This is NOT DiY – #2 Does it look like the Neighborhood
Does Your Church Look Like Your Neighborhood?
1 Peter 2:4-10 — “As you come to him, a living stone rejected by men but in sight of God chosen and precious, you yourselves like living stones are being built up as a spiritual house.”
Peter’s metaphor is beautiful. The church is a spiritual house, built from living stones. But here is a question that should haunt every rural church: Does your church look like your neighborhood?
The Problem of the Bubble
Many rural churches are bubbles. They are made up of people who have been there for generations. The same families. The same last names. The same social class.
Jesus did not come for one kind of person. He came for everyone. And if our churches do not reflect that diversity, we are not fulfilling the mission.
What It Means to Look Like Your Neighborhood
It means being present in the community. It means building relationships with people who are different from you. It means creating a church where everyone feels welcome.
Know your community. Be present. Welcome the stranger. And cross social boundaries.
The Hard Work of Inclusion
Making your church look like your neighborhood is hard work. It requires intentionality. It requires humility. It requires a willingness to change.
But it is worth it. Because the church is not meant to be a museum for the faithful. It is meant to be a hospital for the broken.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does this apply to rural churches?
Every rural church is different. Adapt these ideas to your specific context.
What first step should we take?
Start a conversation. Identify one practical change you can make this month.
Where can we find more resources?
RuralThinkTank.com and MinistryPlace.net offer resources for small and rural churches.
