Most small churches stay small not because they lack resources, but because they resist change. Common barriers include rapid pastor turnover, control by a few key members, lack of a clear growth plan, prayerlessness, and an unwillingness to welcome outsiders. These patterns can be diagnosed and addressed — and many small churches that have confronted them have experienced meaningful, lasting growth.
Church of England publishes report on mission funding impact
The Church of England’s Strategic Mission and Ministry Investment Board (SMMIB) has published its annual review for 2025, outlining the results of its investment into mission and church growth activities.
The SMMIB said it had distributed £98 million to Church of England dioceses and £5.9 million to mission partners in a bid to “revitalise” parish churches and fund ministry, youth work, renovation and other mission projects.
Hearings to Begin in ACNA Primate’s Trial
The Anglican Church in North America’s Court for the Trial of a Bishop will hold hearings this week on the first pretrial motions filed in the disciplinary matter of the Most Rev. Steve Wood, according to a court announcement.
Archbishop Wood, the denomination’s primate, was indicted on ecclesiastical charges of personal and sexual misconduct last December. His trial is scheduled to begin July 20.
SBC membership down, but baptisms and attendance on the rise: report
Southern Baptist Convention membership declined in 2025, but attendance and baptisms continued to rise, according to a newly released report.
Lifeway Research published a report on Tuesday about the Annual Church Profile (ACP) statistics, which found that SBC membership dropped by over 3% last year, going from approximately 12.72 million members in 2024 to approximately 12.33 million in 2025.
How the devil was disguised in the SBC and Paul Pressler's Conservative Resurgence
During the Conservative Resurgence, I thought we were fighting for the Bible. Instead, we were also political pawns for an abuser.
One Counseling Resource Every Church Should Have
Regardless of church size or context, there’s one counseling resource every church can and should have available for those in their churches.
Climate change is getting so bad that it’s making food less nutritious
Climate change’s effects often aren’t obvious.
In a particularly lateral example of how our planet’s changing environment is coming to affect our lives, scientists are now warning that our increasingly CO2-suffused atmosphere is causing the plants we eat to be less nutritious. Though the changes are subtle, they could already be endangering millions of people with poor diets, and hundreds of millions if the trend holds in the coming decades.
Also See: Fewer insects, fewer nutritious crops: Pollinator decline puts human health at risk; After 9,000 years of cultivation, rice has reached its thermal limit7 Traits of the Best Leaders: Lessons from a Wisdom Seeker
Looking back...the best leaders I ever had shared some common traits. There were things that set them apart from other leaders, helped them be successful, and caused me to take notice in them.
The ‘Lordly’ Supper: An Antidote to What Ails the Church
By describing communion as a ‘Lordly supper,’ Paul emphasizes the dignity and honor involved in the ordinance.
The Corinthians thought they had accepted the invitation to this great supper, but Paul’s critique reveals they had shown up to the wrong celebration.
Is a secular religion propelling the AI race?
Philosopher Émile P. Torres contends that a bundle of techno-utopian ideologies is ubiquitous in Silicon Valley. AI ‘doomers’ and ‘accelerationists’ may be locked in a ‘clash of eschatologies,’ but Torres sees them all as part of the same futuristic faith.
Faith plays key role in young people’s mental wellbeing - study
A new study suggests that religion can play a significant role in shaping the mental health and emotional resilience of young people, particularly when it is expressed through positive coping practices.
The research, led by Dr Lydia Mannion of Mary Immaculate College, Limerick, examined how religious belief and practice intersect with psychological wellbeing among students.
Don’t Divide Enjoyment and Edification in Youth Ministry
Mikey Lynch recently published an article for TGCA encouraging youth ministries to display both social activities and teaching topics on their term calendars, and I’m grateful he did. It’s a simple, practical and easily applied set of suggestions, which I can see being immediately useful to a number of contexts. Plus, Mikey wasn’t grumpy or despairing at youth ministries, nor is he belittling or condescending in his proposals. As a youth minister, I was encouraged.
However, when he asked me for my thoughts, I did find myself wanting to nuance (or even push back on) something in his initial premise. So, after a friendly exchange of emails, he invited me to pull together some thoughts.
Parents' refusal to give newborns vitamin K shots is increasing preventable deaths in US
Babies across the United States are dying from vitamin K deficiency bleeding, a preventable condition, after parents refuse the standard newborn vitamin K injection.
ProPublica's Duaa Eldeib reports multiple infants experienced catastrophic bleeding in their brains, seizures, and respiratory failure within weeks of birth. Along with autopsies revealing deaths that could have been prevented with a simple, inexpensive shot.
10 Easy VBS Tips That’ll Make Leading Vacation Bible School a Breeze
VBS doesn’t have to be hard; use our 10 easy VBS tips to make your VBS even easier!
Image Credit: David Paulsen/Episcopal News Service












