The problems are deeply rooted, but the remaining members have been
blind to them, or they chose to ignore them.
There are eight clear signs evident in many churches on the
precipice of closing. If a church has four or more of these signs present, it
is likely in deep trouble. Indeed, it could be closing sooner than almost
anyone in the church would anticipate.
1. There has been a numerical decline for four or more
years. Worship attendance is in a steady decline. Offerings may decline
more slowly as the "remnant" gives more to keep the church going.
There are few or no conversions. Decline is clear and pervasive.
2. The church does not look like the community in which it is
located. The community has changed its ethnic, racial, or socioeconomic
makeup, but the church has not. Many members are driving from other places to
come to the church. The community likely knows little or nothing about the
church. And the church likely knows little or nothing about the community.
Top of Form
3. The congregation is mostly comprised of senior
adults. It is just a few years of funerals away from having no one left in
the church.
4. The focus is on the past, not the future. Most
conversations are about "the good old days." Those good old days may
have been 25 or more years in the past. Often a hero pastor of the past is held
as the model to emulate.
5. The members are intensely preference-driven. They are
more concerned about their music style, their programs, their schedules, and
their facilities than reaching people with the gospel. Their definition of
discipleship is "others taking care of my needs."
6. The budget is severely inwardly focused. Most of the
funds are expended to keep the lights on and/or to meet the preferences of the
members. There are few money for ministry and missions. And any money for
missions rarely include the involvement of the members in actually sharing the
gospel themselves.
7. There are sacred cow facilities. It might be a parlor
or a pulpit. It could be pews instead of chairs. It might be the entirety of
the worship center or the sanctuary. Members insist on holding tightly to those
things God wants us to hold loosely.
8. Any type of change is met with fierce resistance. The
members are confronted with the choice to change or die. And though few would
articulate it, their choice by their actions or lack of actions is the choice
to die.
Churches with four or more of these signs have three choices. They
can embark on a process of change and revitalization. Or they can close the
doors for a season and re-open with a new name, a new vision, and some new
people.
Of course, the third choice is to do nothing. That is the choice to
die.
Thousands of churches will unfortunately do just that the next
twelve months.
No comments:
Post a Comment