Post by Tom Green on Feb 12, 2007 17:03:59 GMT -5
Survey finds house church attendees more satisfied
Worshippers who attend services in independent house churches say they are more satisfied with the experience than those who attend conventional churches.
The Barna Group interviewed more than 2,000 Americans about their experiences in traditional congregations and the nondenominational churches whose services are held in homes or other locations than a church building.
Higher percentages of people attending a house church said they were "completely satisfied" with the four dimensions of church life they were asked about:
68 percent of house church attendees were "completely satisfied" with the leadership of their church, compared to 49 percent of those attending conventional church services.
66 percent of those attending a house church were "completely satisfied" with the faith commitment of the people in their gathering, compared to 40 percent of conventional church attendees.
61 percent of house church adherents were “completely satisfied” with the level of personal connectedness they experienced, compared to 41 percent of conventional churchgoers.
59 percent of those attending a house church were "completely satisfied" with the spiritual depth they felt in that setting, compared to 46 percent of conventional church attendees.
The study also found that the vast majority of house churches – 80 percent -- meet weekly, but only one-quarter of them meet on Sundays; one-fifth of them vary their meeting day. Gatherings tend to last for two hours, with 7 percent meeting for less than an hour and 9 percent meeting for more than three.
Researchers found that many house church attendees are checking out the independent gatherings but have not yet made a decision to leave a conventional church. Forty-two percent of those attending house churches regularly rely on them exclusively for their primary worship experience.
EP News Service
Worshippers who attend services in independent house churches say they are more satisfied with the experience than those who attend conventional churches.
The Barna Group interviewed more than 2,000 Americans about their experiences in traditional congregations and the nondenominational churches whose services are held in homes or other locations than a church building.
Higher percentages of people attending a house church said they were "completely satisfied" with the four dimensions of church life they were asked about:
68 percent of house church attendees were "completely satisfied" with the leadership of their church, compared to 49 percent of those attending conventional church services.
66 percent of those attending a house church were "completely satisfied" with the faith commitment of the people in their gathering, compared to 40 percent of conventional church attendees.
61 percent of house church adherents were “completely satisfied” with the level of personal connectedness they experienced, compared to 41 percent of conventional churchgoers.
59 percent of those attending a house church were "completely satisfied" with the spiritual depth they felt in that setting, compared to 46 percent of conventional church attendees.
The study also found that the vast majority of house churches – 80 percent -- meet weekly, but only one-quarter of them meet on Sundays; one-fifth of them vary their meeting day. Gatherings tend to last for two hours, with 7 percent meeting for less than an hour and 9 percent meeting for more than three.
Researchers found that many house church attendees are checking out the independent gatherings but have not yet made a decision to leave a conventional church. Forty-two percent of those attending house churches regularly rely on them exclusively for their primary worship experience.
EP News Service