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Last month, I was in a room in Central Pennsylvania with North American leaders and kingdom practitioners from around the country for a retreat. After lunch we centered our conversation around this question:

“Where is the Church in North America heading and what are the implications?”

For those who know me, you know I am passionate about discussing a great question. And this certainly is a significant one.

Many missiologists, theologians, and scholars believe the Global Church is becoming more diverse and moving south. That is, the center of Christianity is no longer in North America, but its greatest movement is in the Southern Hemisphere, particularly South America and the southern part of the continent of Africa.

But what about North America? What does the future of the Church look like here? Well, we don’t know for sure, but we are seeing it become more diverse (ethnicity, race, gender, etc.), more urban, and more post-Christian/postmodern. With all this as the foundation, we dug deeper. We broke our answers into three categories:

  • Sociological (what does this mean for how we interact with others)

  • Ecclesiological (what does this mean for the Church and localized churches)

  • Missiological (what does this mean in how we join with God and His mission)

Here is what we surmised for each category:

Sociological

[1] People (and churches) will become more digital… while at the same time, there will also be an increased desire for a more analog – and incarnational – reality. Technology will become more important, while at the same time, there will be a growing movement of people who will long for less techno-centric living in order to be more present and grounded. In-person relationships will becoming even more important as isolation and loneliness increase.

[2] Graciously navigating people’s shame will be an ever-increasingly important evangelistic in-road into people’s lives. Shame is so prevalent in our culture and most people don’t possess the tools and skills to navigate them. If the Church can compassionately learn to enter into people’s shame to experience forgiveness and honor that comes from being a child of God, an evangelistic movement can start.

Shame is so prevalent in our culture- If the Church can compassionately learn to enter into people’s shame to experience forgiveness and honor that comes from being a child of God, an evangelistic movement can start.

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[3] Rented/shared church building spaces will become much more commonplace. Increasingly, churches will need to think more strategically about physical space. Because of this, partnerships with groups and members of the community will becoming even more important and strategic moving forward.

[4] There will be a growing longing and desire to return to the roots of our childhood. We see this already with the wild success of Toy Story 4, the return of items such as fanny packs and Nintendo, the popularity of the Netflix show Stranger Things, superheroes, a growing number of adult sleep-away camps, etc.). How might the Church utilize this longing to help us see the wonder of being a child of God?

[5] A return to and increased desire for a robust, thoughtful and faithful holiness, but it will be free from legalism and moralistic elitism, but full of a faithfulness to honor God more fully. While holiness has been seen as negative, there will be a passionate desire to return to holistic, holy living as we focus on God in His holiness.

Ecclesiological

[1] A greater emphasis (if not necessity) on holistic and integrated practice-based faith for Christianity to be taken seriously in the future (praxis). People long to practice their faith, not merely talk about it. When faith is not practiced, credibility with those we seek to love and serve is lost.

[2] Church size will become more polarized. Churches will continue to become larger (megachurches) yet also smaller (house churches, small church movement, etc.) with little room for the middle-sized churches moving forward due to many complex factors and issues.

[3] Pastors around 40 years of age and younger will not retire from full-time ministry. Bi-vocational and co-vocational ministry will continue to grow. Seminaries that adapt to these realities will flourish; those that don’t will disappear or merge with other seminaries.

[4] In a world of increasing immediacy, un-rootedness and fluidity, there will be a desire for long-standing tradition and liturgy within churches. This increase will grow because people long to know they are a part of something bigger – and older – than they are.

[5] Networks of spiritual mentoring and apprenticeship will increase.

Missiological

[1] Leaders on the fringes of denominations will join together in stronger and thicker partnerships and relationships (i.e. associations, networks, loose tribes, bands, etc.). Tribes and associations will form out of this desire that will share more of a philosophical and missiological identity rather than doctrinal affiliation. Leaders who have felt out of place will now seek out and find spaces and groups where they feel much more at home.

[2] New forms of church will continue to emerge as needs and issues in our complex world intensify. These new forms and structures of church will need to be lightweight, low maintenance and high accountability. The movement Fresh Expressions U.S. may be the leading edge of movements/networks who are positioning themselves for the changing nature of the Church.

New forms of church will continue to emerge which will be lightweight, low maintenance and high accountability.

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[3] This is a Daniel moment. As the Church seeks to be faithful in an ever-increasingly hostile world where we are always “playing an away game.” The book of Daniel will be the text by which Christians will need to study, discuss, and emulate with more passion and conviction. This is what we call a Daniel moment.


  • What resonates with you?

  • What do you agree with? Disagree with?

  • And what did we miss that should be added to the list?

Let us know. We’d love to hear from you.

(This article originally appeared at Kairos Partnerships)

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J.R. Briggs
About the Author

J.R. Briggs

J.R. Briggs is a National Trainer & Equipper for Fresh Expressions U.S. He is also the Founder of Kairos Partnerships, a ministry that seeks to love the Church by caring for Her leaders. His role with Kairos Partnerships is expressed through coaching, consulting, speaking, equipping and writing serving a wide variety of leaders, pastors, churches, non-profits, ministries, companies and denominations. He is affiliate faculty member in practical theology at Missio Seminary and guest instructor at Friends University in the Masters of Arts in Spiritual Formation program. He has guest lectured, taught and spoken at over a dozen colleges, universities, and seminaries around the U.S. He also serves as the Director of Leadership & Congregational Formation for The Ecclesia Network. He is an author, co-author and contributor of ten books that seek to equip and care for kingdom leaders. J.R. and his wife Megan have been married for over 15 years and have two sons, Carter and Bennett. They live in the heart of Lansdale, PA.