Catching the Vision of a Living Church It is crucial to communicate a positive, clear, and concise biblical vision of the living church, whether starting a new church or revitalizing a dying one. God's people must be called to action that is faithful to His Word. They must he confident that God will provide, according to His promises. A biblical vision for the living church includes:
- Worship that is transforming. The Father seeks our genuine worship qualified by internal spiritual enthusiasm formed and instructed by His Word of truth.
- Discipleship at several levels. II Timothy 2:2 teaches, "The things which you have heard me say in the presence of many witnesses, entrust to reliable men, who will also be qualified to teach others." We see three levels of discipleship here:
- Level 1: mentor to maturing pastor (pastor needs to keep learning)
- Level 2: maturing pastor to proven leaders (faithful men who are already leaders need to keep learning)
- Level 3: proven leaders to others (potential leaders need to develop in order to achieve that potential)
The pastor's goal is to multiply the followers of Christ through His church, not merely to add members to the roll. True discipleship also builds balance into the church ministry; since it demands that the discipler evangelize (win the disciple), equip (train the disciple), and exhort (send the disciple). The result is reproduction by multiplication, rather than addition.
- A biblical growth mentality. Biblical growth begins with spiritual growth, which leads to functional growth, which in turn leads to statistical growth. Statistical growth is the bottom line everyone always looks at, but spiritual and functional growth are foundational. They happen when God's disciples become doers of the Word.
- Breaking down jealous criticism of other churches. Dying churches become cynical and critical, especially if other churches nearby are faring better To combat this tendency; pray privately and publicly for the continued success of other evangelical churches in the community and thank God for them.
- Resources for growth. All revitalization pastors face a lack of resources, such as leadership, people, and finances. Remember that seldom do resources precede ministry. They usually follow it.
- Transformation at the deepest level of homogeneity. A hodgepodge of people groups, too diverse for church growth experts, is, nonetheless, still a group of sinners. If Christ calls them, He will "break down the dividing wall.” When people are being rescued from the kingdom of darkness and incorporated into the kingdom of light through the church's ministry; a power is unleashed that melts old differences and breaks down barriers, transforming them into the family of God.
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