Habits and Attitudes of Highly
Effective Churches (Part 1)
Centered on Christ
There is an old legend that says when Jesus arrived in heaven
after his
search-and-rescue mission among humankind, all the heavenly host
was
assembled to greet him. There were choruses of praise the like of
which
had never been sung in heaven:
· He was praised as the one who had brought redemptions
plan to
fulfillment.
· He was proclaimed worthy to receive honor and glory and
praise.
· Torrents of love swept over him as Michael and Gabriel led the
angelic
welcome.
Then the angels stepped back to witness the reception given the
risen and
exalted Christ by God the Father and God the Holy Spirit. There
has never
been nor will there ever be again such a reunion:
· The empty place in heaven had been filled.
· The Word was with God and was God.
· Everything was returned to its maximal degree of perfection.
With the welcome complete and the exalted Christ seated at the
right hand
of the Father, the angels asked him who he had left behind on
Earth to
finish the work he had begun. "Just a tiny group of men and
women who
love me," replied Jesus.
"Thats all?" asked the angels. "What if that
tiny group should fail?"
And Jesus said, "I have no other plan."
The Importance of the Church
Although apocryphal, this story underscores the importance of the
church
in Gods scheme of things. "The church, you see, is not
peripheral to the
world; the world is peripheral to the church. The church is
Christs
body, in which he speaks and acts, by which he fills everything
with his
presence" (Eph. 1:22-23, The Message).
· If the church of God is ineffective, Christ is denied glory
that
belongs to him.
· If churches focus on themselves, they become far more
interested in
maintaining comfort zones than in raiding enemy territory to free
Satans
captives.
· If our churches remain divided and see one another as
"the enemy," the
real enemy will continue to be the Prince of this world.
· If the church is not effective, it cannot fill everything with
the
presence of Christ.
Numbers, nails, and nickels are the quantitative measurements
people use
to assess a church. How many members do you have? What size
facility do
you own? What is your annual budget? These may be appropriate
criteria
for success in business, but they can be terribly misleading
about a
church.
· Churches must learn to measure qualitatively in terms of
wholesome
relationships, unselfish service, and faithful witness.
· The goals we set for ourselves must be larger than the
self-serving
ones related to a leaders ego.
· The habits we nurture ought to define an identity that will
cause
outsiders to see our churches as outposts of the kingdom of
heaven right
here among humankind.
But what are those traits? And how can a church cultivate
habitual
behaviors that will develop them? What are the pitfalls to their
cultivation?
Highly effective churches have some common traits. Identifying
them would
help some churches that are struggling to focus their energies
productively.
· Instead of simply doing the same old things on the same old
schedules
in the same old way, perhaps they could try a few new things and
get a
better result.
· After all, didnt somebody say the definition of insanity
is doing the
same things in the same ways and expecting a different outcome?
A church will be propelled either by precedent, personality,
power, or
purpose.
· Precedent-driven churches have as their operative formula:
This is the
way we always do things here.
· Personality-driven churches thrive on the dreams and
creativity of a
central leader who has special gifts. Assuming the purest of
motives and
a Christ-focused agenda, the obvious limitation in such churches
is the
unlikelihood that their growth and effectiveness will survive the
death
or move of that leader.
· Power-driven churches are unhealthy places where the worldly
game of
win-lose is played out in the name of Jesus. Some person or
family within
the church pushes people around, coerces conformity, and drives
it
according to a human agenda.
· A common phrase used in this setting: "Well leave
if you do that..."
Most of these churches wind up having fights that lead to church
splits
always masked as "doctrinal divisions" in order to
justify the abusive
things the disputants say about and do to one another.
· A purpose-driven church, on the other hand, can survive the
pitfalls
just identified.: "Because it looks forward rather than
backward, the
fact that "weve never done it that way before"
need not hamstring
justifiable innovations. Because its vision is larger than any
one
persons genius, it can not only survive a death or move but
continue
forging ahead to the glory of God and the salvation of souls.
Because it
has embraced a kingdom mentality in which the willingness to wash
feet
supersedes anyones desire to be a church boss, power plays
of the sort
people witness in the world are altogether out of place."
Highly Effective Churches?
For the purpose of these sermons, a highly effective church
should be
understood in terms of two essential traits.
First, it provides a healthy environment for the spiritual lives
of its
members.
Second, it penetrates the larger community around it through
relationship-building and seed-planting.
· Effective churches are skilled at communication and conflict
resolution.
· They encourage creativity.
· They know how to celebrate Christ in ways that are faithful to
the Word
of God without stifling the freshness of the Holy Spirit in their
midst.
· They are safe places for dealing with woundedness and pain.
· Yet they are celebrative and joyous churches.
· Such churches are nurturing places for their members.
· The transformation of saved people from one level of faith to
a deeper,
richer one is witnessed daily."
Yet a highly effective church does not exist just for itself. It
looks
outward for the sake of service and witness. Its presence in a
community
parallels the personal presence of Jesus during his ministry.
He blessed people wherever he went, brought light into darkness,
and
introduced people to his Father.
A church that understands its role as the spiritual body of
Christ in the
world incarnates those same kingdom abilities:
· It offers hope, blessing, and opportunity to people.
· It is a beacon of light to everyone who knows it because of
the value
it attaches to righteousness.
· It speaks not of itself but of Jesus for the sake of those who
do not
understand the reason for its positive outreach and in order to
introduce
them to him.
· Using its own credibility as part of its witness, such a
church
presents the gospel message of new life in Christ and calls lost
people
to salvation.
Centered on Jesus
The vision of the church must always be heavenward. Thus its
worship must
be Christ-exalting rather than creature-centered.
Its members must be challenged to march to the call of a heavenly
cadence
and not to the beat of this-worldly drummers who would divert
their
attention from the ultimate reality that centers in Jesus.
Kay Arthur relates a story a friend of hers shared about a
deer-hunting
trip his father made into the wilds of Oregon. With his rifle
cradled in
the crook of his arm, the mans dad was following an old
logging road
that had been nearly reclaimed by the encroaching forest. It was
almost
evening, and he was thinking about going back to camp. Suddenly a
noise
exploded in the brush nearby. Before he had time to lift his
rifle, a
tiny blur of brown and white came darting up the road straight
for him.
This is how her friend tells the story . . .
"It all happened so fast, Dad hardly had time to think. He
looked down
and there was a little brown cottontail utterly spent
crowded up
against his legs between his boots. The little thing was
trembling all
over, but it just sat there and didnt budge.
"Now this was really strange. Wild rabbits are frightened of
people, and
its not that often youd ever actually see one
let alone have one come
and sit at your feet.
"While Dad was puzzling over this, another player entered
the scene. Down
the road maybe twenty yards away a weasel burst out
of the brush.
When it saw my Dad and its intended prey sitting at his
feet the
predator froze in its tracks, its mouth panting, its eyes glowing
red.
"It was then that Dad understood he had stepped into a
little
life-and-death drama of the forest. The cottontail, exhausted by
the
chase, was only moments from death. Dad was its last hope of
refuge.
Forgetting its natural fear and caution, the little animal
instinctively
crowded up against him for protection from the sharp teeth of its
relentless enemy."
And the deer hunter who had become a shelter didnt
disappoint his
helpless ward. He raised his powerful rifle and shot into the
ground just
in front of the weasel. The animal sprang straight up into the
air and
darted back into the forest. He didnt want rabbit for
dinner anymore. He
was more interested in saving his own skin. "Where did it
go, little
one?" asked the hunter to the wild rabbit still huddled at
his feet. "I
dont think hell be bothering you for a while. Looks
like youre off the
hook tonight."
· With all our intellectual attainments, technology, and
busyness, we
human beings are still basically scared rabbits in the cosmic
forest.
· The twin predators of guilt and shame pursue us.
· Worry, heartache, and fear take peace from our hearts. Satan
is a
roaring lion whose intention is to have us for dinner!
· It is the business of the church to point the world to the one
person
in all of human experience who is capable of rescuing us from
moral
bankruptcy, spiritual barrenness, and hell.
· The world doesnt need any more spectacles of fallen
shepherds and
scattered sheep. Felix Shepherd shared with me an article in our
local
newspaper which told of a youth minister at a church of Christ in
Dallas
a few days ago that was arrested for using the internet to send
pornographic materials to a 14-year old.
It needs a clear vision of the Good Shepherd and dependable
directions as
to how to find him. The business of the church is not to
formulate
doctrines about Jesus in absentia but to be his incarnational
presence in
the world.
Our commission is first to be Jesus in the lives of broken,
hurting
people and then to speak the truth about Jesus to them so they
can have a
personal relationship with him as their Savior.
To allow anyone other than Jesus or anything other than the
gospel to
become the focus of a churchs life is to elevate that
person or issue to
greater prominence than Christ himself and to veer off into
idolatry.
Go back and reread the sermons in Acts. You will be impressed
anew with
the Christ-theme of each one. Depending on whether the audience
was
Jewish or Gentiles, the evangelist might choose to quote
Scripture or a
Greek poet.
· While adapting the method pf presentation to the hearers, the
message
remained the same. "God has made this Jesus . . . both Lord
and Christ"
(2:36).
· "They never stopped teaching and proclaiming the good
news that Jesus
is the Christ" (5:42).
· "Philip began with that very passage of Scripture and
told him the good
news about Jesus" (8:35).
· "Paul was preaching the good news about Jesus and the
resurrection"
(17:18).
The essence of the kingdom of God is righteousness, peace, and
joy in the
Holy Spirit (Rom. 14:17-18). And these blessings come as gifts
from
Christ rather than as fruits of our own spiritual achievements.
The central issue of the Christian faith is still Jesus question:
"Who do
you say I am?" (Matt. 16:15). Unless everything focuses on
and finds its
meaning in the person and work of Jesus Christ, a church dooms
itself to
ineffectual striving after the wind.
Last modified: April 18, 2006