In my last post, I stated that most churches will settle
for being “good” rather than “great.” So
what does a great church look like? I am
not talking about numbers. Being a great
church has nothing to do with numbers—people attending, services offered, funds
received. A great church is characterized
by the willingness of its members and leaders to pursue certain tasks.
A great church both prays to God and listens for God’s
response. Great churches have members
who are willing to lay their concerns, hopes, and fears before God and to be
patient enough to listen for an answer. This
means that the church is willing to hold everything loosely —ministries,
budgets, leaders—and place it all in God’s hands.
A great church values its people as their number one
resource whether they are children, adults, or retired people. A concerted effort is made not only to teach
the Bible but to apply it to life.
Leaders listen to members and discover where God is at work in their
lives and then the church comes alongside to encourage them in their ministry,
whether it is within the walls of the church or outside those walls.
A great church recognizes its strengths and builds on
them. They embrace who they have been
called to be. Such a church does not try
to become something that God has not called it to be but uses its God-given
strengths—people, context, facilities, funds—to be all that it can be.
A great church is willing to take risks and court potential
failure in order to be the presence of Christ in its community. A great church is not concerned about being
unpopular or standing over against the popular consensus but in doing what God
has called it to do.
A great church continually seeks ways to improve the way
that it does things, whether it is member care or food services. Great churches realize that the core remains
the same, but everything else is in flux.
A church that wishes to be great takes advantage of the changes in its
composition, community, and culture in order to become more effective in its
mission.
A great church is willing to learn from the young, the
old, the seeker, and the outsider. Each
brings a certain kind of wisdom to the table that gives the church insight and
understanding about its mission.
A great church seeks to pursue God’s vision for the
church. This keeps the church focused on
what is really important, avoiding wasting time on peripheral issues. This type of church is not afraid to ask the
question, “Does this have impact for the Kingdom of God or not? If not, let’s not worry about it.”
Great churches may not be large, popular, or prosperous,
but they will clearly be God’s people on mission in the world.
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