Latinos are the largest ethnic group in the US. 45.5 million live in the US, comprising 15% of the total population.
According to recent research conducted by the Barna Group, Latinos indicate that faith is very important in their lives. Most Latinos are associated with the Catholic Church; however, this percentage has dropped 25% in the last 15 years. Now, more Latinos are aligning themselves with Protestant churches, especially charismatic churches.
Barna found that Latinos take their faith seriously. They are more likely than other American Christians to be transformed by their faith, and are more likely than other Christians to share their faith. Church attendance by Latinos has also risen 10% in the last 15 years.
These statistics reveal that Latinos are experiencing a spiritual awakening. Their faith is changing, and this challenges those of us who are already in the church to reach out to Latinos in our communities. If churches in the US do not want to miss out on incredible opportunities to minister to this population group, they must take active steps to share the gospel with them and involve them in local churches. How can this be accomplished?
- Evaluate Needs. Churches need to discover the needs of unchurched Latinos without assuming to know them already. What spiritual struggles do they have, and what needs do they have? The lines of communication need to be opened up, their voices need to be heard, and churches need to respond.
- Encourage Cultural Identification. The Pew Hispanic Center revealed that two-thirds of all Latino Christians are involved in churches with Latino clergy or Spanish services. This is true for both Spanish speaking and English speaking Latinos, foreign born and American born. Latinos crave ethnic identification. They need to be supported in acknowledging their cultural identity, or else they will become a culturally white or African-American church that happens to speak Spanish.
- Educate Latino Clergy. Latino churches need qualified clergy to lead them. Churches can institute clergy training programs for Latinos that communicate the challenges and strengths of leading Latino congregations.
- Equip Latino Laity. Since Latinos are evangelistic, churches need to help exploit their spiritual passion by training them how to reach out to others with the gospel of Christ. Traditional evangelistic methods that canvass everyone in sight will not work; Latinos need to be encouraged to target people with whom they can identify.
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The Newsweek
Yesterday I attended a conference at George Fox University entitled, Recalibrating Concepts of Church. Speakers included Len Sweet, author of the upcoming So Beautiful: Divine Design for Life in the Church; MaryKate Morse, author of Making Room for Leadership: Power, Space and Influence; Frank Viola, author of Reimagining Church; Alan Hirsch, author of Reactivating the Missional Church; and Dan Kimball, author of They Like Jesus but Not the Church.
W’s farewell speech yesterday was overshadowed by the