At the blue hole

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“Said plainly, churches are in trouble. All churches are, but certainly Churches of Christ. Whether or not they recognize the threats they are facing is a different matter. The future is fraught with dangers. Many won’t make it.” 

On New Year’s weekend, 1831–32, two churches came together in Lexington, Kentucky, in what is often known today as the Restoration Movement. Among the churches that emerged from this movement were Churches of Christ, which grew in the nineteenth century and then flourished in the twentieth. At their zenith, around 1990, there were over 13,000 Church of Christ congregations in the United States with nearly 1.3 million members. Especially in the southern states where Churches of Christ were concentrated, it seemed inconceivable that they would ever face their own death.

Like most communities of faith in North America, these churches are now in rapid decline. The numbers are devastating. At the current trajectory, Churches of Christ in America, with a membership of just over a million, will be less than a quarter their current size in thirty years. As they awaken to their crisis, many of them are beginning to see themselves at the edge. 

This book is an elegy for those churches—and, frankly, for every Christian community and denomination. We all are facing death, one way or another.

But it is also a story of hope and promise. Frankly, for churches with their eyes open, their imminent demise is good news. If nothing else, it should be clear that we can’t help ourselves. The power and the promise will have to come from elsewhere.

As from the “Blue Hole”—the tiny, hidden spring from which flows the San Antonio River, near where Jack Reese ministers—there is abundant life and grace still flowing into these churches waiting to be uncovered, a future waiting to be embraced.

Anyone wondering how to stem the seemingly inevitable ebb of the fading Western church will find solace and help in Reese’s account of a once-thriving fellowship of churches that, God willing, may yet emerge from the grave into the light of resurrection.

 
 
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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Foreword by Wesley Granberg-Michaelson
Prologue: The Blue Hole
1. Peace, Death, Storm, and Fire: Churches of Christ on the Edge
2. The Peacemaker and the Pallbearer: Choices and Consequences
3. Pray More, Dispute Less: The Road to Christian Unity
4. Freedom and Conformity: The Quest to Restore the Golden Age
5. Resources from the Blue Hole: There Is Life beneath Us Still
Epilogue: Cloudburst of Grace