• The Four Horsemen of Growth – their names and their characteristics

    Horse with a hand reaching out to it

    “And lo, after the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse of Decline had ravaged the Church of God,  there appeared on the horizon the Four Horsemen of Growth. They stalked the land offering terrifying hope, and succour to the needy”.

    There are only a limited number of ways that a church can grow. These apply both to denominations as well as to local churches.

    Last week I was at the General Synod of the Scottish Episcopal Church where we were asked to engage with the idea of becoming a growing church.

    So far as I can see there are only four major ways in which this can happen. The Four Horsemen of Growth have names. They are Immigration, Conversion, Assimilation and Procreation.

    They do not always arrive individually or sequentially. They tend to arrive in one another’s company. They are social. They are amiable. They enjoy one another’s company.

    The pathway to becoming a growing church is not one that is simple. It is not a trivial task to bring this about either in a local church or in a denomination. And I think that it is important to get to know the Four Horsemen of Growth and to become their friends.

    One of the first things that I would say about this is that I am talking about visible, measurable numerical growth. Yes, I believe that spiritual growth matters. Yes, I believe that serving the needy matters. But sometimes we do need to talk about actual numerical growth and decline in the life of the church. I sit with groups regularly who have to decide where best to spend the resources at our disposal. As I do so, I bear in mind other forms of growth but I am aware that spiritual growth and other non-numerical forms of growth will be wiped out without thinking a little bit about how churches can or can’t grow numerically.

    When thinking about this in my context, the first thing that people need to do is to put on their Hats of Holy Humility and take a long hard look at church statistics. They offer little for our comfort. This is not to say that there isn’t hope. There is hope and it is important to be able to identify where it is hiding and bring it out into the open. The reality though for my denomination is that it has been declining at a fairly steady rate since the 1920s. The patterns of decline that I live amongst were already in place long before I was born and long before I joined the church. Shifting them is not a trivial task or a quick fix. The most likely thing is that those patterns are here to stay.

    But let us grab hold of a bit of hope before thinking about the names of the Four Horsemen of Growth.

    There is something that I think need to be said clearly and unambiguously. This is that church growth is possible both in individual local congregations and also in denominations. My own congregation is bigger than it was 20 years ago when I came here. Significantly so. I can easily name other churches that have grown over a timescale of decades. Ps and Gs Church in Edinburgh and St Mungo’s, Balerno are two within my own denomination that have stories to tell about how they grew significantly. Note that those of us who do have those stories to tell also have stories to tell about how difficult things have been since the pandemic and would probably all note that it is too soon to say what the effect of that major disruption has been. But there are signs of hope in individual congregations even since that time too.

    I rejoice that there is obvious renewal and measurable growth at my neighbouring Episcopal congregation – St Bride’s, Kelvinside. (Which isn’t in Kelvinside for reasons involving a traction engine). I know of other churches in this diocese that are talking about growth as something that they are experiencing too. St Oswald’s in Maybole is another one with a story to tell.  And there are others too.

    I can see growth in congregations of different sizes and which worship in different ways.

    When we think about denominations, I am aware of confidence in at least some parts of the Free Church of Scotland. I am aware of significant interest in Orthodoxy too though that remains relatively small when looking at the bigger picture of faith patterns in this country.

    I have a fairly fundamental belief that it might be important to listen to the voices of those who can speak confidently about their congregations growing.

    I also have a fairly fundamental belief that where there is weekly worship in which people encounter God in a way that is transformative for their lives and meet clergy whom they would like to spend an hour a week with then growth is very likely to happen.

    This is one of the reasons why I always want to talk about worship and clergy whenever we have conversations about growth and mission and all that stuff. Some people really don’t want to talk about those things. But I know that I do.

    But where revival comes, how does it come?

    Well that brings us to the Four Horsemen of Growth.

    Let us deal with them one by one and name their names.

    Firstly the Horseman of Immigration.

    One of the ways in which churches can sometimes grow is through the movement of people from one place to another. This is not a growth in the number of Christians in the world but it can look encouraging locally.

    There have been historic attempts to harness the horse belonging to this horseman but not always successfully. In this diocese there was a huge effort put into building churches for immigrants to the area from Northern Ireland. (Several were not that far from me, particular the church in Anderson built to serve the docks). Scottish Episcopalians spent quite a lot of money putting up churches to welcome these workers new to the area. However, these workers new to the area seem to have preferred the  rather more reformed charms of the plain local Kirk to the exotica of Scottish Episcopalianism. Most of these churches are now long gone. It was a bold attempt to do something and we should be bold in our doings. In the long term though, the demographic changes didn’t lead to lasting change.

    However, more recently, there have been hugely positive  changes to some local churches in which the Horseman of Immigration has played his part.

    In my own congregation, Anglicans from Africa – particularly from Nigeria have arrived and enriched our experience of church hugely.

    Even more recently, there have been arrivals from Iran who have become beloved members of our local fellowship.

    Our life is greatly for the better for those who have arrived from afar.

    Here in the West End of Glasgow it often feels as though we are our own Anglican Communion with people present from India, South Africa, Japan, Canada, Mexico, the USA and West Africa.

    The Horseman of Immigration is our friend in these parts.

    Some of those arriving in my own congregation from both near and afar though have not always been Christians, never mind Anglican Christians.

    Their arrival is due to the work of the Holy Spirit stirring up their hearts at the prompting of the Horseman of Conversion.

    Conversions still happen. I see them fairly regularly. This is a surprise to many people.

    A couple of years ago I started to notice an interesting change in the pattern of people being baptised here. For what I suspect was the first time in the modern history of this congregation, the number of people being baptised as adults (or at least as children who could answer for themselves) was greater than the number of children being baptised as babies. I suspect that it is possible that we’ll soon see a year when all the baptisms here are of those who can answer for themselves.

    People still choose Christianity as a way of life. People still choose Christ. People still find themselves, sometimes to their surprise, looking to the church to find spiritual nourishment and a way of living.

    I can easily point to people who have arrived from other countries who have wanted to explore the faith of the country in which they have found themselves. (The Horsemen of Immigration and Conversion are the best of friends). I can also point to people engaging through online encounters with the church finding that they have faith where previously they had none. It used to be that I knew more people who had tried yoga, Buddhist practice and various new age expressions of faith before pitching up here. I still encounter them but now I find myself meeting people who arrive having tried to find a thoughtful way of living through exploring philosophy but now find themselves looking for something more.

    The Horseman of Conversion is surprisingly active these days and has not grown nearly as old and weary as some would suspect.

    Trotting next into view is the big, bold Horseman of Assimilation. He’s the one about whom we most rarely speak.

    This aspect of Church growth (again not the building up of Christianity but of local expressions of the church) is all about people having been brought up or having encountered other expressions of Christian faith and finding themselves drawn towards a new one.

    Here at St Mary’s the Horseman of Assimilation has blessed us with many joys over the years.

    When we do our Rough Guide to St Mary’s afternoon, something we do every three or four months, we find that most people who come to it do not have much of  a background in Episcopalianism or Anglicanism. We also find that they are astonished to discover that people such as themselves make up the majority of the congregation. And when we tell them that this is also the experience of most of the clergy that they encounter including the Provost and the Vice Provost, they fall off their chairs in amazement. (Well, they teeter on the edge of their chairs in amazement but I exaggerate a little for comedic and holy effect – comedy and holiness being a pair of friends that we may explore more in another post).

    People come to us from other churches. They tend to be looking for a relatively small number of things. They are looking for worship that makes them feel more alive and which allows them to experience joy and which will provide a comfort for their sorrows when comfort is needed. A big signifier of that is the musical life of the congregation but it isn’t the only signifier by any means. They are also looking for an open, inclusive and welcoming ethos. Here and hereabouts this tends to be signified to them by an explicit acknowledgement of LGBT equality and of women and men having equality of opportunity and practice in the congregation and in our denomination. They are also looking for a faith that is neither represented by finger-wagging nor an anything-goes free for all. In some things we are in the middle of the road and in others we are very much on one side of the road and not the other. And people know what they are looking for. If they don’t find what they are looking for here, I’m very happy to help them find it elsewhere. There will be plenty more people in this world who are looking for what happens here.

    The Horseman of Assimilation is nudging people our way all the time. But we don’t talk about it much and in my denomination we are a little afraid of making it clear that those who have first encountered God in other churches are welcome to bide with us whenever they want to walk through the door.

    The Horseman of Assimilation may find his work easier to do now that ecumenism is changing from the expectations of the 1970s to something fresh and new. In the past it was harder to keep company with this horseman because lots of people thought that denominational boundaries and distinctions were going to melt inevitably away leaving some kind of new uniting church that would hold everyone together. This hasn’t happened and the expectation that it will is on our rear horizon not the one that is in front of us.

    And so finally we come to the Horseman of Procreation.

    We can grow the church by having children and bringing them up in such a way that they find faith compelling in later life. This is not a short term strategy for growth!

    Many of our expectations about growth depend on this Horseman. Many of these expectations will not be met in our lifetime.

    I found myself looking around at the General Synod and wondering how many of those present would be able to engage meaningfully with embracing this Horseman of Growth as the major driving force behind real growth in the congregations that they come from. I have a feeling that the Horseman of Procreation has his work cut out amongst us at this time. Contraception has made his work a little harder. Modern ways of being men, women and other people have made his life a little more complicated. But he’s still at work. Children are still born. Children are still baptised. And in churches which draw them into active participation in the liturgical life of the congregation, children are part of God’s bountiful growth.

    So there we are. Four Horsemen of Growth whom we should befriend, as they befriend and help one another. If I’ve missed any other means of growth out, I’d be interested to hear about it.

    And when we talk about becoming a growing church again, though some of them may seem to be in the distance, I’d like us to be talking about which of the Horsemen of Growth we see galloping  enthusiastically towards us.

     

23 responses to “Scottish Episcopalians Do It Together”

  1. Bob Faser Avatar

    Re your comment about the media’s obsession with Christians arguing about sex: here’s a related post. http://revdocbob.blogspot.com.au/2016/05/a-voluntary-moratorium-on-churches.html

  2. Linda Slater Avatar
    Linda Slater

    This so warms the heart of a Scottish Anglican. What a thoughtful, considered and respectful response.

  3. Meg Rosenfeld Avatar
    Meg Rosenfeld

    Magnificently stated.

  4. Andrew James Avatar
    Andrew James

    Respect your view and I suspect the real measure on whether Scottish Episcopalians are doing this together will be if this move divides the church or unites it. Some folk may leave the church on the back of this and some may join the church on the back of this. Only after a period of time will we know which.

  5. Cynthia Katsarelis Avatar
    Cynthia Katsarelis

    This is really beautiful. Here is the part that is making it work for SEC: “The most striking thing yesterday was the generosity of those who can’t affirm this.”

    That generosity is truly of the Spirit and ought to be affirmed and lifted up mightily. That is precisely what is helping the church work together graciously.
    Our experience, in TEC in the US, was that some conservatives felt extremely entitled not only to their view and not only to inclusion for them and their view, no, they felt entitled to continue to impose their view on the rest of us, a huge majority (and earlier, they felt entitled to take the property with them…) So there is a very different spirit in Scotland, and I am very glad of it. Very glad indeed.

    I want to respond to this: “one of the solutions is to stop bullying one another into trying to say the same thing. Jesus was no bully and the apostles were always diverse.”

    In The Episcopal Church in the US, we did not force anyone to sign on to something they didn’t believe and the conservatives were in no way bullied. We had discussions for decades and a learned Task Force on Marriage that did great work. As of General Convention 2015, no clergy person is required to perform marriages they don’t believe in, and even several bishops are allowed to ban marriage in “their” dioceses – which is terrible for the gay couples and gay affirming parishes in those dioceses.

    The idea that TEC is forcing every last person to accept inclusive marriage and will defrock any clergy who doesn’t go along with it is propaganda that was used in the realm of Anglican Communion politics.

    +Josiah Idowu-Fearon seems to have finally gotten the message and actually praised TEC for our own “walking together” with difference.

    I’m glad that SEC has come to this beautiful place and are doing it so graciously. It may indeed become a model for the larger communion. TEC is not a terrible model, either (except that bit about letting bishops dictate the oppressive position on ALL of the people and parishes in “their” dioceses). But there were certainly issues of being the first one to do it. It may be bigotry on my part, God forgive me, but OMG – but our opposition was perhaps the most entitled people the planet has ever known. When the vote came, it was overwhelmingly positive 85-90 percent. TEC’s ability to get past that entitlement with sheer conscience and decades of consensus building was a giant leap for human kind in the direction of the Promised Land.

    Congratulations to SEC. If you’re sent to the naught step with us, please bring the shortbread biscuits and whiskey.

  6. Dermot O'Callaghan Avatar
    Dermot O’Callaghan

    Dear sisters and brothers, please open your eyes and realise what you are doing.
    “I’ve always said that the only potential for unity lies not with sex nor bishops but with Christ.”
    William Loader, one of the leading biblical scholars regarding same-sex relations (pro-gay) says, ‘Jesus’ statements [in Mark 10:2-9 // Matt 19:3-9] clearly exclude sexual relations beyond [the union between a man and a woman]. Nothing indicates that Jesus would have approached the prohibitions of Lev 18:22 and 20:13 any differently than his Jewish contemporaries. Indeed he would have apparently supported John the Baptist’s very strict application of the incest provisions of Lev 18:16 to Herod Antipas (Mark 6:17-18)’
    You are in danger of following not the real Christ, but your own version of Christ.

    1. Kelvin Avatar

      Trust me on this – I’ve got a Bible, I can read, and I’ve thought quite a lot about it.

      1. Dermot O'Callaghan Avatar
        Dermot O’Callaghan

        It’s not that I don’t trust you. I think you would agree with Luke Timothy Johnson that:
        “The Bible nowhere speaks positively or even neutrally about same-sex love…The exegetical situation is straightforward: we know what the text says…I think it important to state clearly that we do, in fact, reject the straightforward commands of Scripture, and appeal instead to another authority when we declare that same-sex unions can be holy and good. And what exactly is that authority? We appeal explicitly to the weight of our own experience.”
        It’s not a matter of trust in you, but rather that Jesus looked to Scripture as having God’s authority, whereas you look to this new source of experience. But maybe I’m pre-judging things. Please tell us what verses of Scripture you think support same-sex marriage.

        1. Kelvin Avatar

          I’m sorry, I don’t play the game of trading bible verses. I think you can find quite a few other websites where people are happy to do that but not me and not here. Scripture is to precious to me to be used like a football.

          1. Dermot O'Callaghan Avatar
            Dermot O’Callaghan

            I never suggested using Scripture as a football.
            “Now the Berean Jews were of more noble character than those in Thessalonica, for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true.” Acts 17:11.
            If we are not willing to sit down together and ‘examine the Scriptures’, we cannot walk together. We cannot even have good disagreement.
            If one discussion partner simply says, “Trust me, I’ve got a Bible, I can read (but I’m not going to discuss it with you)”, there can be no unity-in-truth. Is it not a common courtesy, let alone a Christian one, to be willing to be willing to speak and to listen to one another?

          2. Kelvin Avatar

            Sorry, Dermot – check out the Commenting Policy.

            You’ll see I don’t allow proof texting. Please don’t post any more comments like that or they simply won’t get through comment moderation.

    2. Daniel Berry, NYC Avatar
      Daniel Berry, NYC

      My take is that Jesus was silent on much of the Bronze Age barbarisms with which the book of Leviticus is loaded. Mercifully, civilized societies in many or most places have rejected those barbarisms in favor of what the sciences teach us – not just the natural sciences, but also the behavioral sciences. Many christians still have trouble even getting their heads around how old the earth actually is. The position you’re taking on same-sex love is in a league with that rejection of science.

      1. Dermot O'Callaghan Avatar
        Dermot O’Callaghan

        What do the behavioural sciences teach us about same-sex love, that invalidates my position?

        1. Daniel Berry, NYC Avatar
          Daniel Berry, NYC

          if you don’t know then you don’t know what the behavioral sciences are. Try some time on Google.

        2. Kelvin Avatar

          Ah! I see the problem. Dermot, you’ve mistaken this website for a website dedicated to discussing your position.

          Sounds to me as though you need to start your own blog.

    3. Cynthia Katsarelis Avatar
      Cynthia Katsarelis

      Revelation continues. Many of us LGBTQI Christians have met the Risen Christ and He loves us, gifts us with loving partners and spouses, and nurtures our lives and loves.

      It’s fine if you want to believe a fundamentalist view, crystallized in a pre-scientific era that was barbaric for women, seemed to involve ethnic cleansing, and recommended stoning for a range of offenses. It’s fine if your interpretation of Jesus is not the all inclusive, loving Jesus who said to “love your neighbors” all our neighbors. But now it’s time to allow the freedom of conscience to those who’ve read the same texts and come to different conclusions, and who live in a world of continuing revelation, inviting all to the Promised Land.

      In light of Orlando, it is also time for “religious” people to fully understand that the rhetoric that attacks the dignity of us LGBTQI people contributes to an environment of hate that has a range of nasty consequences. Reflecting on those consequences might provoke one to reflect on the life and teachings of Jesus and re-evaluate.

  7. Cynthia Katsarelis Avatar
    Cynthia Katsarelis

    It turns out that the news from SEC is truly the Good News this week, and the only Good News, as far as I can tell. For that I’m grateful.

    (Wish I had time to stop at St. Mary’s on my way through Glasgow on Saturday. Alas, only if I miss my connections from Iona, which is possible).

  8. Gregory Paul Turner Avatar
    Gregory Paul Turner

    This is a lovely report of a gracious debate in the Church. I long for equal rites in the Church but I supportively understand that Godly love seeks to walk together and keep everyone’s place in the Church in their own integrity.

    1. Cynthia Katsarelis Avatar
      Cynthia Katsarelis

      I think that this talk of “two integrities” is problematic. The SEC (and TEC) allows clergy to exercise their conscience on the issue of inclusive marriage.

      In CoE, the “two integrities” concept over WB is essentially a green light for an alternate episcopate, something that institutionalizes discrimination. It seems better, theology and in polity to honor conscience without giving it special status…

  9. JCF Avatar
    JCF

    Thanks be to God! (I’d say it in Scottish if this Yank could. ;-/ )

    1. Fred Garvin Avatar
      Fred Garvin

      This church is small and virtually irrelevant. Who cares?

      1. Kelvin Avatar

        I care. Very much indeed.

  10. Father Ron Smith Avatar

    All I can say is, thank God for the Scottish Episcopal Church. You have a lot to teach the rest of us on this important matter. Deo gratias!

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