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I often see something that needs to be fixed around the house. I have all tools, I have the ability to look up the solutions, and I have the desire to get it done. The results are not always the best; if you looked at my work the new braces on the fence may not be very straight, and that engine on the old truck finally gave up after working on it for six months.
But what I would like to vent on today is often in the middle of one project, I get distracted with another. While working on the fence and putting new slats with an electric screwdriver, a distraction presents itself. The very tool in my hand becomes a distraction. Reminders of other screws that need tightening are brought to mind. Matter of fact everything around me seems too need my screwdriver touch.
The church, it seems to me, is caught in the same trap. There have been volumes of writings on Church Growth. Seminars, educations, blogs, denominational studies on church growth abound. They have become the electric screwdrivers of Evangelical Christianity. “We can solve all our problems with increasing numbers.” Massive outputs of time, talent and treasure have been invested in this Church electric screwdriver.
Why is bigger always better? Why has it become the go-to answer for every church. For that matter, has church growth become a solution looking for a problem?
I look at the Bible for answers. What should be the pattern for today’s church? There are amazing similarities between the first century church and the church today. They had large churches and small churches. There were healthy, sick and dead churches. There were churches with strong leaders, weak leaders, and even sinful leaders. These churches worshiped God in imperfect ways. There were arguments over beliefs and practices. Some were in homes while others were big enough to gather in communal gatherings.
If there ever was a picture of variety, it was in the early church. The church in Jerusalem, Corinth, Laodicea, Thessalonica and Ephesus had little in common outside of following scripture and practicing communion and water baptism. Their goal was not building new edifices to gather in. Church growth was never a solution. It was a natural evidence of something else.
When a church was in trouble, when a church was not living up to the standards of Jesus the New testament writers did not exhort them to get bigger. They were told the argumentative to get along. The immoral church was told to repent. The sinning church was warned of impending punishment. Not once did Paul, Luke, John, or Peter ever tell a church in crisis to expand.
No New Testament writer ever told a sick, dying, sinful or hurting church to get bigger. Church growth and church health are not equal.
Church growth is not the electric screwdriver that can fix a church that is not what it should be. No early church leader ever pointed to church growth as the fix for problems.
Yes, I know that Jesus said to go out and make disciples and that would mean growth. But a sick church is not helped or maybe even harmed by an in swell of more people. John, when he addressed the challenges, sins and blessings of the seven churches in Revelation, never told any of them to grow. No early church leader ever told any church – sick or healthy – to structure for growth. Not every church was growing. Many were barely hanging on, while staying faithful. But there’s not even a hint that the apostles saw their lack of numerical growth as evidence of a problem.
In fact, unless you’re looking at the New Testament through a modern, western church growth lens, it’s impossible to miss the fact that small, suffering churches were given far more praise for their faithfulness than large, growing churches were given for the numerical increase.
With my electric screwdriver in hand and everything around me needing a wood screw, it is easy to be distracted from the fence that needs fixing. I believe that churches are supposed to grow. But I do not think then next Church growth tool is the answer. I believe that health not size is the emphasis of the first church and should be the emphasis of my church.
I’m merely raising a much-overlooked point about where we place our priorities. The fence needs to be fixed before we worry about that new deck that is planned.
Have to go, the battery on my electric screwdriver is now charged.
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I wonder if the emphasis on growth is because the people who are already there are looking for someone else to fix the fence?