| Title: | The CHRISTIAN Notesfile |
| Notice: | Jesus reigns! - Intros: note 4; Praise: note 165 |
| Moderator: | ICTHUS::YUILLE ON |
| Created: | Tue Feb 16 1993 |
| Last Modified: | Fri May 02 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 962 |
| Total number of notes: | 42902 |
I'm trying to decide how to define a "successful church". At the moment I've
come up with two very different options:
1 - A church experiencing physical growth plus an ongoing spiritual
maturing of its members/growth in the gifts and fruits of the Spirit.
2 - A church battling with small numbers, little impact in it's parish,
(fighting against terrific odds) but still seeing an ongoing spiritual
maturing of its members etc.
I can see a measure of success in both cases, just the same as you can see
success in both Job and Elijah. Perhaps some of you could define your
perception of "a successful church".
Ben
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 554.1 | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:05 | 30 | |
The mission statement of two churches: "To glorify God and provide an atmosphere where every Christian can reach his or her full spiritual potential." "Exalt the Lord, Equip the Laity, Evangelize the Lost" The second one is more of a marketing sound bite, but it conveys three good aspects. The third aspect must be implied in the fist statement. I think they both have number 1 in the right order. A successful church worships in spirit and in truth. When this occurs, the others will follow (though not without commitment of the worshippers). A successful church will equip the Christians within its walls, through worship, education, and fellowship, and reach out through evangelism and other means of outreach (ministering to the community). The byproducts of these principles may be physical growth, or battling and maturing. (My father-in-law pastors a small church where he has at tmies been discouraged by the people who come and go, but many of them have come in and gone out to Christian service! His small church has been the breeding ground for missionaries (home and abroad).) Be careful not to measure a church's success by external metrics. If God uses our hearts and not our actions as the guage (cf. the Widow's mites), then we need to put on a perspective of the divine when discussing spiritual entities, such as the church. Mark | |||||
| 554.2 | enabling Christ-centered relationships | DYPSS1::DYSERT | Barry - Custom Software Development | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:09 | 13 |
Off the top of my head (I do that a lot lately - must explain my
ongoing hair loss <:-}...
Seems that a successful church is one that makes a Christ-like
difference in people's lives. Some churches are successfully
evangelizing, helping the lost come to know the Lord. Other churches
are successfully discipling, helping the saved come to know Him better.
There are probably even some churches successful at doing both!
Bottom line: if the church is helping people get closer to God, it's
succeeding.
BD�
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| 554.3 | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:45 | 9 | |
Intersting topic...
I don't think a "successful" church is in *numbers*. I go to a large
church and while success is something that many see at NVBC, I've been
to churches with 30 people in them and been blessed beyond belief and
the fact that the Spirit is strong in both places is really what
success is all about.
With the Spirit in the church, nothing can be accomplished for God.
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| 554.6 | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Oracle-bound | Fri Sep 02 1994 15:22 | 39 | |
| 554.7 | what church? | JUPITR::MESSENGER | The discerning heart seeks knowledge PR 15:14 | Tue Sep 13 1994 22:23 | 17 |
The initial & subsequent entries seem to all address the physical
church. Ecclesia - the original word translated into church has little
if anything to do with that.
The ecclesia or the physical church's success is going to depend upon
the age more than some brilliant activities coordinator or astounding
preacher.
God said he would blind the people so that their judgement might be
fulfilled. In such an age one could not expect enormous numbers from a
church that is preaching truth. False doctrine on the other hand would
be very popular. In such an age the "salt" that is here and there
would be more successful in growing spiritually than in growing in
numbers.
My two cents,
Rich
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