journeys and stories

Nick Spencer's avatar
Posted by Nick Spencer Fri, 15/12/2006 - 1:00am :: Church | more by Nick Spencer

Why would anyone become a Christian in Britain today?

Why, when God is dead, religion a cause of global conflict and the church inflexible, illiberal and irrelevant, would anyone in their right mind embrace the Christian faith?

People do. Somewhere upwards of 15,000 a year, at a rough estimate – though surprisingly little research is done to find out how and why.

Over the last two years, LICC has worked with an ecumenical body in Scotland on a research project exploring why people ‘find faith today’. The results were always interesting, often inspiring and, above all, bewilderingly varied. If you didn’t know that everyone was talking about the same thing, you would never have guessed.

Three things stood out, however. First, the importance of people. It is people who bring others to Christ (hold the front page!). But not special or particular people. The research showed that you didn’t have to be a minister, an elder or a theology graduate to play this role. Everyone – ‘our son … my sister … my gran … my ex-girlfriend … this family I teach … my wife’s colleague’ – did their part. There were no extras.

Second, the importance of God. Obvious, you would think, but as a researcher you don’t really want God to turn up. He doesn’t do things your way. He messes up your theories. You can never pin him down. But he was there, nonetheless, making the whole of each person’s story somehow greater than the sum of its parts.

Third, the importance of the church. Time and again, people surprised themselves. They knew all about what was wrong with churches, yet they still spoke glowingly about the impact the church (meaning the body of Christians) had had on them. There was ‘something completely different’ about church, a ‘feeling of togetherness and unconditional acceptance’. ‘They were … the church family in the proper sense,’ one young man said.

Everyone knows how bad churches can be – heaven knows we’re told often enough. But perhaps the reality is different. Perhaps, for all their faults, churches are places of healing and redemption.

Certainly, one of the strongest messages to emerge from ‘Journeys and Stories’ is that a community of believers that is welcoming, joyful, enthusiastic, encouraging and loving presents an enormously powerful testimony, a compelling invitation to a banquet – perhaps even a sign that the Kingdom of God is here.

Nick Spencer

additional resources

‘Journeys and Stories’ is available from LICC for £5 plus p&p. Call 020 7399 9555 or click here to buy online.

Journeys And Stories
Posted by  David Faulkner on Fri, 15/12/2006 - 4:11pm.
Nice piece: I've briefly blogged about it here: http://davefaulkner.typepad.com/dave_faulkner_life_spirit/2006/12/why_do_people_b.html

David Faulkner
Methodist Minister, Chelmsford Circuit
Blog: http://davefaulkner.typepad.com/
Web: http://www.davefaulkner.co.uk/
Journeys and stories
Posted by  Andy Bathgate on Mon, 18/12/2006 - 12:47pm.
I attended an excellent presentation on Journeys and stories which provided an early indication of the results. At that point there was quite an emphasis placed on 'residual attachment'since so many of those interviewed had had some link with the Christian faith whilst young. I felt this was a very important emphasis and was slightly surprised it did not appear amongst the issues that stood out.

Below is a copy of the email I sent to Nick following the early presentation:
I was thinking further about this ‘residual attachment’ idea and the extent of its importance in the research. There is a danger perhaps that we simply accept that this will diminish. The conclusion from the research could equally be that, if ‘residual attachment’ is so significant then we need to be devoting even more of our energies to ensuring that as many as possible have some foundation laid in their early lives which may later be the base for them coming to ‘fully-fledged’ faith.

Is there a tendency to see this ‘residual attachment’ as almost having being ‘in the air’, as part of the environment of what was a less secular culture rather than something that was and can be inculcated by seeking to live and teach the Christian faith to children and young people?

This could have important implications for how we use our limited resources

Thanks

Andy
It's thrilling to hear when a
Posted by  Phil Clayton on Sun, 28/01/2007 - 9:36pm.
It's thrilling to hear when a church reaches out to needy groups of people and they come to faith. Often this is via some social action to poor people abroad or locally, or to the sick, the elderly, or people who are struggling in some way.

I haven't (yet) read the book. Are there stories & journeys from the comfortable, the happy, the satisfied who came to faith? I am sure this group is the hardest to reach, yet we tend to hear more from the front about reaching out to the worldly-needy. Do the comfortable sometimes come into the Kingdom as they are, as though winning the pearl of greater price; or is it usually after some sort of difficult life event?

A great idea for a book - must have been fascinating research Nick.

Phil Clayton
I'm always thinking why do we
Posted by  maryadavis on Fri, 11/07/2008 - 5:52pm.
I'm always thinking why do we need a Church to believe in God. My mom was very faithful and she always prayed for everyone. She never set foot in a Church though. She said that people forgot what the church should have been and that they are there for the wrong reasons.
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seo firm
God.
Posted by  hadibutt on Sat, 13/09/2008 - 10:47am.
God always remains in our heart, God always use to listen our prayers and fulfill them but we also have to remember him.
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seo services

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With love (and extra resources, group-work ideas and links...)
from
www.licc.org.uk/culture.