I thought this map of religious identity in Sydney in today’s SMH was quite interesting.
I think there’s competing interests at the heart of church growth which tend to hinder specific action.
On the one hand, the diocesan leadership has to lead for the whole diocese, has to be inclusive of all churches so no one feels ‘left out’, and launches initiatives based on those principles, so we have broad, all-encompassing ideas/campaigns like the 10% Mission and Connect09.
However, think about the presidential race in the US. Sure, you have an overall campaign, but you fight it out in the battleground areas where there are swing voters at stake.
In a sense I think a successful mission strategy has to take a targeted view, like generals with a map of the battleground, for want of a better analogy. You don’t just say “Oh we’re going to influence the whole area, win all the people, everyone’s going to chip in and it all work out”. You may as well rely on magic in that case.
Generals look at where their forces are, where they can move them to, where the fight is, where they should push on the offense, where they should hold and defend and where they can drop in forces for targeted missions.
Sydney, as the map in that link shows, is a place of considerable ethnic and religious diversity, and broad, good intentions aren’t going to get you very far.
On a deeper levels we have to decide if we’re about growth and numbers or not. We’re very ambivalent about it at the moment - we talk about growth and church planting, scrutinize the numbers, plan these big campaigns, but there’s also a strong vein of ‘Oh it’s all in God’s hands, numbers don’t mean anything, we should just pray and hope for the best’ which is essentially an argument for the status quo and not doing much.
So being caught between the idealistic (or, conversely, political) desire for broad gestures for all of Sydney, and what I would argue is the need for a more targeted, hard-headed approach to specific growth areas, and the ambivalence about the importance of growth/numbers at a deeper level, I think it will be difficult to make much headway.
(That said there may very well be targeted activities currently in action which I’m completely unaware of! :)
By the by, here’s an interesting (if slightly OT) question: how many new people (ie, pick a figure) should we expect to join the Anglican church in Sydney for the $1.5million spent on the campaign? Serious question - how many people? 100? 1000? 10,000? Who will be counting? What if it’s zero?
If you put $1.5mil into a big, single charro-style Syd Ang church how many new people do you think you could attract? Serious question again, it might be nil for all I know. Just interesting to think about.