Listen to the seminar below.
Highlights from the Seminar Discussion
1. The Health of the PCA
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Local churches are often thriving, showing vitality and growth.
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At the denominational level, mistrust, missed opportunities, and fatigue have taken a toll.
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“Two things can be true at once”—the church can be both fruitful and in need of healing.
2. Main Challenges and Opportunities
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Mission Drift: The PCA risks turning inward at a moment of evangelistic opportunity.
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Generational Engagement: Younger believers long to be part of something larger than themselves; the church must invite them into mission.
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Loss of Trust: Scandals and division have weakened confidence in institutions; rebuilding trust requires long, slow, relational work.
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Loneliness in Ministry: AMR can help foster connection and co-labor among pastors and leaders.
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Women in the Church: The PCA is “impoverished” when half its members are sidelined; AMR encourages recovering women’s full gospel calling.
3. AMR’s Role
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Producing content that models charitable, thoughtful dialogue on contested issues.
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Encouraging co-labor and relational trust through listening, lament, and shared learning.
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Advocating for women’s meaningful participation in ministry.
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Hosting forums and media that embody Christ-like speech and honest disagreement.
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Serving as a connective tissue for leaders who feel isolated or discouraged.
4. The Big Tent Vision
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The PCA’s diversity of worship and ministry expression is “a feature, not a bug.”
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Founders resisted centralization; grassroots mission should remain the norm.
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Despite growing polarization, the Big Tent remains worth defending as a beautiful expression of shared faith and cooperation.
5. Encouragement for the Weary
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Replace venting with lament—bring discouragement before God together.
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Hope grows through community: “Despair thrives in isolation; hope is our superpower.”
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Remember: “This is still Jesus’s church—He bought it with His blood.”
6. Practical Steps Toward Health
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Listen: Seek out someone you disagree with and ask them to tell their story.
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Participate: Serve on committees, attend presbyteries, stay engaged.
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Include: Men—listen to women in your congregations and learn from their experiences.
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Connect: Build relational networks of encouragement and shared mission.