Did COVID change how you do ministry? Of course it did. COVID changed everything about your church, your community, and how you meet its ministry needs.
Recently, Derek DeGroot, the Vice President of Design and Integrated Services for Aspen Group, wrote an incredible article on best practices for churches who wish to design facilities to better engage their changing culture. His thoughts are so insightful I want to share them with you.
Also, if you are not familiar with Aspen Group, click HERE and start a relationship with this fine organization today. I don’t think there is a better design/build firm out there. Here’s the reason why – they LOVE pastors and churches. In fact, they care more about helping pastors get better than making a sale. You can trust not only their competence and creativity. You can trust them personally. And that’s saying something. I only promote organizations who care more about transformation than transactions.
Now onto Derek’s comments:
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The built environment is complex, changing, and needs fresh thinking to solve today’s challenges. The pandemic has created new problems to solve and accelerated the problems already occurring. Recent data from Barna highlights shifts in our culture and how they are—or soon will be—affecting the church.
Three key themes have emerged in Barna’s research this year:
Learn how physical AND digital space can work together to support the discipleship journey.
1. Emotional Health
Almost daily, we hear that mental health is worsening across demographics. People are sad, lonely, and 3 in 10 say they are depressed. People are starving for an emotionally-connected church.
2. Integrating Physical and Digital
Leaders are wrestling with church engagement, having been forced to adapt quickly to a digital world. Millennials want to participate and contribute, not just consume. The challenge is that streaming often happens in isolation. How do we foster connections in the digital world?
3. Gen Z
Gen Z, born after 1996, is forming in a crisis. Gen Z is a post-truth generation—only one in three believes that lying is wrong. Flooded with information but lacking context, they wonder how to process their doubts and curiosities safely. The church has barely begun addressing how to disciple this generation as they survive the pandemic.