Write a book on “Why I’m Finished With the Church Forever,” and you will make money. Many of us who love the church and have devoted our lives in her service will probably want to hear what you have to say.
Write a book on “Why I Love the Church,” and you end up with a garage full of your efforts. Those who already love the church will “amen” you and critics on the outside will mark you off as deluded.
Whether we are a critic or a lover of the church–or for some of us, it’s a little of both–it’s important to be balanced.
Let’s acknowledge that there are both good and bad churches in the world today. Strong and weak. Churches that ought to be cloned and some that should be euthanized.
For a moment, let’s focus on the churches which are healthy and strong, faithful and loving, redemptive and grace-full.
The good news is some churches in Scripture got it right. The incident in Acts 6:1-7 provides a wonderful illustration of a congregation that faced up to a crisis in a healthy, Christ-honoring way and bore great fruit as a result.
Let’s use that Jerusalem church as an object lesson.
Here are ten things healthy churches do well– particularly when it comes to dealing with problems.
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Any growing body will have its share of aches and pains.
The Jerusalem church had been basking in the sunshine. All was well. God had sent miracles, new believers were arriving daily, and a sense of contentment settled in upon the leadership. Suddenly, from inside the family, a groan went up. Then it swelled into a chorus of complaints.
In the distribution of food for the congregation, the widows received priority. But for some reason, Hebrew widows were getting the lion’s share to the neglect of the Grecian widows. (We’re told that “Hebrew” widows were part of the native population from Palestine, whereas “Greek” or “Hellenistic” widows were Jews from the Disapora, that is, everywhere across the Roman Empire.)
Did someone there say, “Oh no! We have a problem! What are we doing wrong?” Did they panic? Did anyone jump ship because the presence of a problem must indicate they were failing God?
Not that we can tell.
Any church will have the occasional problem. Like a growing child, a lively family, a thriving business, a school, a club, challenges arise within growing enterprises that have to be dealt with. Not only is it not bad, it could be an indication you’re doing something right.
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The healthiest family will run into a problem from time to time that results in unhappy campers needing to speaking up.
The “fix-it” mind-set in me wants to say that if we incorporate structures into the church organization so people can register their complaints and suggestions, we will not have the murmuring and bellyaching which drives the leadership nuts. But that’s being idealistic.
People who gripe do not think of what they are doing as undercutting their leadership and demoralizing the troops. They are just registering their displeasure at the way something is being done in the church.
There is, of course, a healthy way to complain. And, there is a type of complaining that is like a cancer in its deadliness, a knife in the cuts and wounds it inflicts, and a slap in the face for the abrupt wakeup it administers.
The pastor of a mega-church in Texas, a man who had led that church from near death to become a powerhouse in the Lord’s work, told me one day that he had a deacon who had fought him on everything he had tried to do. I was stunned. Surely, I thought (but did not ask), such a strong and well-loved pastor would have dealt with that character in short order. But he hadn’t.
He never told me why he had left that guy in place. But I think I know.
Sometimes, unfair criticism can perform a useful function. Others hear it and do not want to be associated with that position. They shrink away from the naysayer and rush to the support and defense of their leaders. He is like a lightning rod, attracting the nay-saying and diverting it to the trash heap.
A wise pastor will not panic when he learns someone is criticizing. “Consider the source” is always good advice.
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One of the differences in healthy and sick bodies is in their promptness in responding to an infection.
Now, while some critics can be left alone safely since the body has walled them off and they will do no harm and can actually do some good indirectly, most problems that arise, however, should be dealt with by specific action.
A healthy church will either already have a way to deal with problems and criticism and trouble-makers or will find one quickly when the need arises.
Some years ago, the church I was pastoring received a letter on a Monday morning from a medical doctor and his wife. They had visited our services the previous day, they said, but would not be back. We had failed to provide sufficient security in the nursery area of the church.
The father said, “After church, I walked up to the window and pointed out my child and said, ‘That one,’ and the lady handed her to me.” He said, “Anyone could have done that. She would have given that child to anyone who pointed out my baby.’”
That day, I called a meeting of our leadership and shared that letter. We all agreed the couple had identified a serious need. We did not leave that room until we came up with a plan for instituting safeguards and a parental-identification system for the nursery. Then, I called on the young family and thanked them for their letter. They joined our church and became valuable members of our family.
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The twelve summoned the multitude of the disciples and said… 'Seek out from among you seven men….’”
The head does not handle all the body’s problems itself. It sends instructions to other parts of the body to deal with it.
The preachers do not have to handle every issue themselves. In an unhealthy church, they may have to. “That’s what we pay them for,” I can hear someone saying.” No sir. You do not.
Some ministers are unable to turn loose of jobs and feel their authority is being undercut if they ask someone else to do anything. This is not authority, but a sickness. God does not send His pastoral-servants to do everything themselves, but to assist others in developing their spiritual gifts, fulfilling their calling, finding their place of service. Problems that arise can provide ideal opportunities for such ministry.
A friend said he always loved it when the pastor would say, “Tom, such-and-such has arisen and we need to jump on this. Can you get with the teachers in that department and deal with this?” Absolutely. He’s trusting me, said Tom. The preacher is doing what he should do–delegating the responsibility to the right person.
Tom says later it was fun to write the pastor a report on what was done and how the problem was resolved.
It is not desirable that we should leave the word of God and serve tables…. We will give ourselves continually to prayer and to the ministry of the word.
In a healthy body, the head does not stop its activity of receiving information from everything around, from thinking and studying, of learning and analyzing, in order to pull another part of the body out of trouble. It stays with its priorities. After all, some other part of the body–an arm, a hand, fingers–is better equipped for rescue work than the head.
One reason so many pastors meet themselves coming and going is that they have misplaced their priorities. They end up printing the bulletin, contacting nursery workers, and filling in for absent teachers. And we wonder why they burn out.
Now, a pastor is not “The Head” of the church. Jesus is that. The minister is divinely sent as the “Overseer” (Greek, episcopoi) of the church, according to Acts 20:28.
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Seven men of good reputation, full of the Holy Spirit and wisdom.
Nothing speaks to the health of a church like the quality of the people it chooses as its leaders, teachers, servants.
Take deacons, for instance. I’ve seen churches choose able-bodied, mature, men of integrity for this work (and more than a few great women, but we’ll save that discussion for another time).
And I’ve seen churches–alas, I’ve pastored them–where the congregation chose men on a popularity basis and ended up with well-liked but weak men with no biblical foundation. Pity the pastor who is sentenced to work with leaders who see themselves as big-shots sent to rule over the members and order the ministers but who don’t have a clue what the Bible says about anything.
In a typical church, the people will know who the godly men and women are, and who does not qualify. As a rule, the pastor will not need to give guidance in the selection of such. What he may need to do, I hasten to add, is to insure that the process of selecting such leaders is not a popularity contest.
Once good leaders are chosen, the congregation should get out of their way and let them do the work they were assigned, and support them in it. Invariably, they’ll come in for criticism at some point–it’s the nature of the leadership beast–and will need two things: their pastor to defend them and the congregation to reaffirm their trust.
Even when we do not agree with a decision our leaders have made, affirming that they did the best they could is still wise. The injunction of Ephesians 5:21 to “submit to one another” has to mean something or it’s meaningless. What it means is that even when we disagree with each other, we are still going to be supportive.
The church which insists on making every decision great or small in its monthly business meeting is sentencing itself to dwarfism and its leadership to misery. This is one element in what has been called “the bonsai theory of church growth.”
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And the saying pleased the whole multitude. And they chose Stephen, a man full of faith and the Holy Spirit, and Philip, Prochorus, Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas, and Nicolas, a proselyte from Antioch, whom they set before the apostles….
In his commentary on this, John MacArthur writes, “The seven men chosen by the church all had Greek names, implying they were all Hellenists. The church, in a display of love and unity, may have chosen them to rectify the apparent imbalance involving the Hellenistic widows.”
I think I’d have said it even stronger: They chose them for that very purpose!
Sometimes in churches where I’m teaching this text (and it’s almost always a majority-white congregation here in the Deep South), I’ll tell them it’s as though the African-American members of the church were complaining that their widows were being neglected in favor of the Anglo widows. So the congregation chose seven Black men–all godly and mature–to take charge of the distribution of food.
Think of the statement that would make to the church’s own members as well as to the world!
The next time a group of people in your church cry that they are being neglected in ministry, ask yourself what would happen if a representative group of them were put in charge of the work. We need to emphasize that if this is to work, the group must be mature and godly, otherwise it’s a disaster in the making.
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Then the word spread and the number of disciples multiplied greatly in Jerusalem, and a great many of the priests were obedient to the faith.
The outside world was watching. When a problem arose within the membership, some held their breath. This would tell the tale on the Christians. Would they panic and self-destruct? Would the leadership impose a cult-like autocratic rule over the membership? Or would they handle this legitimate issue in the love which they preached?
They got it right. They did it so well that the outside world–lay and priest alike–said, “We like what we see. We want what you have.”
No problem which results in this kind of harvest is bad.
Any problem which causes the church’s leadership to forget who they are and Whose they are and to adopt the world’s way of problem-solving is no friend.
I keep recalling hearing a preacher stand up at a civic club meeting enthused over the blessings of God. “Our church is building a new sanctuary out on Route Three,” he said. “And we had run out of money. But, thank the Lord, the banker called me this morning and they’re going to lend us $500,000 at only 6 percent!”
A member of that club leaned over and said to his neighbor, “I borrowed a million for less than that last week. And the Lord had nothing to do with it.”
The Lord’s work done in the Lord’s way will always bring about the Lord’s planned results.
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Whenever God’s people do the hard thing in the Lord’s way–when we love the unlovely, when we forgive our attackers, when we do good things to our enemy, when we soldier on in the face of adversity, when we maintain our joy in the midst of disaster and retaliate with love–twelve things begin to happen from that moment.
1. God is glorified.
2. Jesus is pleased.
3. The Holy Spirit is freed to do whatever He had planned.
4. The devil is infuriated. This is not going according to plan.
5. The enemies are puzzled. You are behaving differently from what they had expected.
6. The critics of the church are silenced.
7. The church itself is edified and strengthened.
8. Church members going through hard times are encouraged and instructed.
9. Outsiders are impressed and want some of what they see in you.
10. You yourself are blessed.
11. Your reward in Heaven is great. (Luke 6:35a)
12. And your reputation goes through the roof. (Luke 6:35b)
Anything that can achieve all of that in one motion has to be considered a blessing indeed!
Most of us have learned to look behind us and thank God for what appeared an insoluble problem but which He turned into a major blessing.
The trick is to give thanks in advance, the moment the problem arises. After all, experience has now taught you that these are opportunities for the Lord to do something special.
Aren’t we blessed to have such a sovereign, active, blessing-oriented God!
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This article originally appeared on joemckeever.com. Used with permission.
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