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Churches all have their own set of unique problems as well as a set of problems that are common amongst a vast majority of churches. One that needs to be quickly addressed is a lack of young, single men attending church.
This is a problem that
church leaders and churchgoers must work together to solve going forward.
Churches are increasingly becoming very unpopular places to meet a future wife or husband
since the 1940s. The truth is, Christian Culture is dying. A culture cannot
survive with great gender imbalances. Religious communities normally form
semi-closed dating and marriage pools. However, new families cannot be formed
when there is a barrier of severe gender imbalance. According to Lyman Stone’s study, a typical Sunday service has 71 eligible
men to 100 eligible women. This is an enormous problem within the Body of
Christ that isn’t getting any better or going to fix itself. Here are three steps to help solve the
problem.
Step One: Have more Sunday sermons focused on careers, sex, and
marriage. These topics are of great importance, yet are hardly covered from the
pulpit. In today’s modern world, Youtubers like Mark Ballenger, Tiffany Dawn, Karolyne Roberts,
and others are tremendously beneficial to young, single Christians in
discussing topics like dating, sex, marriage, and singleness. I have viewed
their content multiple times and found it very practical and beneficial in my
own life, and the comment sections show that I am not alone. These same lessons
simply have to be taught from the pulpit, not just on Youtube.
The truth is young men leave the church for a plethora of reasons, but one of
the main reasons is moving away to school or going to a new place to start a
career. Young people have a hard enough time finding what to do with their
lives, but men especially are judged in the sexual marketplace by their career.
Young men can find some guidance in the church if they are taught on Sundays
how to pick a career for themselves. Also, teach young men how to find a
Christian woman that they can start a family with. Men need to learn how to
balance their work lives with their home lives. Teach these lessons from the
pulpit.
Step Two: Have Mother’s Day and Father’s Day celebrations be on equal
footing. On Mother’s Day, pastors tend to preach sermons about the wonderful
maternal examples in the Bible: Hannah, the mother of Samuel; Mary, the mother
of Jesus; Jochebed, the mother of Moses. Mothers are praised and told how
wonderful they are and how being a mom is one of the hardest jobs in the world.
They are told how crucial they are in the upbringing and stability of a child’s
life. They are given flowers, cards, brunches, and gifts. Mother’s Day can even
turn into a fashion show at some churches. But Father’s Day takes a backseat.
It’s actually quite forgettable. Fathers are told that they need to step up
their game. Fathers are berated and left wondering if they do anything right at
all. Maybe they get donuts and coffee and quite possibly a standing ovation.
But the overall message to men is “Do Better,” while the message to women is
“You’re Amazing”. If churches keep telling men they are not enough, churches
will keep finding they don’t have enough men.
Step Three: Have events that interest men, not just events men attend.
The truth is that men need other men, and men bond over activities, not
conversation. Many churches get this wrong. Men’s groups may try to just have
men get together and talk and open up to each other; while this is important to
build men up, this does not draw men. Psychologist Leonard Sax puts it best in
the second edition of his book, Why Gender
Matters: “Girls friendships are about being together, spending time
together, talking together, going places together. Friendships between boys, on
the other hand, usually develop out of a shared interest in a game or
activity”.
Men and boys aren’t just going to sit and talk like how women and girls do. Men
need activities that will cause them to want to be together. Airsofting,
golfing, gym outings, hikes, bike rides, fishing, or other activities that
get testosterone pumping and create a pecking order is how men come together.
The events where men sit down and talk do not draw new men into the fold. Men have
to DO something; events with action, movement, and a goal are what interest and
draw men, not sitting down and opening up to each other.
As Candace Owens shared on Twitter,
no society will last long with an absence of strong men.
A child turns out best when a mother and
father are present. The church needs both men and women. The Body of Christ
will not be as strong as it is supposed to be with this serious gender
imbalance. The vast majority of young Christian ladies desire to get married,
and once the men in the church are taken, the remaining women will either stay
single, marry Christian men who don’t attend church or marry non-Christian
men. These three options are all deadly blows to the church. If the church
seeks to stay strong, it must draw the men back in.
Let me know what you think.
News Source: Christian Post
Written by: Solomon Green
Thank you sir
ReplyDeleteI agree with the last two points but I have concerns with the first point. Won't that be a deviating from the true gospel?
Those steps are worth starting with.
ReplyDelete👍
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