          Millenials, Generation Y Born from 1982 – 2001 Ages 11 – 30 Favored Generation Community Oriented Mission driven ‘Green’ Minded Team Players Live Technologically See Millenials report Pew Research.

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Transcript           Millenials, Generation Y Born from 1982 – 2001 Ages 11 – 30 Favored Generation Community Oriented Mission driven ‘Green’ Minded Team Players Live Technologically See Millenials report Pew Research.

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Millenials, Generation Y
Born from 1982 – 2001
Ages 11 – 30
Favored Generation
Community Oriented
Mission driven
‘Green’ Minded
Team Players
Live Technologically
See Millenials report
Pew Research
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The urgency of our times should not be driven
by our decline in the United Church of Christ.
The urgency of our times should be a new
generation and population attuned to the
values of our UCC message and witness with
great potential to be living
stones.
18-29
Total Population
20
Total Protestants
17
Nondenom Charismatic Churches
18
Nondenom Evangelical Churches
19
Church of God in Christ
29
Assemblies of God
14
American Baptist Churches
18
Southern Baptist Convention
13
African Methodist Episcopal
14
United Methodist Church
11
Ev. Lutheran Church of America
8
Disciples of Christ
10
Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod
11
Presbyterian Church in America
12
Episcopal Church in the USA
11
Presbyterian Church USA
8
United Church of Christ
11
Anglican Church
7
30–49
39
38
54
51
33
41
36
37
31
34
36
33
32
29
29
31
27
26
50-64
25
26
22
22
28
33
23
27
30
29
29
21
31
32
34
30
34
33
65+
16
20
6
8
10
12
23
22
25
26
27
35
26
27
25
32
28
35
Unchurched USA
•Since 1991 adult population
in the US grew by 15%.
•During that same period the
unchurched population grew
by 92%! 75 million US
adults do not attend church
'Unchurched' Americans
say church is 'full of
hypocrites' consider
Christianity to be more about
organized religion than
about loving God and
people, …“unchristian”.
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Age
% Outsiders
to Christianity
18-41
37%
16-29
40%
42-60
27%
61+
23%
Population
34 Million
24 Million
21 Million
12 Million
44 percent -- agreed that
"Christians get on my nerves.“
Vast majority of young non-Christians
view Christianity as anti-gay,
judgmental, hypocritical, too political,
and out of touch.
But 78 percent said they would be
willing to listen to someone who wanted
to tell them about his or her Christian
beliefs.
Almost three-quarters -- 72 percent -agreed that God "actually exists“ and an
even larger percentage -- 86 percent -said they believed they could have a
good relationship with God without
church involvement.
Six Reasons Young Christians Leave Church
The Barna Group
September 28, 2011
http://www.barna.org/teens-next-gen-articles/528-six-reasons-youngchristians-leave-church
• Reason #1 – Churches seem overprotective.
• Reason #2 – Teens’ and twentysomethings’ experience of
Christianity is shallow.
• Reason #3 – Churches come across as antagonistic to
science.
• Reason #4 – Young Christians’ church experiences related
to sexuality are often simplistic, judgmental.
• Reason #5 – They wrestle with the exclusive nature of
Christianity.
• Reason #6 – The church feels unfriendly to those who
doubt.
Five Myths About Young Adult Church Dropouts
The Barna Group
November 16, 2011
http://www.barna.org/teens-next-gen-articles/534-five-myths-about-youngadult-church-dropouts
Results of the entire research project are found in the book You Lost Me: Why
Young Christians are Leaving Church…and Rethinking Faith by David Kinnaman
Myth 1: Most people lose their faith when they leave high school. Reality: More
commonly, young Christians wander away from the institutional
church—a pattern the researchers labeled nomads. They still call
themselves Christians but they are far less active in church than they
were during high school.
Myth 2: Dropping out of church is just a natural part of young adults’
maturation. Reality: The significant spiritual and technological changes
over the last 50 years make the dropout problem more urgent. Young
people are dropping out earlier, staying away longer, and if they come
back are less likely to see the church as a long-term part of their life.
Myths
Myth 3: College experiences are the key factor that cause people to drop out.
Reality: College certainly plays a role in young Christians' spiritual
journeys, but it is not necessarily the 'faith killer' many assume. Many
young Christians dissociate from their church upbringing well before they
reach a college environment; in fact, many are emotionally disconnected
from church before their 16th birthday. The problem arises from the
inadequacy of preparing young Christians for life beyond youth group.
Myth 4: This generation of young Christians is increasingly "biblically illiterate."
Reality: When comparing the faith of young practicing Christians (ages 18
to 29) to those of older practicing Christians (ages 30-plus), surprisingly
few differences emerged between what the two groups believe. Many
younger Christians are cognizant that their peers are increasingly
unfriendly or indifferent toward Christian beliefs and commitment. As a
consequence, young Christians recognize that the nature of sharing one's
faith is changing. For example, many young Christians believe they have to
be more culturally engaged in order to communicate Christianity to their
peers.
THE BIG MYTH
Myth 5: Young people will come back to church like they
always do. Reality: Some faith leaders minimize the
church dropout problem by assuming that young adults
will come back to the church when they get older,
especially when they have children. However, previous
research conducted by Barna Group raises doubts about
this conclusion. Furthermore, the social changes since
1960 make this generation much less likely to follow the
conventional path to having children: Mosaics (often
called Millennials or Gen Y) are getting married roughly
six years later than did the Boomers; they are having
their first child much later in life;
Five Cultural Shifts That Should Affect the
Way We Do Church
Carol Howard Merritt
Duke Divinity School Faith and Leadership Blog
September 22, 2011
http://www.faithandleadership.com/blog/09-22-2011/carol-howard-merrittfive-cultural-shifts-should-affect-the-way-we-do-church
• Finances. Younger generations are not faring well in this
economy and they feel like they need to get their life
together before they go to church.
• Work Hours. Many people in their 20s and 30s work retail
or in the service industry. You don’t get Sunday
mornings off unless you’re management.
Five Cultural Shifts That Should Affect the
Way We Do Church
• Families. People marry and have children later in life. We’re a society
that expects financial stability before a couple gets married, and many
younger adults can’t manage financial stability.
• The Internet. Church leaders have a lot on their plate. Many don’t think
they have any time for Facebook or Twitter. But there’s no way to
ignore it any longer. Even if a church leader shies away from the web,
people may be talking about you on Google Map reviews or Yelp.
• Politics. A new generation is exhausted from the culture wars. Many
people growing up in the last few decades had a difficult time keeping
“Christian” and “Republican” in two separate boxes. Emerging
generations look at poverty, the environment and war as complex
issues, and many younger evangelicals are less likely to vote on prolife credentials alone. Many young Christians who grew up
evangelical are trying out mainline congregations.
What does all this mean?
What is it saying to us?
In The Celtic Way of Evangelism: How
Christianity Can Reach the West . . . Again,
George Hunter writes about the difference
between what he describes as the
evangelism approach in Roman and Celtic
Christianity.
Roman Model
Presentation
Decision
Fellowship
Celtic Model
Fellowship
Ministry and Conversation
Belief,
Invitation to Commitment
Christianity is more caught than taught! As
Professor Robin Gill observes, belonging
comes before believing. For this reason,
Fostering discipleship is now about helping
people to belong so that they can believe.
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The days of waiting for new generations to
come to church to welcome them are over.
Instead of waiting inside, we go outside to
meet them
Bridge the gap by building relationships
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‘Hang out’ where there are new generations
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Meet them where they gather
 Soccer matches, book stores, Coffee Shop, Gym, Parks
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Pastors ‘office’ in a coffee shop, fast food, bookstore.
Make public your worship, go outdoors
Have discussion groups outside the church.
 Bible/book studies in coffee shop, book store
 Movies
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Engage in conversation, build relationships,
Collect data of names/addresses/e-mails
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“I
stopped wondering about how to draw
younger folks into my church and
started focusing on how to draw my
congregation out of its building and into
relationship with the world outside its
doors.”
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Conversational ministry is central to the future
of the church in 21st
Count conversations, not conversions
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Brian McLaren, More Ready than You Think
Talk and Listen to New Generations
 What are their hopes and challenges.
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The postmodern world calls for disciples who
reach out to a world that is hungering for
good conversation about faith, values, hope,
meaning, purpose, goodness, beauty, truth,
life after death, life before death and God.
Engaging in everyday faith conversations will
not only help others become disciples, it will
help us become disciples, who know and love
the stillspeaking God more than ever.
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New Generations want to talk.
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We are the ones who are not talking
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New Generations are curious and want
information not on “what” we believe, but
“why” we believe.
Go Forth into the
Virtual World!
Missional Tools Online
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Connecting with new generations on-line
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Church Website
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Invitational
Interactive
Messaging
E.newsletter
Links
Facebook
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Church fanpage
Your own
Links
Advertising
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E-mail Blasts
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Daily Devotional
Twitter
You Tube
Webinars
On Line Classes
On Line Prayer
Go To Meetings
Apps
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Reaching New Generations
Make it joyful and God-filled
Make it spiritual and experiential
Make it conversational and casual
Make it personal, real and authentic
Make it about missional opportunities
Make it about discipleship not membership
Make it about community transformation not church growth
Make it about the journey not the place
Make it excellent
Make it real online
Make it possible for busy lives
What did you learn about
new generations?
What are best practices that
you have seen in faith
formation with new
generations?
What is one thing
you are going to do?
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Blessings as you discern how God is
calling you in faith formation to
build a foundation of living stones
with new generations!
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