Why People Leave the Church (And What To Do About It)

Why is it so hard for some to explore why people leave the church?

Why is there an emphasis on “don’t forsake the gathering” but no preoccupation with the quality of said gathering?

Last week, I wrote about why people leave the church and asked whether one can be a Christian if they are no longer part of an organized congregation. (Great conversations on Facebook and Threads by the way.)

why people leave the church

A reader left a comment on the blog post, noting, among other things, that “Christianity is definitely a collective faith, not a personal individual one.” I agreed.

In the Western world, faith is often a personal experience. Even within large communities, the focus is often on the individual aspect of faith rather than the communal responsibility and connection.

Other parts of the world tend to follow the early church norm, where faith was more communal than personal/individualistic.

While I agree with the collective practice of faith, I see the problems that arise if we’re not careful. Which I think is what is happening when Christians criticize other Christians for not being part of an organized congregation, instead of exploring why people leave the church.

If we’re not careful, we will insist that people keep their “responsibility” to the gathering regardless of its quality. We will hold the gatherers accountable in a way that we don’t hold the systems they gather under (the church as an organization.) Read More When Pastors Exploit in the Name of Christ

We will tell people they need the church but don’t tell the church (i.e., systems, doctrine, leaders) that they are accountable for how they treat people and the environments they create. Read More Should Pastors Confess Sins Publicly? Should We Forgive and Forget?

If we’re going to talk about “not forsaking the gathering,” then we also need to discuss what happens when the gathering devours those who gather. Read More Why It Doesn’t Matter How Much Pastors Say “I’m Sorry”

The conversation can’t be one-sided. Some people think it is, but it’s not. Before we tell people to stay in church, we need to explore, reflect on and address the issues causing people to leave the church.

(And they are not obligated to come back, by the way. The idea that people just need to heal and then join the church is not fully informed. Nobody is obligated to rejoin systems and relationships that oppressed, marginalized, and oppressed them—not on someone else’s time clock anyway. And if they choose never to join another church, controlling, exhausting, assimilating systems are to blame for that.)

Why people leave the church

Understanding Why People Leave the Church

Here’s something to remember before telling someone, “You NEED the church,” and “The Bible says you need the fellowship.”

Many who left the church building were part of the church. Let that sink in. We’re not not speaking to non-church folks. We’re talking to a group that already valued Christian community. They were part of a congregation before they left. They were in.

So preaching at them about how much they need the church is well..pointless. They know. They were there. Often, people don’t simply wake up one day and decide to leave the church. They have reasons.

  • They are victims and survivors of domestic violence who were excommunicated by their church.
  • They are the parent being pressured by church elders to “love and forgive” their spouse who was found out to have child sexual abuse material in their devices.
  • They are the othered and marginalized, expected to conform to male-white-centered evangelical systems.
  • They are the faithful who gave and gave and gave, but it was never enough for their plantation-minded church leader.
  • They are steadfast and devoted, traumatized by church systems that prioritize multiplication and production over the care of God’s people.
  • They are the curious and maturing, pushed out by zero tolerance for questions, empathy, and awareness.

People don’t simply wake up one day and decide to leave the church. It often takes years to make that decision (whether to temporarily or permanently leave the church building). And even after leaving their original congregation, many continue to explore other churches and congregations.

The Worst Thing Christians Do

Christians like to yell and throw tomatoes at those leaving the church building. Which is the opposite of what Jesus would do.

I doubt that He who came to proclaim good news to the poor and unfree, who came to switch on the light for the unseeing and liberate the oppressed, and proclaim God’s presence (see Luke 4:18), would be part of a crowd throwing barbs, sarcasm, and stones at the wounded limping out of a building.

I believe Jesus would be wrapping up the wounds of the suffering and offering them shelter and healing. When we fail to follow His example, it begs the question of who we are truly following.

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