I fit into a few general demographics.
I am in my 30’s.
I am divorced, but newly married.
I have two small children.
I live 15 minutes away from the church I attend with my wife and 30 minutes away from the church I attend with my kids.
I work full-time and study part-time.
The amount I attend, contribute and give have all changed over the last decade and a half. I assume they won’t stay the same over the next few decades. Life situations will, in part determine my involvement.
The problem I used to fall into was that I would lump people together irregardless of their situation.
If you didn’t attend church every week then you were flakey.
If you didn’t give then you were a freeloader.
If you didn’t volunteer then you were a deadweight.
Of course, none of these were said aloud and the positions are overstated, but within the ministry bubble, the perceptions exist within ministry.
The trouble I fell into, and can be a victim of now, is when you don’t fairly compare those within similar situations.
When you compare those of a similar age, marital status, parental responsibilities and geographic restraints then you are able to get a more accurate grasp on their spiritual health.
In ministry, we need to compare apples to apples...
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