Why The Future Of Church Renewal Looks Ancient
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The church world loves the question “What’s next?” but that question can hide a deeper problem: we have forgotten what came before. After seasons of division, disaffiliation, and strained relationships, we can rush to build a new identity, a new structure, or a new brand. We push back on that impulse and make a different claim for the Global Methodist Church and for any renewal movement that wants to last: the church doesn’t need a new thing, it needs a return.
We talk honestly about cultural Christianity and what happens when cultural momentum disappears. When being Christian stops being assumed, respected, or expected, it can feel like unfamiliar territory. But the early church lived as a misunderstood minority from the start, and their power did not come from influence or innovation. It came from their Lord. That’s why we challenge language that sounds like we’re starting Christianity over. Biblical authority, holiness, orthodoxy, discipleship, and evangelism were not discovered by us, and that is good news because our confidence is rooted in Christ’s faithfulness, not our originality.
We also dig into a danger every reform movement faces: getting stuck as a people defined by what we left. Lines sometimes need to be drawn, but a church cannot stay healthy if it only knows what it is against. We look to John Wesley’s humility, his attention to the Church Fathers, and the wisdom of the saints as an antidote to chronological arrogance. Then we land on the uncomfortable center: the church’s biggest problem isn’t a lack of strategy, it’s a lack of holiness. Revival has always looked ordinary at its core, anchored in prayer, Scripture, repentance, worship, and the Spirit of God.
If you’re hungry for church renewal, historic Christianity, and practical clarity about what faithfulness looks like right now, press play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review telling us what you think the church needs to return to first.
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