|
When Communers Become
Consumers: Church-Growth Rules That Could Be Making Yours Sick
by Greg Laurie
Once I had a friend — I'll call him Bill —
who worked out everyday at the gym. When we got together, he liked to
flex his bicep and say, "Greg, feel this!" Bill's muscles
were rock hard.
Then one day I heard terrible news. Bill had
died of a heart attack. Even though he appeared robust and powerful,
his heart was diseased. Inwardly, as it turned out, Bill was a
weakling.
I keep Bill in mind when I think about the
church today. Outwardly everything can look promising. A ministry may
appear to be going very well. Yet the inside reality can be another
story. What makes a church body grow big doesn't necessarily make it
grow healthy.
The past two decades have witnessed a dramatic
increase in the number of large churches, including
"megachurches" (congregations of 1,000 or more), around the
country. As a result of pastoring a large congregation, I'm frequently
asked about our success at Harvest Christian Fellowship. What kind of
church-growth formula do we follow? Can what we do at Harvest be
applied to any church, anywhere, with similar results?
I understand these questions and the motivations
behind them. Pastors would rather preach to people than to open
spaces. And let's face it, something would be terribly wrong if
Christians weren't interested in seeing churches grow. But it's time
to take a hard look at what church growth means.
In a recent article entitled "The Myth of
Church Growth" featured in Current Thoughts and Trends, David
Dunlap cites some troubling statistics. For example, during the very
time megachurches have sprouted across the landscape, the proportion
of Americans who claim to be "born again" has remained a
constant 32 percent. According to Dunlap, growth isn't coming from
conversions but from transfers — up to 80 percent of all growth
taking place today. He goes on to quote C. Peter Wagner, one of the
leading spokesmen for the church-growth movement, who admits, "I
don't think there is anything intrinsically wrong with the church
growth principles we've developed...yet somehow they don't seem to
work."
I would suggest that one reason they don't work
is because they tend to approach church as if it were a business. For
example, some church growth experts are telling pastors their
"customers" no longer attend to commune with God, but to
"consume" a personal or family service. In a recent survey
of 1,000 church attenders, respondents were asked, "Why does the
church exist?" According to 89 percent, the church's purpose was
"to take care of my family's and my spiritual needs." Only
11 percent said the purpose of the church is "to win the world
for Jesus Christ."
These attitudes concern me and many other
observers deeply. A business-driven response may make things only
worse. In the long run, if we train consumers instead of communers,
we'll end up with customers instead of disciples. It might fill up an
auditorium, but it will never turn the world upside down for Christ.
The last thing I want to do is discourage any
person or ministry, or cause division. We must be careful about
limiting the ways God can work; but we also need to be aware of how
our strategies — even well-intentioned, statistically valid ones —
can actually take us off course.
Allow me to suggest how certain popular
church-growth "rules" can put a church's health at risk when
slightly misapplied or taken to extremes.
Risky Rule #1: If it brings people in, it
pleases God.
Recently I attended a pastor's gathering where
many participants expressed frustration with the lack of numerical
growth in their churches. One pastor said to me, "My feeling is,
whatever works, and if it pleases God, that is what I want to
do."
I understood his good intentions, but I couldn't
agree with him. "You know, I don't want to be nit-picky," I
said, "but I really have to differ with you. It's not whatever
works; it is whatever is pleasing to God. Period."
Why? Because if it's pleasing to God, it will
work.
If there was ever a church growth plan that did
work, it was the one the early Christians used. Talk about numbers.
Talk about effectiveness. This church exploded. Why? Because they knew
why they were here on earth and what they were supposed to do.
A careful reading of Acts 2:42-47 shows that the
early church didn't make bigger and better their business. Instead,
they focused on five priorities: worship, prayer, evangelism,
learning, and loving. The passage ends with the words, "And the
Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved"(KJV). The
first church didn't have a problem with growth because God took care
of the growth as they took care of honoring His principles.
Church growth is ultimately God's business, not
ours to control. Our commission is to live out the gospel individually
and whole-heartedly in community. Then, in keeping with God's will,
"the Lord added to the church daily" will become the success
story of our church. Not every pastor will necessarily have a
"megachurch," but he will have a growing one.
Risky Rule #2: The less confrontive or overt
the gospel message, the better.
One positive aspect of the recent growth
movement is the emphasis on getting nonbelievers to come to church.
I'm concerned, however, that in a sincere effort to get their churches
to grow, some pastors are exchanging entertainment for exhortation and
gimmicks for the gospel.
We recently conducted a survey at our church and
found that over 40 percent of those who attended had become Christians
at one of our services. If people walk away from our services with a
good feeling but no idea who Jesus is, I know we have really missed
the boat.
Graham Scroggie said compromise is what
"prompts us to be silent when we ought to speak for fear of
offending." Of course, drama, videos, music, and other media used
to communicate Christian faith in churches today aren't compromises by
themselves. Yet we must be sure that gimmicks don't take the place of
the gospel. Let's be sure we are actually proclaiming the whole gospel
— including sin, judgment, and salvation.
Risky Rule #3: Find out what your church is
hungry for and feed it to them.
People and churches develop an appetite for what
they are accustomed to being fed. A church with a steady diet of
feel-good sermonettes in place of solid teaching from Scripture might
eventually grow to become a large congregation — but it will be weak
and immature.
You could easily conclude that many congregants
want the church to be light and hassle- free. No heavy meals or
five-course messages. But just because people have developed an
appetite for empty calories doesn't mean their bodies have no need for
nutritious meals.
When our two boys were younger, they didn't
understand why my wife, Cathe, and I wouldn't let them exist on a
steady diet of Hostess Twinkies and Ding-dongs. Nevertheless, we
insisted on a balanced diet. Why? Because the boys' appetites didn't
feed their real, long-term hungers.
There's a reason Scripture tells pastors to
"devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to preaching
and to teaching" (1 Tim. 4:13). Whether they always feel it or
not, human beings have a deep need to know the meaning of life and the
reason for their existence. The answers people need can be found only
in God's Word and in a living relationship with Jesus, "the bread
of life" (John 6:35).
Risky Rule # 4: Target your church to a
particular demographic.
Despite their diversity, the believers of the
early church maintained a love and unity so powerful that they enjoyed
the favor of all (Acts 2:47). Who wouldn't want to join in on such a
love feast? As a result, their numbers exploded and thousands came to
Christ.
Nevertheless, one trend in church growth is the
attempt to target churches to a particular niche of
"consumers." You might call these designer churches. Every
decision has a particular "consumer" in mind — Gen-Xers,
executives, surfers, Boomers, and so on.
Now, there's nothing wrong with trying to find
ways to reach out to a specific segment of society and make a
connection or with using common interests as a springboard for the
gospel. Yet we need to be cautious about mistaking our circles of
comfort for our calling. Philip went to an Ethiopian court official
(Acts 8); Peter went to a Roman centurion named Cornelius (Acts 10);
Paul went to a Philippian businesswoman (Acts 16). Each one of those
contacts was instrumental in helping to spread Christianity around the
known world.
A problem with catering only to a certain group
of people is that we miss out on the great power and beauty of
diversity. Something exciting happens when we walk into a church and
see different ages, cultures, tastes, and races with one thing in
common — Jesus Christ. That is a truly loving church. And that
church will grow.
I believe the church in our generation has a
unique opportunity to have an impact on the world. God has opened
doors, and we can use this opportunity to get the gospel out and turn
the world upside down for Jesus Christ.
As we do, we should remember that God's church
is not a business. It may grow larger to some extent when it's treated
like one; but it will probably not be God-centered, nor will it have a
good prognosis for living out that dynamic first-century example.
Ultimately, God's church is based on heavenly, "upside-down"
principles that nearly always go against the world's grain.
We simply need to do the Lord's work the way God
has taught us in Scripture, as demonstrated for us in the Book of
Acts. Clearly and systematically, we need to present "the words
of eternal life" (John 6:68). That's how God will bring change
and growth to His church, and that's how the church will change the
world.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Greg Laurie is senior pastor of Harvest
Christian Fellowship in Riverside, California, which is one of the 10
largest churches in America. More than 2 million people have heard
Greg speak at his "Harvest Crusades" and other evangelistic
outreaches. Greg is the author of many books, including the
forthcoming The Upside-Down Church (Tyndale), on which this article is
based.
This article first appeared in the Summer 1998
issue of the Christian Research Journal. It was obtained from:
http://www.equip.org/bam
|