in  their 
lives" 
Instead of worrying about the 29 percent of millennials who have lost any  
interest in church, Swanson asked, "What if the key to reaching these 
'Nones'  was their relationship with the millennials who are connected to  God? 
6. Millennials Have 3 Top Priorities 
According to a 2010 _Pew Research survey_ 
(https://www.good.is/articles/new-pew-research-the-millennials-have-their-priorities-straight)
 , Millennials 
have 3 top priorities: 
    *   Being a good parent — 52 perceint 
    *   Having a successful marriage — 30 percent 
    *   Helping others in need — 21 percent
A 2015 survey by _Principle Financial Group_ 
(http://diginomica.com/2015/04/15/millennials-prefer-email-for-financial-services-duh/)
  found that 
Millennials' top  three of four passions are: 
 
    *   Raising a family — 79 percent 
    *   Starting a family — 62 percent 
    *   Being spiritual — 60 percent

Based on his research and the findings of other scholars  and theologians, 
Swanson concluded that "a church without millennials is a  church without a  
future."




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