by Bob Whitesel
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Slowly over time most churches grow primarily inward in
their focus, rather than focusing outward to meet the needs of those outside
the church. The result of this inward focus is that churches stop reaching
non-churchgoers because they are less frequently meeting the needs of those
outside of their fellowship.
Most non-churchgoers will avoid an ingrown church all
together because it does not appear to be sensitive to their needs. Even newly
launched and emerging churches are not immune to becoming ingrown.
The close
fellowship created in new church plants, multiple-site churches, cell-churches,
art churches, café churches, and house churches often subtly redirect the
leaders’ attention inward and away from their mission field.
Ask yourself, “How much of my volunteer time at church do I
spend on meeting the needs of the congregation rather than meeting the needs of
those who don’t go to church?” If you do not see a balance, then the church you
attend may be ingrown.
Good churches have this problem too
Ingrown churches actually arise for a good reason. A
church’s fellowship often is so attractive, compelling, and beneficial, that
before long most of a congregation’s attention becomes directed toward these
benefits.
Donald McGavran in Understanding Church Growth summed up these
positive/negative attributes by saying a good church will create “redemption
and lift.” By this he meant that once a person is redeemed (restored back to a
relationship with God), the person’s fellowship with other Christians will lift
him or her away from previous friends who are non-churchgoers. The cure,
according to McGavran, is to realize that this lift is good (it raises your
life to a new level of loving Christ) but also bad (it separates you from
non-churchgoers who need Christ’s love too). McGavran argued that balance is
needed in meeting the needs of those inside the church and those outside of it,
and so does this post.
Good reasons that trap churches into ingrown
behavior
Let’s look at four common church characteristics that when
left unattended can unintentionally redirect a church into a closed, inward
focus:
History Trap—A church with a long
history.
A church that is focused internally will eventually lose
sight of its original mis- sion and gravitate toward being an organization
consumed with helping itself. Years and years of internal focus will result in
a church that knows little else. Leaders raised in an internally focused church
will think that the volunteer’s role is to serve the existing congregation,
perhaps to the point of burnout. Time erases the memory of the earliest days of
a church conceived to meet the needs of non-churchgoers.
The Organizational Trap—A sizable congregation
that must be managed.
Have you ever noticed that when new churches are started,
they often have an outward focus? This may be because a newly planted church is
often keenly aware that without reaching out to others, the new church will
die. However, I have noticed that once a new church is about eighteen months
old, it starts becoming so consumed its organizational needs, that it spends
most of its time internally focused. Thus, any church with a history over
eighteen months long will usually be internally focused.
The Experience Trap—A church with a talented
and long-serving team of volunteers.
When a church has a cadre of talented and gifted
leaders, these volunteers are often asked to stay too long in their positions.
They thus become regarded as experts by others and newcomers. The result is
that leadership unintention- ally becomes a closed clique, which newcomers with
innovative ideas will often feel too intimidated to penetrate.
The Infirmity Trap—A church with a ministry to
hurting people.
Hurting people are often seeking to have their hurts healed
by the soothing balm of Christian community. A church that is offering this is
doing something good, because to help hurting people is what Christ calls his
church to do (James 1:27). And a ministry to hurting people must be
conducted with confidentially and intimacy.
An unintentional result of such confidentiality is that
these churches can become closed communities too. Subsequently, churches often
thwart their mission to reach out to the hurting and instead gravitate toward a
closed fellowship where outsiders find it increasingly harder to get in and get
the help they need.
There is a difference between an internally focused church
and one that is balanced with equal emphasis upon internal and external needs.
Check all that apply to your church. The column with the most checks may
indicate whether your church is growing in, growing out, or is equally balanced
(the goal of an uncommon church).
Is your church ingrown?
Check all that apply to your church:
More curated ideas from professor, award-winning
writer and consultant Bob Whitesel DMin PhD at ChurchHealth.wiki,
WesleyTours.com, MissionalCoaches.com & ChurchHealth.expert
Excerpted from Cure For The Common Church:
God’s Plan to Restore Church Health,by Bob Whitesel (Wesleyan
Publishing House 2012)
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