Jump directly to the Content

What are two or three ways your church has reached out to the neighboring community to draw it in?

John Sommerville is pastor of City Church in Minneapolis, Minnesota and serves on the board of Christianity Today.

Our community is upper middle class, extremely well educated (70 percent have college degrees), socially progressive, politically active, and concerned with issues of social justice. Strategies that work a few miles away in the suburbs fall flat in the city. And as a new church meeting in an elementary school, we've had to be creative in reaching out and engaging the community with Christian truth.

One example is "The Skeptics." Each week is devoted to an important question, such as "Is the universe an accident?" "How do we know what we know (for sure)?" "What is God like (if God exists at all)?" and "What is a human being?" We've stressed that skepticism, in the ancient Greek tradition, is not cynicism, but honest inquiry. The search for truth always includes the possibility of a changed mind. The key to the group's success has been creating an atmosphere that allows a free exchange of ideas (we call it "respectful dialogue") without forcing a single point of view. It has become a safe ...

May/June
Support Our Work

Subscribe to CT for less than $4.25/month

Homepage Subscription Panel

Read These Next

Related
Church Planting Through Needs
Church Planting Through Needs
From the Magazine
Charisma and Its Companions
Charisma and Its Companions
Church movements need magnetic leaders. But the best leaders need more than charm.
Editor's Pick
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
What Christians Miss When They Dismiss Imagination
Understanding God and our world needs more than bare reason and experience.
close