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The Millennial Mission Field, by Harry Jackson, Jr.

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Last week, Pew Research released a comprehensive report on who the Millennial Generation is and how they think. This group, which is comprised of people aged 18-29, will soon be the America of tomorrow. On the surface, young people seem less religious, less materialistic, yet, less relationally anchored than previous generations.

 

I would like to talk about what Millennials' attitudes toward faith are and what the evangelical church and social conservatives should do in response. I am convinced they can be reached, empowered, and mobilized ...but not with the same old tired rhetoric and judgmental approaches. Before I give a prescription, here are some of the specifics of the spiritual views listed in the Pew Report.

Abortion:
Opinions on legalized abortion have shifted from earlier surveys. Previously middle age categories (those 30-49 and those 50-64) tended to support legalized abortion while young people and seniors expressed more opposition. From a 2009 survey, most groups have expressed a more conservative direction in their attitudes toward abortion. The only exception to this seems to be young people, 52 percent of which say that abortion should be legalized in all or most cases.

Pornography:
In terms of views on pornography, 21 percent of Millennials believe pornography should be illegal, compared to 24 percent of Gen Xers and 22 percent of Baby Boomers. Current data for older generations is not available, but data from 1970 and later point toward the trend that people become more and more opposed to pornography, as they get older.

Prayer, Bible Reading in Public Schools
As different generations have been asked about prayer and Bible reading within the public school system, those questioned in early adulthood have given comparable opinions; 51 percent of Baby Boomers, 54 percent of Gen Xers, and 56 percent of Millennials approved the ban on Bible reading and prayer. However, as the generations have grown older, the Boomers and Gen Xers have expressed less support of the ban on prayer and Bible reading.

I believe that the above survey findings can give us important direction. The greatest opportunity for evangelicals to bring Millennials back to church has to do with messaging and outreach. In the area of outreach - as Millennials come of age, they will want to know how to raise their children and maintain their marriages and other significant personal relationships. Historically, previous generations have returned to church when these needs became evident.

But will our churches be ready when they darken our doors? This is where messaging comes in. In my many public appearances, especially on television, I have found that how you deliver your message is often more important than the nuances of your point of view. A few months ago, a clip from comments I made about health care reform went out across the Internet with a vengeance. I was depicted as a preacher without compassion and a legalistic sell-out because of my views on abortion and maintaining the quality of care for life-threatening illnesses. The mistake that I made in that presentation is the mistake that many preachers make when engaging the culture in moral arguments. We must be clear, concise, and understand that the biblical and ethical illiteracy of our generation requires masterful crafting of our viewpoint.

Further, what many from the theological world believe is very, very simplistic may have to be communicated in stages over a long period of time, even to people within our own flocks. This communication gap is often why our young people or Millennials don't understand the problems with pornography, abortion, or divorce, for example. Our churches have not made the sociological cases that prove the moral admonitions against these vices have modern-day weight. Preachers are often guilty of simply banning behaviors the culture sees as normative instead of giving listeners an opportunity to make informed personal choices, which also have cultural and political ramifications.

Click here to continue reading.

Bishop Harry Jackson is chairman of the High Impact Leadership Coalition and senior pastor of Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, Md. He co-authored Personal Faith, Public Policy.
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