How to get young people into church



When my husband and I joined our church—Waterloo-Kitchener United Mennonite—a few years ago, we joked that we (in our 50s) were the youth group. A year later, the church hired a young adult as our church administrator. She came with excellent skills—and lots of questions about God, the church and faith. It had been years since she had attended church, and she had seen harm done in the name of Christianity. Was God also hateful, unkind, vengeful? She genuinely wanted to know.

For months, Katria met with a retired pastor for what morphed into baptismal classes. Last spring, we shared her evident faith and joy as she was baptized.

In the current issue of CM, she shares her faith story Never Alone. I hope you’re encouraged as you read it.

But, since many church “youth groups” are made of people my age, we need to think about why.

A recent article offers a new take, suggesting that rather than this simply being caused by the rising authority of science and reason, individualism, materialism and pluralism, secularization is sensitive to the “religious imaginary” — how religion is viewed in society.

The authors say, while Canadians once widely saw religion in positive terms, among younger people especially, it is increasingly perceived in a negative light (see Katria’s concerns above), and it’s becoming socially unacceptable for younger people to be religious.

How do we wrestle with the possibility that while Jesus came “that they may have life, and have it to the full,” (John 10:10) we’ve gotten a reputation for being unkind. It’s a sobering thought, but also one that calls us in the church to repent so that we can have and invite others into that abundant life.

We’d love to hear from you on this,

Susan


“Never alone.” Katria Ezekiel shares about her return to church.



Galen Watts of the U of Waterloo offers a new take on why young people aren’t in church.


Desalegn Abebe, head of the largest Anabaptist body in the world, shares direct words for MCC amid their HR controversy, but his words are for all of us as we seek to be faithful to Jesus and the ways we function as his church.



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