Originally I wrote most of this piece nine years ago for a parish church magazine. As my current church comes together to discuss the future this coming Saturday, I have remixed it and updated it as a personal vision for what our local church could be like.
I
have been thinking a lot recently about the church. Not so much the
church worldwide or nationally, but our local church. I’ve been thinking
about and asking myself a lot of questions about us. Hard questions,
like why don’t more people want to come and worship with us, or even
better, join us and become part of the church family. We give thanks for
those who do come with all our hearts. But why don’t more people come?
After
all, I think we are a welcoming and friendly congregation and I know
how eager we are to see more people coming along to our services and
other events. We are a strong and committed congregation – strong in our
faith and committed to doing God’s work in our part of the city. And I
believe we are a loving and caring church too.
But there’s a hard fact that
we have to face. In the past three years we have been shrinking as a congregation. Recently some have left because they do not want to stay in the Church of Scotland. I believe many others left before that because they were not happy with the ministry of our soon to be departed minister. Most of us stayed put and wait upon the Lord's leading for the next part of our story to be written.
I know full well that if God wills it, he can
send a revival and save a thousand souls. He can fill our church with
new life and new Christians by the hundreds if he wants to. And we pray
that he will! But, what if God is waiting until we show
our willingness to change and go further as a congregation to bring
people to Christ? God has always also worked through the work and
witness of his people. Sometimes he waits until we give our lives to his
service and to mission. He might be waiting to act until we decide what
our priority is as a church, until we decide we are willing to change
ourselves and the way we do things, so that he can then do a new thing
through us. As he said to the prophet Isaiah:
“Forget
the former things; do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new
thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in
the desert and streams in the wasteland.“ (Isaiah 43:18-19, NIV)
The
question we all have to face is whether we are ready and willing to
change, to give up certain things, to have “dead wood” cut away from the
stump of the tree so that new growth can flourish?
What things do
I have in mind? Well I don’t have all the answers. I think this is a
discussion we need to have with each other within our congregation. We
all need to be willing to give and take, learn from each other, and take
up different ideas. Here are just a few ideas to get the discussion
started.
Faith. Unless we have a real, living faith
in Jesus Christ ourselves, unless we know Christ as our Saviour and
Lord, brother and friend, how can we really tell other people about him?
Unless we understand the gospel, believe it and live it out in our
lives, how can we really tell anyone outside the church that we have
good news for them? This means that opening up the Scriptures, whether in Sunday preaching or midweek Bible study, must be at the heart of what we do.
Worship. We need to worship
God in accordance with God’s word. But are there parts of our worship
that people from outside the church would find hard to understand, or
difficult to engage with? Do we have things that are merely our traditions
rather than God’s commands? Could we do worship differently at some of
our services if this would be more interesting or easy to understand for
people who are not used to going to church? Is it a good use of our resources to have two Sunday services following almost exactly the same format?
Communication. Those of us who have been going to church for years are comfortable
with church language that we use all the time. Do we need to take time
to consider that not everyone knows what our church language means or how our church works? Can
we find ways of communicating the truth of God’s word in ways that are
more meaningful to people who are not used to reading the Bible or going
to church? Should we better at explaining how our church is governed and what decisions have been made?
Prayer. Prayer has always been central to our congregation life and we need to go on in prayer if we want to become a growing congregation again. The apostles were
constantly telling Christians in New Testament times to pray for one
another. Do we need any new systems to enable us to pray for each other and
for what we need as a congregation? Do we need to think of ways to boost our prayer life beyond the traditional prayer meeting?
Fellowship.
If the churches in the New Testament were anything they were
communities. We are God’s family and we need to be as close to each
other as any blood family. Are we ready to share our lives with each
other, allowing each other to see and to share in our joys and sorrows?
Or are we too proud to let our guard down? Too scared of what people
will think of us, to be really honest with each other when we have
problems, doubts, sadness, or pain? If we don’t live as a family, as
God’s community, really loving each other and showing it, how can we
convince anyone outside the church that we really love them?
Service.
One of the most effective ways of touching the lives of those outside
the church is by helping and caring for them in practical ways. In this
Jesus is our prime example. As well as teaching people, Christ helped
people in very practical ways. He cured the sick, he fed the hungry, he
comforted the broken. How can we find ways of doing that for people that
we want to reach and bring into God’s kingdom? Equally how can we serve those who have limited or no material needs? How do we ensure that everyones gifts for service are recognised, encouraged and developed to their maximum potential?
For a long time it has seemed to me that small groups is a biblical and practical way to cover several of these issues in one solution, particularly fellowship, prayer and studying the Bible. But I am aware that for others the current large midweek prayer meeting and Bible study for the whole church is also a valuable and important part of our church life. Perhaps we need to move beyond an either/or mindset to a both/and mindset?
Coming up with ideas is a human skill. Coming to agreement and moving forward together as congregation is the work of the Holy Spirit. Let us pray for his guidance in the days ahead.
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