I'm thinking about quitting my church

Thsnnor

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State your position to the Pastor and if you so desire ask for a letter before you go.

Church should be about the LORD and not all the things we as people put on top of it.
 

Thsnnor

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which one? id be all for supporting god if hed clarify which religion was real

Every religion in the world can fit into one of three categories.
1. The universe
2. God and the universe
3. God

Search out the truth and look at the evidence for Christianity.
 

the cac mamba

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Am I wrong? ........ I get it. you just having fun out here.
i just dont see why i should seek out the truth in christianity, or any religion, when there are hundreds across the world. even if one of you groups of clowns have it right, ill be in good company with the other 95% of humans who hve ever existed :heh:

the simple fact that (all people who worship the same god) 2 billion people tell you you need jesus, and 2 billion say thats false, tells me all i need to know about religion
 

Midrash

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i just dont see why i should seek out the truth in christianity, or any religion, when there are hundreds across the world. even if one of you groups of clowns have it right, ill be in good company with the other 95% of humans who hve ever existed :heh:

the simple fact that (all people who worship the same god) 2 billion people tell you you need jesus, and 2 billion say thats false, tells me all i need to know about religion

There are millions of different people out there with millions of different opinions about black people in America but we still exist. Just some food for thought.
ehh.png
 

wheywhey

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OP, it sounds like you haven't experienced any other church. Nearly all black churches are filled to the brim with out of wedlock children and down low gay men. You either need to attend a church with non-blacks or go to a hierarchical denomination that attracts blacks like Seventh Day Adventist or Jehovah''s Witnesses.

However, since you think it is normal and good to attend a church where people are running around, screaming, and pretending to speak a different language, you will just end up with the same problems in your new church. Might as well stay where you are.
 

Taadow

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I show appreciation to this church because my parents knew the pastor since we were small and also I picked up my piano skills from a guy over there

Oh...so a man a church...taught you how to tickle long ago?







Is that what happened?
 

GoPro

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Are Father's Day Events at Churches a Waste of Time?


Many churches invest a great deal of time and money into special holiday events that are designed to draw people into their services, but statistics show that Father's Day is one holiday in which church attendance is typically less than impressive. So is it a waste of time, money and energy for churches to host big Father's Day events?

In the week leading up to Mother's Day, Lifeway Research released the results of a survey in which they asked 1,000 Protestant pastors across the U.S. to indicate which three Sundays their church attendance is highest each year.

While Mother's Day (59 percent) ranked third on the list behind only Christmas (84 percent) and Easter (93 percent), Father's Day was ranked last. With just four percent of pastors saying it was one of their highest attendance Sundays, Father's Day was ranked below the Fourth of July (four percent), Friend Day (14 percent), Homecoming (16 percent) and "Other" (26 percent).

"The attendance difference between Mother's Day and Father's Day is telling. Either churches are less effective in affirming fathers, or families believe Christian fathers don't value their participation in worship services," Scott McConnell, director of LifeWay Research, said in a statement.

Many pastors believe there is a natural ebb and flow to church attendance throughout the year, and there are seasons in which growth and decline have become somewhat predictable. Naturally these pastors try to gather people during the peak seasons – like Easter, Christmas and during back to school time in the fall – but what about the off-seasons when no one seems to want to go to church?

Rich Barrett, lead pastor of Access Church in Jacksonville, Fla., says June is typically his church's lowest attendance month, but he isn't about to let Father's Day pass by without trying to reach out to men.

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"We just want men in general and fathers in particular to feel like church is a fun place to be, so we're always going to do some fun stuff and put some resources into making Father's Day fun," Barrett told The Christian Post on Thursday.

The month of June can be a struggle, he says, because most schools have just let their students out for the summer and families are away on vacation. He also suggested that if churches looked at the numbers for the weeks before and after Father's Day, those services would probably be low in attendance as well.

Barrett says he isn't sure how effective special promotions and giveaways are during the holidays, but he tries to make sure his church is fun year-round.

"What's going to draw people into your church is having a year round mood that people find refreshing, engaging and hopeful. And it's fun, so they want to invite their friends, so they want their friends to experience what they're experiencing," said Barrett.

He also said the church in general has failed to really connect with men over the last few generations, and many other pastors seem to agree. According to a study released by The Barna Group last August, 39 percent of men have not attended church in the last six months, a number that increased nine percentage points since 1991.

And when they are present at church, many men aren't helping out. Only 18 percent of men volunteer at church during a typical week, which is a decline from the 24 percent of men who did so in 1991.

Abbeylyn Constance, children's pastor at River of Life Church in Doylestown, Pa., says it is important for churches to reach out to fathers, in part, because they play such a key role in their own families.

"In my point of view I think that it's very important to minister to the family in general, [but] the father especially because it says in the Bible that the father is the head of the household and the spiritual leader of his family," Constance told CP.

On Father's Day, former New York Giants running back and two-time Super Bowl winner Lee Rouson will be serving as a guest speaker at River of Life Church. Constance says her church has held "packed out" services on Father's Day in the last few years, in part because of the guest speakers they've brought in.

Many fathers, she says, are looking for something special to do on Father's Day, and are less likely to attend a normal church service. Having a special event, however, gives them a break from the routine and can be a great way to draw them in.

"We do draw in a lot of visitors, especially men that sort of go to church on a somewhat regular basis," she said. "But certainly when we have these special events, they come for it. So it gets them reconnected."

:mjlol:
 
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