They tell me churches will not die, according
to Jesus’ words in Matthew 16:18: “And I also say to you that you are Peter,
and on this rock and I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not
overpower it.”
There are two major problems with the argument
that churches will not close. First, Jesus is not referring to any one
congregation in this passage; He is referring to the Universal Church. Second,
churches are dying, lots of them—several thousand each year in America alone.
It is, therefore, helpful to see the life
cycle of churches so we can at least understand visually where our church
resides currently, and where it may be heading. I call this visual the Congregational
Life Cycle ©.
This approach delineates six stages. Keep in
mind that most churches are not totally focused on any one
stage at any time. Rather, the Congregational Life Cycle demonstrates where a
church is predominantly focused in its resources of time,
money, and emotions.
Outward Focus
This is the beginning stage of most new
churches. In the spirit of the Great Commission of Matthew 28:19 or Acts 1:8,
the church focuses the majority of its resources reaching the community and
having gospel conversations. The focus is on the “other” instead of the “us.”
Organization and Structure
A church without a healthy organization and
structure is like a body without a skeleton. It cannot survive as an
unstructured mass. It needs a clear polity. It needs a place to meet. It needs
a healthy system of groups. It needs clearly defined leadership. It needs processes
and procedures.
Integration and Assimilation
A congregation is better able to integrate and
assimilate the congregants with a healthy organization and structure. The
previous stage was more about the right structure. This stage is about
integrating people into the structure.
Inverse Priorities
I also call this stage “the tail wagging the
dog.” The previous two stages become ends instead of means. Members seek to
hold onto the ministries, programs, processes, and styles where they are
comfortable. Two phrases become common mantras in the church: “We’ve never done
it that way before” and “We will not change.”
Decline
The church not only declines numerically; it
declines in spirit and unity. The congregation often looks more like a
spiritual country club doling perks and privileges, rather than a biblical
church where all of the parts of the body are working in a self-sacrificial
manner.
Death
The church closes its doors. In the past,
death took years, even decades, to become a reality. Now it comes with surprising
speed and unforgiving force.
What Now?
What are church leaders to do with this
Congregational Life Cycle? First, determine where your church is on the cycle
today. Where is your congregation expending the greatest level of resources?
Second, always seek to move to Outward Focus.
Seek to expend your greatest resources being a true Great Commission church.
Seek to reach your community with unadulterated love and grace-filled giving.
Even a church about to close its doors can
move to the Outward Focus stage. The church can give its building and resources
to a healthy congregation. It can become acquired by another church. It can
become a church replant. Through its own death, it can give new life to another
congregation.
But all churches should prayerfully move to
the stage of Outward Focus, where the greatest level of resources are focused
on reaching others and discipling them. That’s what the early church modeled.
And that’s what our church should model today.
Source: Thom Rainer
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