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Three rules on seeking opinion

In a congregation getting started on a Church Wellness Project, teams are preparing to gather information from their fellow members. They will interview young adults, newcomers who joined, visitors who didn’t stay, former members, current and former leaders, and people engaged in various ministries, as well as staff.

Beyond the Labels

A friend and colleague in ministry with whom I share a number of theological and cultural differences recently commented that I was..

An evangelistic future?

After three days of making friends, comparing notes, hearing testimonies, and brainstorming their dreams, might 75 Presbyterians hope to create an evangelistic future for the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)?  Most of those attending the Grow the Church Deep and Wide:  Evangelism Consultation at Stony Point Center on November 10-12 hoped for that very thing.

Same old, old story

We sing that we love to tell the old, old story of Jesus and his love, but Presbyterians notoriously keep the story to themselves.  So reported Eric Hoey, the associate director for evangelism for the denomination’s General Assembly Council, to conferees at the Grow the Church Deep and Wide: Evangelism Consultation at Stony Point Conference Center on Nov. 10. 

Evangelism lessons from 10,000 miles away

STONY POINT, N.Y. — If we’re going to do evangelism well in the US, who better to train us than a veteran mission co-worker fresh from the foreign mission field? About 80 participants at the Grow the Church Deep and Wide: Evangelism Consultation at Stony Point Center soaked in a tour de force collection of lessons from one such worker on Nov. 10.

Deep and wide: Growing via evangelism?

STONY POINT, N.Y. — Mainline Protestant denominations have being shrinking for the past 40 years because they’ve scaled back what they did so well for decades before:  birthing babies. Growth surged during the baby boom of the 1950s, but when that faded so did membership. 

Two become one

Mark Twain once said “There are two kinds of people in the world: those who believe there are two kinds of people, and those who do not.” This week we begin a three-part series of articles by Edwin Barron on two kinds of churches. They reflect great research and offer lots of insights.

My summer with the PC(USA)

I had been pondering it all summer, but it didn’t hit me full force until I saw it juxtaposed so starkly. There, lying on my nightstand, were two bookmarks. Not exactly earth shaking, I hear you say. True.

Why do we Presbyterians continue to fight?

Editor’s note: This is the first installment of a three-part series. Succeeding installments will appear in later issues of the Outlook The topics include: “Why Scripture divides us,” and “The priority of experience in moral debate.”

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