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03/16/206

Promise Keepers Panelists Say Churches Must Change
Ministry Leaders Gather at Promise Keeper's Annual Media Event to Discuss "Where are the Men?"

 

DENVER, March 16  -- A panel of leading thinkers and strategists on men's ministry said yesterday that churches must change, or they will continue to lose membership. Speaking in a forum at Promise Keepers (PK) annual media day in Denver, Colo., Stan Perea, HIS Ministries; James Ryle, TruthWorks Ministries; and Alvin Simpkins, Emmanuel Christian Center, discussed why men are leaving traditional congregations and how churches can correct this disturbing trend.

"There is a disconnect between men's deepest wants and needs and the churches that need men so badly," said Dr. Thomas S. Fortson, president and CEO of Promise Keepers. In the face of mounting evidence that men in particular are exercising spirituality away from the traditional church, Fortson explained Promise Keepers' position. "We find ourselves in the middle of this question -- inspiring men to go deeper and loving our pastors who shepherd the communities of faith."

Ryle, a founding PK board member, said that times are changing and that the biggest mistake the church can make is not to change. "The people who are leaving the church aren't leaving God, truth, Scripture, or community – they are just leaving the game." Ryle argues that the church has become too institutional in a culture that is starving for what is real, relevant and significant.

Simpkins leads a growing congregation in Denver where 40 percent of the membership is men. Although sympathetic to the difficulties pastors face reaching men, he believes that Christian leaders should demand more from the men in their congregations. "You demand much, and your men respond enthusiastically," he said, noting that he gathers men from his congregation at 5:30 a.m. every Monday morning for prayer and discussion on issues that matter.

"The critical question is going to have to transition from 'how to get men to the church' to 'how to get men to become the church," said Ryle.

Perea agreed, "You must reach men for Christ and then set them free to transform the community – whether they come to church on Sunday or whether they don't."

In his opening remarks, Fortson acknowledged the importance of the church. "Jesus loves his Church, his people, wherever they are," he said. "And we believe that He is drawing them together, but, perhaps, in some new and surprising ways."

Dr. Bob Reccord, president of the North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention and a keynote speaker at all 19 PK events this year, opened media day forum in Denver with a message on what it means to be on mission for God. "God has not changed the strategy of winning the world for Christ," Reccord said. "The strategy is having one man telling another man about the Savior."

Promise Keepers media day is an annual event designed to introduce Promise Keepers conferences to media and to advance issues affecting men. This year, Promise Keepers will host events in 19 American cities reaching more than 170,000 men. This year's conference theme is "Unleashed– Releasing the Raw Power of Your Heart." Promise Keepers has retooled the 2006 conference format to help men do three things: discover their potential, find a pathway to optimize that potential, and move in that direction with a few other like-minded friends.

Based in Denver, Colorado, PK has directly reached more than five and a half million men since its founding in 1990.

Audio, transcripts and photos from today's PK Media Day are available at
http:// www.promisekeepers.org/2006mediadayarchives.

 

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