Many
people leave the church because they look to other human beings to be their guides and inspiration; when that person or persons fall short of expectations, they become disappointed and leave.
He could tell you about
why people leave the church, and how outsiders view the church, and what you and I can do to be the church in the world.
I don't think the reason
most people leave churches has anything to do with not believing they can become more holy or with wanting to live by different ethical standards.
One
person left our church because we put up a book and literature table, another because we had a free coffee and snack table in the foyer before the service.
There are many reasons
why people leave church, but one of the key reasons is that church no longer seems able to address their questions and doubts.
And
when people leave your church to go to another church across town, thank them for what they contributed to the church while they were there, and trust God to lead them to the next step He has for them.
Citing statistics that show that 70 percent of young
people leave the church by age 22, Powell contends that fostering intergenerational relationships in church may be the key to changing the trend.
It wasn't so much that
people left the church in droves, but that somehow the traditioning that went on in those churches didn't take hold in the next generation — that is, among adolescents and young adults.
I have
seen people leave a church community because the Gospel is not being taught in its fullness and I have also seen people leave because they are rebellious and want things their own way.
Did you know it is possible to
help people leave the church, stay in the church, stay away from the church, return to the church, or to become an atheist, or to choose another religion?
If you have a problem
with people leaving your church or «faking it», then I recommend that you don't blame science (which generally melds quite well with core Christianity and has nothing to do with its principles), but instead yourselves and how YOU are treating the people around you.
The turbulence that gripped the Roman Catholic Church in the wake of Vatican II is the main reason for this diminished appeal (for example, it has been estimated that roughly the same number
of people left the Church of England for Rome because the former decided to ordain women as the number of people who went the opposite way for the same reason or for related reasons).
Too,
some people leave the church because they choose to engage in practices that are sinful or harmful.
People leave their church when they are not fulfilled by the teaching and fellowship there, and they are pulled instead toward the distractions and concerns of the world and self.
I've had
people leave my church to go to another one that provides the hype I wouldn't so couldn't provide.
People leaving the church every week, down to about 20 families.
* I realize that
some people leave my church because they believe I am not preaching the gospel, or the whole gospel, or something other than the gospel.
It was a subtle haze that spread throughout the church and eventually about 1/4 of
the people left the church.
Of course this article doesn't address ALL the reasons
people leave churches or even Christianity as a whole, but it just so happened to express almost all of my reasons for leaving.
The kind of things that can lead to churches splitting,
people leaving churches, pastors writing condemnatory blogs about the beliefs of other pastors and relationships falling apart.
At a recent conference, I sat stone still as David Kinnaman, Barna Group president and author of You Lost Me, quoted one statistic after another about young
people leaving the church and their low knowledge of Scripture.
Maybe during that time,
some people left the church, but you stayed around and are glad you did?
Amid concerns about young
people leaving the Church, another problem facing the Catholic church is a decline in nuns.
When
some people leave churches, I have heard them described as «blessed departures» and one time, a «divine enima.»
You're the reason that
people leave the church, with your self - satisfied, sanctimoneous snobbery.
Micah Smith writes a column for RELEVANT about why
people leave the Church — and what they're really leaving behind.
In every example of
a person leaving the church, the person converts to a different christian sect.