The Church of England is to launch a nationwide "digital evangelism"
campaign to reach out to the one million children educated in church
schools once they leave school. The social media project will also aim
to reach children leaving secular schools.
The aim is to show the "unchurched" generation what Christianity has
to offer, using means of communications they are familiar with such as
Snapchat, WhatsApp and Instagram.
Details of the campaign were today revealed in a presentation to the General Synod at Church House, Westminster by Canon John Spence,
who heads the finance committee of the Archbishops' Council. Finance is
likely to be agreed at the General Synod in York in July.
"It is unlikely we will see a net growth in church membership over
the next 30 years," Spence admitted to the synod.
But this did not mean
there was no place for the programme of "reform and renewal" being
planned for the church nationwide, and which will be "deep rooted in
discipleship".
Canon Spence said: "This cannot ever be about a numbers game. It is about holistic growth."
The Church still needed to work out how to "measure success" in a way
that went beyond numeric tallies of numbers of baptisms, confirmations
and other demographics, he added. "More difficult work that we still
need to do is how we can measure that growth in spiritualism and
discipleship. Renewal and reform has to be rooted in theology and
spirituality."
Spence said: "We do not call it the social media project. As far as
we are concerned it is digital evangelism. We know we have got to
continue working and making sure the Church is seen in a positive
light."
Church leaders had to keep "pushing hard" to let people know the
Church was a "positive force" that is "inclusive" not "exclusive".
He insisted there was no inevitability of decline. The Church had to
engage in a "revolutionary and almost dramatic way" with new
demographics. This meant "nurturing those who are with us, reaching out
to those who are not yet aware of what we do."
Jonathan Kerry, secretary of the Leicester diocese and a member of
the Archbishops' Council lay leadership task group, said: "We stand at a
moment of crisis and opportunity, of seismic shift perhaps in our
understanding of what it is and how to be Church."
Bishop of Guildford Andrew Watson outlined plans to increase the
number of ordinands by 50 per cent in 2020 and beyond, totalling 6,000
new ordinands in a decade. This is to counter the loss of the
baby-boomer generation to retirement, with 70 per cent of existing
clergy expected to have retired by 2030.
Rev Arun Arora, spokesman for the Church of England, referring to
Spence's prediction of no growth in 30 years, said: "The reference to 30
years is based on projections which assume no change and underscore the
importance of the renewal and reform programme. They do not factor in
the changes being proposed. Most crucially, as the Archbishop of
Canterbury said this morning, we trust in the grace and transforming
power of the Spirit of God, who empowers and equips the church."
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