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The Erosion of the Sacred Community: An Old Testament Reassessment of the Church’s Shift to Dechurching

The Erosion of the Sacred Community: An Old Testament Reassessment of the Church's Shift to Dechurching

CHAN Yew Ming

“Dechurching” is a social trend in which people gradually distance themselves from institutional churches and their communal activities. Many Christians who used to attend church regularly have stopped participating but still hold onto their faith. Churches worldwide are facing these changes and need to address the social issues they raise. Data shows this trend continues and evolves, resulting in fewer young believers, declining attendance, and weakening of traditional in-person community structures. In reality, missing church or other activities is just the surface of deeper issues. A closer look shows that “Dechurching” involves multiple factors, including identity issues, lifestyle choices, shifting values, emerging alternatives, and a decline in mutual trust. So, the church's challenges go beyond internal structure and spiritual growth; they also involve adapting to external social changes and instability and offering diverse solutions.

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Message from the Editor of Issue 47

Editor's Note: Huang Fuk-Kwong Although we have no such plan, the six special articles included in this issue's theme "Theology of the Body" can actually be classified into three categories, two articles in each category, if divided carefully. First, the article by Chen Yiu Ming and Chen Weijia can be classified as a biblical theological teaching on the body and its implications. The second category is articles written by Li Fuhao and the author, talking about disability. The last category includes articles by Zhao Chongming and Pan Yirong, which talk about the aesthetics and theology of the body. ...