The Isaac Project [Book Review]
December 27, 2016Love Letters In The Sand
December 27, 2016Church In Recession
Is This Your End?
By Vinnie MacIsaac
Click the audio button if you’d rather listen to Pastor Vinnie narrate this article.
Every so often, an economic recession comes to our great nation. Recently, we have had some. Recessions in our economy can quickly snowball into depressions. Thank God (yes, literally), we have dodged that bullet for a long time now, even if not by much at times, recently. But let’s talk about how recessions get started and why they are so hard to stop! The way it happens is when a recession is even hinted at hitting, people stop spending, stop buying, and stop trusting the market. The problem with that is the lady in the morning at the coffee shop you stop by needs her job to pay her rent. So, when you cut back, she gets laid off (fewer coffee workers are required), and when she gets laid off, she does not pay her rent. When her rent is not paid, her landlord can’t pay the mortgage, and the bank forecloses. Now, the former landlord can’t buy his morning coffee, and even fewer coffee workers are needed. At the same time, property values keep dropping, people start panicking, and it keeps snowballing. It is not all that simple, and the economy will not collapse because you give up coffee, but the basic idea is that when you pull back from a broken system, you make the broken system worse for yourself and others.
The same is true for the church. When a church enters a spiritual recession, as all churches sometimes do, and the members start cutting back on their spiritual investments, the economy of saving souls and making dynamic disciples for Jesus heads towards a massive depression. It can quickly become bleak. When a church falls into difficult times, it becomes evident by the number of people who jump ship. Every pastor is known for that one saying they continually repeat that may annoy everyone, but they refuse to stop saying it until the congregation “gets it.” Well, I am a pastor, and I have one of those sayings, and it goes like this: God is a million times wiser than the most prudent banker on Wall Street. God’s economy works like this:
“When it is a safe investment, God invests his most treasured resources (people) into the church, and when it is a bad investment, he gets them out of there before the crash comes.”
Is your church headed for a recession or, worse yet, a depression? Should you stay or should you go? Here are some suggestions to help you if you are facing such a battle.
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No, don’t go! They need you! You can’t leave them at a time like this! Yes, I know I just said that God pulls people out when it is a bad investment, but guess what? You’re not God. So, unless He says “Go!”, He has you there for a reason. Yes, I know John the Baptist said, “I must decrease so He can increase,” but that is not what he meant!
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Get out and do it now! Wow, we’re only on number 2 and I’m already contradicting myself. But I have lived it. I was once in a church where I thought everyone else was the problem, not me. If that happens to you, chances are you’re the problem! God moved me, and I ended up planting a church with a group of like-minded believers and many souls were saved. Oh, in case you missed it, the point was that God moved me. Don’t leave a church that is in trouble unless God clearly calls you to another church that really needs your help even more.
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Step it up and shake it up! Our tendency in sick churches is to step back, move away, and come less. But guess what? That is why they are sick! Why not try something new? Invest more, but maybe in completely different ways and ministries.
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Pray for people to leave. I know, I know; this again sounds like a contradiction. But it is perfectly in line with #1 and #2. You should not move, nor cause others to move, but God can. You don’t even have to know who He is doing it to (no, you can’t make suggestions). Why not pray, “God, if there are people who refuse to heed your mission, impress it upon their heart three times as much as ever before. However, if they refuse and they continue to attack your mission, please send them elsewhere so they can be happier.” Warning, if you’re the problem person and don’t know it, this prayer could still work.
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Pray for the right people to come. The church is too often already filled with unconverted seculars and cultural Christians. Pray for God to bring you these three key groups of people: a) Mature believers who are utterly sold out in love to God and his mission; pray for b) young believers or seeking nonbelievers who will come and be transformed by the gospel, c) those who are mature in their faith and can disciple others, and d) those who have a heart for evangelism and reaching the lost. Young families who will come and grow and become pillars of the church. Those who are hurting and broken and need the love and healing that only Jesus can offer. Above all, trust in God’s plan for your church and pray for His guidance. He has you there for a reason.
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Eat more… I mean it, and I mean it. Invite people from your church to eat with you more. Invite them out to a restaurant on Saturday night. Get together and have decaf Starbucks. The early Christian church ate together daily. We barely see each other weekly, and then, only in one context (worship) and we are then expected to love one another. Yeah, that is not likely unless we spend more personal time with each other. Nothing breaks up a good church squabble like a pan of hot chocolate chip cookies right out of the oven (unless you’re fighting over health reform). Seriously though, eating together is a time of intimacy that aids the Brotherhood connection in churches.
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Take a break. Yes, I said break, not a departure, unless #2 applies to you. But sometimes we all get burnt out and contribute to the low morale. Take a break – not many breaks, not breaks on and off all the time – just one break for one week, or a maximum of two weeks. Rest up and come back knowing you are ready to practice the steps above.
2 Comments
As always, some great ideas here. And applicable across the board, whether you are part of a “church church” (business church) or a “house church” or on a “mission field” or in a “workplace ministry.” It takes prayerful consideration to fix problems – and each church might need a different solution. Lean on God to guide the process – amen!
I just want to say thank you for the kind comments. It is so affirming to have other bloggers supporting my work and finding value in it. Thanks for being an active part of the Body of Christ.
Ps. Everyone should check out.. https://roguemillennials.org