When You Sense Your Church Is Dying
by: Eric C. Redmond
One of the most wonderful experiences believers
can share is being part of a strong, growing church. What a joy it is to share
in a congregation that has unity, love, holiness, a sense of the Spirit in
worship, Christ-centered preaching, God-fearing leaders, members of all age
groups and ministries towards all members, and a passion for reaching the lost.
In contrast, it is burdensome to be part of a dying congregation: Worship is
mundane, large age group segments are absent, there is strife among members and
coldness toward visitors, and there is no purposeful preaching of the gospel to
the lost or the baptized.
Having been part of both thriving and dying
churches, I have witnessed believers make choices that have either blessed or
harmed the recovery of their congregations. Here are some humble suggestions on
how to live godly when you are facing a dying church.
First, review the basics of the gospel. At
the core of the life of any church is its faithfulness “with one mind [to
strive] side by side for the faith of the gospel” (Philippians 1:27).
When this is lost, the church will die spiritually, even if it does not die
numerically. Faithful congregations can avoid this, in part, by reviewing the
gospel regularly at the Lord Supper and Baptism, and by studying through the
doctrine of the church as a means of grounding members in the gospel. Using the
historic confessions and catechisms in Sunday and weekly teaching is helpful to
this.
Second, look for signs of
self-interest. Important to being a healthy body is that each member
“look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others,” and
“outdo one another in showing honor” (Philippians 2:4; Romans 12:10).
Church should be an experience in which each member is working hard to make
everyone else feel like the Number 1 Person in the fellowship. Churches start a
slow march to death when self-interest becomes the rule of the day. When you
look at the ministries of your assembly and say, “There is nothing here for
me,” or “I prefer the way things used to be,” you are not thinking of others;
you are thinking only of yourself. A church in which many think of themselves
rather than others will cease to be a church; it will become a dull party of
everyone doing what is right in his own eyes (cf. Deuteronomy 12:8; Judges 17:6; 1 Corinthians 1:26).
This attitude led to Israel’s downfall, and it corrupted the church of Corinth.
Third, be slow to depart. Stay
in the dying situation together with all of the saints and “share in suffering
as a good soldier of Christ Jesus” (2 Timothy 2:3). Be
a change agent and think of what your presence means for those who will stay.
Expect a turn-around to take several years of faithfulness—and that only after
corporate repentance, great prayer for the mercy of God, church-wide deepening
in the gospel, and wholesale fighting against self-interest.
Jumping ship is the easy thing to do, requiring no
dependency on the Spirit of God. All leaving takes is a choice to abandon those
with whom we have shared in the mutual love of Christ and one another. Staying
takes prayer, patience, meekness, faithful service with reduced resources, and
faith in what is not immediately visible—all things that are works of the
Spirit, and not works of the flesh.
Fourth, seeks ways to give
sacrificially. One unkind act that comes with a godly
façade is that if something is not going the way I think it ought to go at
church, then I should withhold my giving in protest. The thought behind this
act is that when others and I drain the church of financial resources, we can
stop the direction of the ministry. It is couched in sayings like, “God doesn’t
want me to give to support that,” or “I’ll just designate my giving to support
missions.”
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I hope today you will be found in the House of the Lord! It is imperative to join with others to sign together - pray together and hear the Word of the Lord!
It's simple: Get up - and go to church! (PR)
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