
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this thought-provoking episode of "To Be snd Do," Phillip Amerson offers a heartfelt reflection on the changing landscape of faith communities. Drawing from recent readings, including John Fugelsang’s Separation of Church and Hate and Ryan Burge’s The Vanishing Church, Phillip Amerson delves into the realities facing mainline churches today. He addresses Burge’s sociological perspective, which centers on the decline of traditional congregations, particularly focusing on Burge’s own experiences as a pastor leading a small American Baptist church that ultimately closed its doors.
However, Phillip Amerson challenges the notion that the church’s diminishing numbers are the only story to tell. While acknowledging the accuracy of demographic shifts—such as smaller families and decreasing need for expansive education buildings, a trend that began in the post-war era—he asserts that data doesn’t capture the true essence of what makes faith communities meaningful. Rather than seeing religion as a commodity to be measured, Phillip Amerson urges listeners to view it as a community to be built and nurtured.
He highlights examples of congregations across the country, including one attended by his producer, Brad Miller, where growth might be modest but the ministry and sense of hope remain vibrant. The core message is that faith is best understood not in numbers, but in relationships and the transformative power of community. He invokes the biblical narrative, referencing Paul, John, and Peter, to underscore the importance of offering the intangible gifts—faith, love, and transformation—that Christ offers.
Key Takeaways:
Listeners are encouraged to seek, nurture, and participate in communities that prioritize offering these gifts, reminding us that the church’s mission is ultimately about transformation, not statistics.
By Philip AmersonIn this thought-provoking episode of "To Be snd Do," Phillip Amerson offers a heartfelt reflection on the changing landscape of faith communities. Drawing from recent readings, including John Fugelsang’s Separation of Church and Hate and Ryan Burge’s The Vanishing Church, Phillip Amerson delves into the realities facing mainline churches today. He addresses Burge’s sociological perspective, which centers on the decline of traditional congregations, particularly focusing on Burge’s own experiences as a pastor leading a small American Baptist church that ultimately closed its doors.
However, Phillip Amerson challenges the notion that the church’s diminishing numbers are the only story to tell. While acknowledging the accuracy of demographic shifts—such as smaller families and decreasing need for expansive education buildings, a trend that began in the post-war era—he asserts that data doesn’t capture the true essence of what makes faith communities meaningful. Rather than seeing religion as a commodity to be measured, Phillip Amerson urges listeners to view it as a community to be built and nurtured.
He highlights examples of congregations across the country, including one attended by his producer, Brad Miller, where growth might be modest but the ministry and sense of hope remain vibrant. The core message is that faith is best understood not in numbers, but in relationships and the transformative power of community. He invokes the biblical narrative, referencing Paul, John, and Peter, to underscore the importance of offering the intangible gifts—faith, love, and transformation—that Christ offers.
Key Takeaways:
Listeners are encouraged to seek, nurture, and participate in communities that prioritize offering these gifts, reminding us that the church’s mission is ultimately about transformation, not statistics.