Churches are closing all over the United States.
I’m not referring to the “Big C” church, as
we understand that the Church is actually the Body of Christ comprised of all
believers in Jesus regardless of location, race, denomination, language or
tradition. In addition, worldwide,
Christianity is not only the largest religion but also the fastest growing
religion. What we are seeing in America
however is that many local church congregations, some in nice buildings, some
in buildings that have seen better days, are closing their doors each
year.
According to recent reports about 4,000 church
congregations close each year contrasted with about 1,500 new churches
resulting in a loss of about 2,500 congregations. Considering a growth in the population in the
United States of about .7% and if 40% of Americans attend church, we need 4,200
net new churches every year.
A nation that is unchurched
It’s becoming increasingly clear that each year a greater
percentage of Americans are now ‘unchurched’.
While the reasons for this are varied the undisputed fact is that as
Christianity has become less relevant in the eyes of the average American. As a result more and more local churches are
faced with very difficult decisions regarding their continued operation, their
ability to attract new people and their continued role in the community.
While they are still meeting and the lights are still on,
these congregations have the opportunity to revitalize their ministry and to
again be an important part of the fabric of their community. The Great Commission of making disciples of
Jesus Christ is not just about reaching new people groups or something that
growing and sprawling mega churches do, it’s the basic and the essential
mission of every local church.
There is hope!
Rather than abandoning these ministries and hoping that
either the buildings can be sold, torn down or otherwise recycled, we need to
remind ourselves that there is hope. Not
only is Jesus still the Lord and Head of the Church, we as the Body of Christ
likewise can come alongside these churches and provide them with opportunities
to rejuvenate and rebirth their congregations.
My observation is that these local congregations start
spiraling down and get caught in a number of ultimately fatal traps. Unless the leadership of the congregation
recognizes the trends and understands that unless things change radically,
their fate is sealed. The congregation,
the building, the legacy and the local Christian witness will vanish.
The challenge is that the change that is necessary is
often very difficult to initiate. In
every generation local churches have struggled when they make even minor
changes in worship, preaching style, the environment, attire or service
times. Recently many churches have
stepped away from the traditional service patterns of Sunday morning, Sunday
evening and Midweek as American culture has become busier and attendance has
been declining.
If your local church is thriving and prefers more
traditional worship and midweek services, God bless you. Many congregations believe their culture and
traditions are very closely related to their doctrinal beliefs and would rather
be satisfied ministering to a declining and likely aging population. However, they and the community they serve
may be missing out on an opportunity to understand and witness first hand that
the Gospel is not limited by tradition and culture.
The example of Jesus and Paul
Today more than ever we need more of our leaders to be
like the Apostle Paul. While Paul was a
great church planter and was used by God to bring the Gospel to the gentiles in
Asia and Europe he was also interested in strengthening and revitalizing the
existing churches. In the book of Acts
we see Paul and Barnabas returning to the churches to “see how they are dong”
(Acts 15:36).” Paul was not hesitant to
address moral or theological issues, heresy or problems in leadership.
Jesus as well through his angel sent messages to seven
churches in the Book of Revelation.
These churches were all unique and each needed to hear a unique message
regarding insights into their ministry.
Some were commended while some were severely criticized. They all had the opportunity to be faithful
to the ministry that they were given.
For most of them however that meant they had to make changes.
The bible is clear that we are the Body of Christ and
that when one member suffers, we all suffer (1 Cor 12:26). We are all too familiar with the scandals
that spread when a minister falls because of moral failure. Likewise, churches that begin to embrace the
very sin that so easily entangles very quickly bring shame, dishonor and
confusion within the Body of Christ.
In the same way, churches that close their doors, sell
their buildings and abandon their calling indicate failure. Their failure means that the message of the
church, the life-changing opportunity to embrace Jesus as the Christ, to have
sin forgiven and provide a message of hope is somehow irrelevant.
I mentioned earlier that many of our local congregations
are spiraling down and get caught in a number of ultimately fatal traps. Often
before a church can be revitalized, it has to be pruned and closed temporarily
for some major remodeling. Like an airplane
that goes into a stall and starts spiraling down, the very deliberate but often
counter intuitive maneuver of pushing the nose down is the only thing that can
stop the spiral down.
Six changes to make!
Here are the major things I recommend these congregations
look at to make the changes needed:
- Sever the denominational ties! If you can’t completely
depart from the denomination change the name on the building so that the
message is clear that the purpose and mission of the local congregation is not
about denominational differences but about the essential message of the gospel.
- Focus on the local community! Local congregations are designed to serve the
local community. People within a few
miles of the church need Jesus and having a local church provides great
opportunities for fellowship and true communion.
- Worship! All
too often we worship our worship rather than worship the Creator. There has been more hand wringing and
arguments over the style and type of worship in a church than any other
issue. Worship preferences are rarely
doctrinal issues and Christians have worshiped God in many different manners
over the past 2,000 years.
- Preach the gospel!
As churches become smaller the preacher assumes that since the remaining
people already know the gospel, they need to be given other lessons in
stewardship, parenting, ecology, history, social services or other useful but
nonessential messages. It is the gospel
that brings spiritual rebirth and it is the gospel that people need to hear.
- Evangelize! Evangelism is not a program nor an annual
outreach, nor even an option; it is a command.
Evangelism is just another term for our part of the Great Commission, as
it was Jesus that said to go and make disciples. We go, He brings the Holy Spirit.
- Pray! It is Biblical and it has also been show historically that there are no second generation Christians. Every believer begins his or her walk with the Lord individually. Christianity is about prayer, self-sacrifice, humility, discipline and the development of a personal relationship with God through Jesus Christ.
Jesus said..
Jesus said that the gates of hell shall not prevail
against the Church. With that we have to understand that there is a very
significant spiritual component as we lead and determine the appropriate
actions to take to revitalize our congregations. We pastors also need to always remember that
its not our efforts but each member that contributes to the vitality of the
local church. In Ephesians chapter 4 the
Apostle Paul says, “As each part does its own special work, it helps the other
parts grow, so that the whole body is healthy and growing. …” (Ephesians 4:16b,
NLT)