Correction appended
(Photo: AP Images / Nathan W. Ames, Pool)Aaron Kruse, a New Life Church member, worships during services Sunday, Feb., 18, 2007, in Colorado Springs, Colo.
What will the Christian church look like in the next 1,000 years?
If a devout Christian from the year 1000 A.D. were to be dropped into a mid-morning service at a 21st century progressive church, the medieval Christian wouuld not recognize the Christian faith, says Kevin Kelly in the latest issue of Willow magazine a publication of the Willow Creek Association.
So it's "reasonable and responsible to expect tremendous change in the Christian church" in the next millennium, he writes.
Besides the end of the world happening in this lifetime, Kelly offers five other scenarios or plausible stories for what the church may look like in the year 3,000 A.D.
And he cautions, "If Christians dont seize the future, then unbelievers will."
Scenario One
The center of Christianity will continue to shift west. Since the time of Christ, the center of gravity for the global Christian church has steadily moved west from its epicenter in Jerusalem. It has shifted to Armenia, Greece, Rome, then into Europe, and further west into North and South America.
Many reports indicate that the center of Christianity is now in Asia and Africa where the Christian population is booming.
But Kelly says it won't stop there.
"If the move west continues as it has for the last 2,000 years, Christianitys center of gravity will keep migrating westward beyond East and Central Asia. The new missionaries based in Asia in the coming century will reach out to unbelievers in the birthplace of Christianity."
Eventually, the epicenter of Christianity will circumnavigate the globe and arrive back where it began in Jerusalem.
That means, "unless Christianity in the U.S. becomes less parochial and more global, what happens in North American Christianity in the next 500 years may simply be the side-show," Kelly writes. "The main event will happen elsewhere around the globe."
Scenario Two
The varieties of Christianity, including the number of creeds and denominations, will continue to increase. Christian denominations have increased from 500 in 1800 to 40,000 in 2007, Kelly cites.
And nothing will apparently halt the diversification.
"When you can get 72 varieties of mustard in the supermarket, choice is accepted," he writes. "There is no known counter force visible in our culture which would work against increased varieties in Christian approaches."
Scenario Three
Churches outside mainstream Christianity are growing the fastest. The greatest growth in the future is expected from such marginal church groups as the Mormons and the Amish.
The growth, however, won't go without criticism. These churches will be, and some already are, considered cults or heretics by the orthodox, Kelly points out.
Nevertheless, Kelly says "an entirely safe bet would be that the largest denomination 1,000 years from now is one that does not exist at the moment."
Currently, the largest church in the United States is Lakewood Church, a nondenominational church of now 40,000 weekly attendants, in Houston. It was founded in 1959.
Scenario Four
An overwhelming majority of the challenges such as abortion, stem cell therapies and pornography Christianity will be facing in the next millennium will be driven by new technologies. Kelly points out that today's challenges are tame compared to the ones coming. Continue »









Agree:
Disagree: 






