If your church is showing one or two of these signs, some
change is in order to optimally position your congregation for the future.
If it’s showing more than half of the signs, then in my
view there’s some serious work to be done. If it’s showing most or all of
the signs, it’s time for some prayerful and radical repentance and reinvention
before it’s too late.
1. No sense of urgency
Growing churches have an exceptional sense of urgency.
Stagnant and declining churches don’t.
If every Sunday is just another Sunday—and you don’t have a
burning sense that lives and eternity hang in the balance—then you’ve lost the
edge that all great churches, preachers and movements share.
2. Urgency about the wrong things
It’s not that dying churches don’t have any sense
of urgency. In fact, they will often feel urgency about two things: the budget
and survival.
If your motive for growth is financial, you should probably
close your doors or open your heart. Unchurched people can smell it a mile away
when you see them as simply a means to an end.
Resources and people follow vision. If your only vision is
to stay afloat, the end is near.
3. Decline has made you cautious
Growing churches take risks. Stagnant or declining
churches don’t.
Churches that aren’t growing often end up in preservation
mode—they try to converse what little they already have rather than risk it to
grow again.
This is a critical mistake.
Ask yourself, when was the last time we took a real risk?
If you can’t answer that, you’re far too cautious.
4. Success has made you cautious
It’s not just stagnation or decline that makes leaders
cautious, success does it too.
Sometimes you become so successful you become afraid to
break the formula. So you become cautious. You stop innovating. You risk
little.
The greatest enemy of your future success is your current
success.
5. Your affection for the past is greater than
your excitement for the future
Stuck or declining churches are nostalgic churches. They
remember when everything was amazing, which clearly isn’t today.
To figure this out, listen to the way people talk. Is there
an excitement for what’s next, or mostly a longing for what was?
When your affection for the past is greater than your
excitement for the future, you’re in trouble.
6. You don’t understand the changing
culture
Stagnant and declining churches often see a gap develop
between them and the culture.
Because nothing has changed in a decade—or several
decades—the world is seen at best as something they don’t understand, or at
worst, as an enemy.
Outsiders who come in see a church like that as, at best,
quaint, and more likely as irrelevant and misguided.
Jesus loved the world enough to die for it. The church
should love the world enough to reach it.
7. You haven’t got new leaders around the table
Look around you. Are most of the people on your team the
same people who were there five years ago?
I’m not advocating for high turnover in staff, but in far
too many churches there is no plan to renew leadership.
Churches who position themselves for future impact
intentionally integrate new voices and new leaders around the table. I
try to keep a balance of established, trusted voices and new voices around our
table.
If all the people around your table are the same as 5 years
ago, you might just all be 5 years older, not 5 years better.
8. You mostly listen to the voices of
current members
When you make decisions, who are you listening to?
Hopefully, (naturally) to the voice of God and to
scripture.
But when it comes to human voices…whose wins the day?
Too often, the voice of current church members drowns out
the voice of the unchurched people you’re trying to reach.
In fact, smart church leaders will intentionally hang out
with unchurched people and bring their voice to the table. How you do that is
up to you. That you do it is critical.
9. Your conflict is about all the wrong things
There will always be some level of conflict whenever human
beings gather, so what’s your conflict about?
Dying churches spend their energy fighting each other and
fighting change.
Growing churches spend their energy fighting for new
opportunities to reach unchurched people and speaking up for the change that
will impact their lives.
10. Any growth you have is transfer growth
But wait, some will say, we’re
growing. We had some new members last year!
That’s awesome. But who are you reaching?
If your growth is mostly transfer growth, you’re pulling
from an ever-smaller pool of people.
If you’re reaching unchurched people with little or no
church background, the future is much brighter.
11. The core team is not fundamentally
healthy
How does your leadership get along?
Do you like hanging out with each other? Do you resolve
conflict directly, quickly and effectively?
Are you growing in your faith and in your
skill set?
Are you living in a way today-physically, spiritually,
emotionally, and relationally—that will help you thrive tomorrow?
Are you aligned around a common mission, vision and
strategy?
If you can answer yes to most of those questions, you’re
healthy.
If not, there’s some work to do.
But here’s the truth: health at the top is health at the
bottom. Dysfunction at the top is dysfunction at the bottom.
If you want a healthy church, grow a healthy leadership
team.
In addition to serving as Lead Pastor at Connexus Community Church north of Toronto Canada, Carey Nieuwhof speaks at conferences and churches throughout North America on leadership, family, parenting and personal renewal.
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