SermonCentral.com - Your Sermon Resource Center
October 20, 2008
Topic: Commitment

Dear Church Leader:

It pierces a shepherd's heart when a sheep is lost to the wolves. I'll bet you have seen a stray member of your congregation wander off and suffer spiritual damage as a result. The wandering trend is on the rise. Sam Rainer, President of Rainer Research, understands the causes of the problem and solutions to address it. Today's article, Squaring Off with the Church Dropout Rate, offers valuable tools to you as a pastor wanting desperately to keep younger sheep in the fold. If you want a deeper look into this crisis, I recommend Sam and Thom Rainer's book, Essential Church.

Also a reminder: this Wednesday, we are offering a free webinar that could serve as the basis of your next sermon series. Join us with Dr. John MacArthur on Preaching the Prodigal: The Parable You've Never Heard Before. Learn more about the webinar and register here.

Because dropouts matter,

Ron Forseth
General Editor
SermonCentral.com


Sam S. Rainer III

Squaring Off with the Church Dropout Rate

by Sam S. Rainer III

Rainer Research
Full Article

When my father, Thom S. Rainer, and I began looking at research about the young adult population, we were stunned. We knew anecdotally that people leave the church. And studying the latest research, we understood that many leave the church during their young adult years. What we did not realize was the concentration of people that leave during their college-age years.

The dropout number that the research uncovered alarmed us: 70% of young adults drop out between the ages of 18 and 22. The number alone is numbing. Perhaps more distressing are some of the reasons why these students are leaving.

Why Do Dropouts Leave?

Their faith doesn't look like their parents' faith. This generation likes to talk about faith. Many believe, rightly or wrongly, that they have faith. Religious matters do not scare them. Most maintain some level of interest in spiritual topics. But this generation must fuse faith and church, or else they see no reason to stay in church. Frankly, the faith of their parents is not reason enough for them to claim it as their own.

One of the most glaring issues of estrangement for 18-22 year-olds is the gap between their personal belief system and their church's stated beliefs. In other words, the church's external beliefs, covenant, or confession goes against the personal and internal belief structure of the younger adult crowd. In fact, only 53% of all young adult churchgoers state that they agree with the beliefs of their church. Clearly, the dropout crisis isn't found in the style, venue, programs, or location of the church. This crisis is much deeper—it runs to the core of the doctrinal truths of the church if only half of our young adults agree with the church's teachings.

Read Full Article

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This Week's Sermons

A Call to Commitment
by John Hamby
Romans 12:1-2

Why do you suppose that there are close to 100 million church members in America yet they are not making more of a moral and spiritual impact? There is of course a difference between a decision and a commitment. Charles Stanley in his book, Confronting Casual Christianity, says that it is because these couples made a decision but did not make a commitment.

Full Sermon »

The Comatose Congregation
by Jeff Strite
Revelation 3:1-6

Have you ever seen a dead church? What does a dead church like? What puzzles me about today's text is that the church that Jesus calls "dead" (Sardis) has a "reputation of being alive." What that indicates to me is that Sardis wouldn't have been a church you or I would look at and say "that's one dead church!" They look alive (even though Jesus declared them to be dead). Their parking lot may have been full every Sunday, their pews packed to capacity. Their preacher may have been the finest that money could buy. But something had died inside. They appeared to be alive, but as far as Jesus is concerned, they had reached a state of being comatose. And here's Jesus at their bedside, trying to slap them awake. "Wake up! Wake up!" he tells them.

Full Sermon »

R.S.V.P.
by Alan Smith
Matthew 22:1-14

Here in Matthew 22, Jesus tells a story that has to do with clothing, and what to wear, and he even talks about wearing the wrong thing. It's a disturbing story in some ways, and it doesn't have a happy ending. But it's a story with several important lessons, so let's take a look at it together this morning.

Full Sermon »

Commitment to the Church
by Marilyn Murphree
Ephesians 2:13-22

When you commit your life to Jesus, then what? Is it all taken care of and then you just forget about it? Maybe you are baptized and join a church and say, "Well, I've taken care of that. I've bought my heavenly insurance policy." What can we get out of today's Scripture that will move us forward in our relationship with the Lord? Is commitment to the church necessary today?

Full Sermon »

Passionate Commitment
by Wes Humble
2 Kings 2:1-14

God is looking for a people full of passion. Christ-followers are passionate people. Christ-followers are people who burn with a passion to serve God and others…God is calling this church to another level of walking with Him. God is calling you to another level in your spiritual journey. Maybe you are resting. Maybe you have taken a break for a little while. Maybe you have put your time in and just don't feel it any more. God has no reserves or weekend warriors. God is looking for people who will serve Him by serving others.

Full Sermon »

This Week's Videos

Video

Go To Church
Time: 2:49

We all have our reasons for not going to church from time to time. This video is a humorous look at one man's internal struggle about going to church.
click to watch »



Video

The Unexpected Visitor
Time: 4:20

Is your faith reflected in your lifestyle? What if Jesus showed up at your door?
click to watch »



Video

Anything But Jesus
Time: 1:09

Satan has one goal: anything but Jesus! Use this simple, yet affecting video to remind your congregation, Sunday School class, or Youth Group about the tactics Satan uses to distract us.
click to watch »

This Week's Sermon Illustrations

Fully Committed
Contributor: Doug Lyon

Garibaldi had an incredibly committed volunteer army. He would appeal for recruits in these terms: "I offer neither pay, nor quarters, nor provisions; I offer hunger, thirst, forced marches, battles and death. Let him who loves his country with his heart and not with his lips only, follow me!" Jesus invites you to discipleship. But He lets you know up front that it is a commitment that will cost you something. It's not going to be easy. To paraphrase Garibaldi, "Let him who loves the Lord with his heart and not with his lips only, be Jesus' disciple!"

We Need More Church Fans
Source: National & International Religion Report, 5/2/94. "To Verify," Leadership.
Contributor: D. Greg Ebie

The Bible tells us that where your treasure is, there your heart is also. That means we could accurately say that many folks are more committed to professional sports than they are to the church. In 1993 the total attendance at worship services in the U.S. was 5.6 billion, while the total attendance at U.S. professional baseball, football, and basketball games combined was only 103 million (less than two percent of the worship attendance, or for every 100 people who attended church less than two were at a sporting event.)

Now the rest of the story: Contributions to churches for the year totaled $56.7 billion (that's just over $10 per person), but the amount spent on professional baseball, football, and basketball totaled $4 billion (that's nearly $40 per person or almost four times what people gave to their local church per person). Is it any wonder that we look at some fans and say that they really are fanatics? They are more sold out for their team than many church attenders. How could we change the nation if the church quadrupled its commitment of resources, discipleship, and evangelism?

Accepting the Marginal
Source: Dallas Willard
Contributor: Andrew Hamilton

The leading assumption in the American church today—and the Australian one I'll add—is that you can be a Christian but not a disciple. That has placed a tremendous burden on a mass of Christians who are not disciples. We tell them to come to church, participate in our programs and give money. But we see a church that knows nothing of commitment. We have settled for the marginal, and so we carry this awful burden of trying to motivate people to do what they don't want to do. We can't think about church the way we have been.

The True Nature of Spiritual Life
Source: James Emery White, You Can Experience the Spiritual Life (Nashville: Word Pub., 1999), 194.

Christian spirituality isn't about sitting at the feet of some guru for a seminar at a retreat. It isn't about having a nice comfortable, safe dose of spirituality in your life to make you feel good whenever your thoughts run deep about ultimate questions and eternal destinies. Jesus called people to follow Him—and there was only one place He was going: a cross. The true nature of spiritual living involves sacrifice, duty, and commitment.

Commitment Challenges
Contributor: Jim Kane

A common source of challenge in life is commitment as illustrated in the following story: The church choir director was frustrated with the sporadic attendance of all the choir members for rehearsals for the Christmas Choral Concert. At the final rehearsal he announced, "I want to personally thank the pianist for being the only person in this entire church choir to attend each and every rehearsal during the past two months." At this, the pianist rose, bowed, and said, "It was the least that I could do, considering I won't be able to be at the Christmas Choral Concert tonight!"

This Week's PowerPoint Templates

PowerPoint

Leadership Commitment
PowerPoint

Becoming Commit
PowerPoint
Basics
Maturing
PowerPoint

Plug In

Upcoming Topic

Finances

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