Church beyond the pandemic
Ottawa leaders share challenges and insights for the months to come
Craig Macartney
Spur Ottawa Writer
What will the Church look like after the pandemic? How have the restrictions of the past year changed the Body of Christ in Ottawa? What weaknesses were exposed? These massive questions were the focus of an online panel discussion for local pastors and leaders, held June 2.
“The idea was to do something to help pastors learn from each other and think together,” says Richard Long, Director of Love Ottawa. “Things won’t go back entirely to normal, but people are thinking about how to re-engage for the fall.”
Organized by Love Ottawa, the discussion included presentation from several local leaders and break-out groups for pastors to discuss plans and pray together.
“A return to some sense of ‘normal’ will be met with a sense of regret, nostalgia, and a strong bent to return to ‘the way it was’,” says Doug Ward, one of the panelists and a pastor at Kanata Baptist Church.
Yet, Ward cautions that the last year exposed several major issues in the Church. He notes that national leaders expect “an initial bump in church attendance, come fall, but it will level out and perhaps even show a reduction from pre-pandemic levels. Canadians, by and large, are not looking for answers from the Church. The Church has mostly been invisible through the pandemic from a cultural viewpoint.”
“For a lot of churches it will be very hard going through the fall.”
That projection highlights a key realization for many pastors in the city: while the Church has run many programs to engage congregants and community members, effective discipleship has been seriously lacking. Some expect most churches to lose a third of their members when they reopen.
“These are people who are not showing up for live streams or answering calls,” Long states. “I don’t think we will really know until the fall. There are also many people who are solid Christians who are feeling disenfranchised. For a lot of churches it will be very hard going through the fall.”
Many pastors and elders are eager to be able to re-gather, and assume the congregation feels the same. Yet, Long says the response last summer suggests that may not be the case.
“They didn’t [rush back] when we could do 30 percent. Why do we think they will do that when we can do 50 percent? Actually, a lot of our people are not ready to do that yet. We need to talk with them and help them process so they are ready to come back.”
One challenge is the polarization and politicization within congregations. With people staying at home and not interacting in person, pastors were surprised how congregants interacted online.
“Pastors have been able to come through this well if they have good, solid peer relationships.”
“People have not always been very Christian in how they have interacted on social media,” Long states. “There has been conflict that pastors had to wade in the middle of, that they were not expecting. This will be an ongoing challenge. This polarization tells pastors that we need to do a better job helping our people think like Christians, act like Christians, and grow up. This is one of the places where discipleship is obviously lacking.”
As pastors anticipate reopening, another concern is whether the government will lift restrictions on children and youth ministries.
“There is a lot of uncertainty,” Long acknowledges. “There is concern about whether the government has gotten used to being overly assertive. Churches are wary that the government will try to come back with these kinds of measures again.”
Yet there are also signs of hope. Long highlights that some pastors are committed to making in-person gatherings more significant than before and to double down on fostering godly relationships.
“One of the big takeaways is pastors have been able to come through this and deal with the pandemic well if they have good, solid peer relationships. That’s part of why we do this, to increase the healthy relationships among pastors.”
Jason Boucher of Lifecentre adds, “We need to see what this storm revealed, then have the courage to remember—God is a master rebuilder. The work of the cross remains finished and complete. As a pastor I want to steward our church to lament what we’ve lost, and one day soon rebuild where together we can look more like Jesus.”
Similar Articles
Canadians call for preserved charity status for crisis pregnancy centres
The Liberal government has committed to revoke the charity status of what they call “anti-choice organizations”. In response, Campaign Life Coalition launched two petitions (one paper based and the other online) asking the government to preserve the charity status of pro-life organizations. Standing […]
Christmas amid COVID
When a local teacher recently asked a little boy what he enjoyed about last Christmas, he told her about going to church on Christmas Eve to worship Jesus and walking home, hand in hand, with his family. It was a good night, he said, because he felt closer to God. How will churches capture this same powerful childlike awareness of Emmanuel—God with us—amid pandemic restrictions? […]
Christian think tank uses research to highlight nation’s faith-roots
From the Canada Summer Jobs grant banning any pro-life applicants to the recent Supreme Court ruling against Trinity Western University, Canada has displayed its increasing exclusion of religious communities from the public square. While many religious individuals are grappling with how to respond, an ecumenical […]
A record summer for Christian camps
Christian camps have lots to celebrate this year. No longer constrained by restrictions on summer programs, they have registration numbers that one camp director said “exceed all expectations”. “I feel like we can exhale […]
The Church in the storm
“This storm actually was more devastating than both the ice storm and the tornado.” Donna Boisvert leads Respond Ottawa, a rapid-response task force established by Ottawa’s churches to help in natural disasters. Her team is coordinating with Samaritan’s Purse and churches across the region to lift the city out of distress and bring God’s […]
City on our Knees highlights social justice
Every year, local prayer warriors kick off the New Year with “City on our Knees”, a week devoted to praying for the city and its challenges. The focus for […]