Evangelicals challenged to mentor the consumer generation
A survey taken of 800 young people at Soul Survivor's Momentum event for students and 20-somethings showed young adults are most attracted to a church by the resources it provides to support their own personal faith.
Relevant preaching was ranked as the characteristic that would most attract them to church, followed by excellent worship and with people they can relate to coming third. The least attractive characteristics were the church being mission-orientated or a safe place to invite friends.
Only one-third of the under 30s said they see themselves as leaders in their church.
Soul Survivor leader Mike Pilavachi, addressing the EA council, said a culture of consumerism, individualism and entitlement has "eaten into the psyche of 20-somethings".
"What that mitigates against completely is commitment to community," he said, explaining that 20-somethings are always in a futile search for perfection, are afraid of going into the real world and show a great deal of pain in ministry times.
"We've got to help them," he said. "We've got to love them, we've got to listen to them, but also we've got to find ways of gently, lovingly but definitely challenging some of the things that come from a culture of consumerism, individualism and entitlement."
Gavin Calver of Youth for Christ and Tim Rudge of UCCF, responding to the survey, said the church has a responsibility to mentor and invest in young people through their progression from childhood to adulthood.
Jason Lane, Executive Director of young persons' ministry Innovista, said: "In our experience, people from this age group feel they have to make a choice between a church that's for me and a church that's about mission. For them, it's actually a choice between surviving as a Christian or not.
"We need to give them both, where church can support you as a Christian and helping you live for Jesus, which involves and includes mission."
Steve Clifford, General Director of the Evangelical Alliance, said: "The survey findings, and the personal experiences shared at the symposium, are a wake-up call to the church.
"As an Alliance, we are committed to provoking conversation and all of us, across all ages, are ready to respond to this challenge."
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