Developing A Long-Term Strategy For The Enhancement Of Church Health Among Fellowship Of Evangelical Free Church Of Australia Churches And Other Participating Churches Based On Natural Church Development Concepts

2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ka Shing S. LUI
2004 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 502-518
Author(s):  
Gerben Heitink

This article is an attempt to open up a new perspective on the crisis of christianity and church in the context of Western Europe, especially The Netherlands. Since half a century the secularisation paradigm has  been the dominant perspective to explain  this development. But a long-term historical perspective offers a wider horizon. Through the ages there have been different  types of christianity (E.Troeltsch): the public church in relation to the civil society, the free church emphasizing church membership (the priesthood of the believers) and the more individualized mystic type of faith. Since the  separation  of church and state untill totday the second type had been the dominant one. A consequence of  the cultural  shift from modernity to postmodernity is the rise of ‘wild devotion’ conform the third type of a more individualized way of life. This article pays attention to the challenges of these  developments  to the practice of church life and the pastoral profession. 


2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 198-217
Author(s):  
Friedrich Schweitzer ◽  
Wolfgang Ilg

Abstract This article first discusses the question of how empirical research can contribute to the ongoing discussions concerning the future of the church. Among others, German research on church membership is used as a case study for gaining insights into the interplay between theoretical assumptions, empirical research and designing strategies for church development. The need for comparisons over time, for longitudinal studies and the identification of long-term predictors is discussed. Against this background, recent research on confirmation work in Germany and Europe is taken up as an example. The article draws on data from a European study on confirmation work with a longitudinal research approach. The results show that confirmation work, as one of the major educational programs of the Protestant Church, can influence adolescents’ views of Christian faith and the church. Predictors for future commitment to the church in terms of believing, belonging and volunteerism are not only dependent on religious socialization in childhood but also on experiences and activities during confirmation time in adolescence.


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