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The Pew Forum recently surveyed the changing religious scene in America, and although not highlighted, one of the obvious conclusions from the report is that most religious decisions, including conversion, abandonment, and switching, are made before a person’s 24th birthday.  (http://pewforum.org/Faith-in-Flux.aspx)

My own experience is the same. Other workers in Germany often teased our mission team about not having planted a church, just a youth group! (Notice the just in that sentence!) We did have mostly children, university students, and young working adults.  But ten years after we began, we had a church of young marrieds, which after another few years was a church of young families. The church had matured into a vibrant community of faith.

Great churches focus evangelistic efforts on young people! Most churches focus on 30-50 year olds and then wonder why they don’t grow. Most people have already made their religious decisions and very few—comparatively—are in a searching mode any longer.  Here are my suggestions for focusing on young people:

  1. Every new church plant should be near a university and should include a campus ministry as one of its main thrusts. I would include a particular outreach to international students on that campus.
  2. Churches should plan events like camps, weekends, concerts, for highschoolers from the community, not just church kids (but these are great for church kids too!) These should have priority over gospel meetings, lectureships, and potlucks for adults.
  3. Worship services do not have to be completely focused on youth, but if your services are exclusively for the 50 year olds, then that is who you will attract (Not!).  What can you do for the teens/college-aged youth in your service?
  4. Youth mission trips should be a high priority for your church, and you should take non-Christian youth with you! There is no better evangelism than an unbeliever seeing a believer in action.
  5. Special Bible studies for youth—and not just a Sunday school class—are essential. Unaffiliated youth are not going to get up and come to Sunday school, but they might meet you at Starbucks on Thursday afternoon after school for a small group study.
  6. The minister and church leaders other than a youth minister MUST be involved with this outreach. Especially 18-24 year-olds want to be considered full members, fully adult, but in some ways, they don’t even understand what that means yet. Mentoring groups are great for this age group.
  7. Church budgets should reflect the emphasis on seeking young people.

I’m sure many of you have other ideas which I would love to see you share. Remember, I’m not talking about maintaining the church kids—although that will be a byproduct—but rather, reaching out to younger people during their age of decision.  If I were going to the mission field now, I would focus 80% of my time and energy on people 25 years old or less.

Question: What portion of your church’s time, resources, and energy are focused on evangelistic outreach to young people?

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As a young missionary, I remember (with embarrassment now) my own disappointment the first time I visited a mission church in Paris and realized that although there were 40-50 people in their worship service, virtually none of them were Parisians, only a handful were even French, and the rest were internationals from the French-speaking world.

Let’s Start Talking, which Sherrylee and I direct, works with many Japanese churches, who breathe the air of a culture with strong tendencies toward uniformity, conformity, and all things Japanese. Some Japanese leaders are very hesitant to invite foreign Christians to work beside them and reticent to think of the international communities in their city as a mission field. They want national churches—churches that look like them. I have seen the same prejudice (and I use this word consciously, but not pejoratively) on every continent, including North America.  Such churches rarely thrive.  Great churches overcome prejudices and present the Gospel to all people whom God brings into their lives.

 

  1. 1. Great churches see their community as it is today, not as it was! From the US 2000 Census data:  Between 1990 and 2000I the foreign-born population increased by 57 percent, from 19.8 million to 31.1 million, compared with an increase of 9.3 percent for the native population and 13 percent for the total U.S. population.  A small Texas city has a colony of Armenian Turks. A Michigan suburb is home to thousands of Albanians. Chinese residents are the second largest number of foreign-born population after Hispanics.  The neighborhood has changed!  The world has come to our doorstep. Has the church body changed with it?
  2. 2. Great churches find strength in diversity. The church in Paris that reaches out to Africans and uses them as well as other Internationals in church leadership has created “growing edges” for greater outreach and service. Instead of serving one community, this church now serves at least three—and sends the message of “welcome” to even more.
  3. 3. Great churches find resources in diversity. No longer (if it ever was) is the U.S. church the headwater for all missional gifts; African churches, Korean churches, Brazilian churches, yes, Chinese churches are sending resources and people out throughout the world with power, vision, and the gospel. These precious resources are used by great churches—regardless of nation of origin.

I’m just pretty sure that the greatest churches will reflect “the glory and honor of the nations” which the Apostle John saw in the New Jerusalem (Revelation 21).

Questions:  Does your church intentionally seek to reflect “the glory and honor of the nations?” How?

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Unfortunately, many of the phrases, like multiplying churchesdiscipling churches, or change agents, that best describe great, growing churches have fallen into disrepute in many church circles. On the other hand, some phrases, like conservative churches or mainstream churches, are very comfortable descriptions, but often do not describe great, growing churches.  Can we lay aside all the labels for a moment and just talk about what it takes to have great, growing churches?

In previous blogs, I have given you four observations about great, growing churches:

#1 – Christ owns the church, not anyone else.

#2 – Prayerful vision and strategy are essential.

#3 – Growing churches is a process that takes time.

#4 – Groups working together are more effective than individuals working alone.

Today I offer you the observation that great, growing churches are constantly creating growing edges. Growing edgesfor churches means new doors and new windows for new people.

New church plants have an immediately recognizable vigor and an attractive freshness that attract new people. A new church plant is a growing edge. But even new church plants do not remain new (nor fresh or attractive), so what does a church do that is no longer new in order to re-newitself?

1. Great churches create new doors! Doors are entrances into your congregation. Most churches rely on Sunday services, midweek Bible study, ladies class, and a handful of special events each year (special series, VBS) to serve as doors. These are probably the same doors that came with the original building, if you know what I mean.  Many mission churches have the same doors as their American counterparts, which means that they stop growing at about 35-50 people. They only have doors for that many people.  Growing churches, on the other hand, think constantlyabout new doors! It might be a new service, a new time, a new activity, a new site, a new church plant, a new ministry, a new outreach, a new service in the community….but whatever it is, it will be new ( for a while) and it will invite new people into your renewed church.

2. Great churches build new windows! Most people want to look before they buy. How can someone who knows nothing about your church and who will not visit you (because you are a total stranger to them!) find out about you? Churches need lots of windows for people to look in on them.  You don’t need just one window that looks at your Sunday service (like a broadcast of a Sunday service), you need lots of windows for lots of people. What about your website? Is it for “lookers” or is it for members/visitors? Where can the community see you? Doing what? How will they know you are Christians and not just a humanitarian organization? Are you ever in the local newspaper? Do you offer (not wait for requests) your building to your community? The more windows you have, the more people will be able to see who you are—and the better you will become because you know the world is watching!

3. Great churches are always meeting new people! While this seems integral to the previous two points, I’d say many older churches basically reach a point where they say, “Everybody knows us.” Great, growing churches intentionally meet new people. This begins with church leadership: ministers, staff, pastors/elders.  If these leaders find all of their energy consumed by current members and their needs, they may have a good church, but not a great, growing church.

New people looking in new windows, then walking through new doors—the vigor in such a church attracts new people—looking in new windows, then walking through new doors—the vigor in such a church . . . and the multiplying begins!

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Perhaps the fastest growing work in western Europe since the mid-fifties was a congregation that grew to 150+ in about seven years time—three times as large as most churches of Christ in Europe! LST worked with that church for several years, so after thinking about why this work was so successful, I came to the conclusion that the significant difference was that it was a large team effort!  Yes, there was a main missionary family (Americans), but they had recruited two other families (non-Americans) for the core team, AND  they always had 10-15 mission interns with 1-2 year commitment, AND THEN they invited short-term mission groups for 2-6 week stints throughout the year.  The total effort then was about 20-25 team members working all of the time and 5-20 additional workers for special efforts.  In our forty-year relationship with the work in Europe, I have never seen this much manpower focused in any one location.

Quite the contrary. Sherrylee and I were part of a three-family team to Germany in the 70s. Practically from the moment we arrived, other congregations and other workers begged us to split up and not hoard so many workers in just one place. Between external pressures and internal conflict, most mission teams do not make it to a fifth-year anniversary intact.

The team approach to missions in South America is exemplary with great encouragement from Continent of Great Cities. I know of a small handful of Asian churches that are the result of great team efforts, but there may be more.  The principle in North American churches looks different, but is, in fact, the same.

What About US churches?

Vibrant, growing churches among us do have a visionary leader, but one of the primary characteristics of a strong leader, I believe, is the ability to build a great team of co-workers. The current debate about whether congregations are better off staff driven or elder driven may be slightly out of focus. I would suggest that churches grow that are team driven, and that team are best composed of those in the congregation with the gift of leadership (Romans 12:8) The title that one wears, whether it be minister or elder does not bestow the gift of leadership. Ministers and staff may function as employees, elders may function as a board of directors, but a team of leaders, each exercising his/her own gifts and who can resist the temptation to wish they had other people’s gifts—or even worse, ALL the gifts—this team is a real example of the body of Christ functioning as it should.

Jesus chose twelve and traveled with many more; Paul always traveled with an entourage; Moses wisely gave up his role as sole judge and shared it with many. Is your church led by a team?

 9 Two are better than one,
because they have a good return for their work:

 10 If one falls down,
his friend can help him up.
But pity the man who falls
and has no one to help him up!

 11 Also, if two lie down together, they will keep warm.
But how can one keep warm alone?

 12 Though one may be overpowered,
two can defend themselves.
A cord of three strands is not quickly broken.

                                    Ecclesiastes 4:9-12

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Amber Woodward, our daughter-in-law, has posted a wonderful description of her family’s faith adventure in Natal, Brazil, with Let’s Start Talking.  I promise you will enjoy both the description of God at work as well as the pictures of happy people.  Just follow this link to her blog.    amberwoodward.wordpress.com

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A church in Eastern Europe invited a campaign group of American Christians to come for about a week. For the last weekend of that effort, the campaign group’s schedule predicted simply “Baptisms.”  As was expected, over 1000 people were baptized that weekend with great celebration. Less than a year later, however, not one of those people was attending that church. Without judging what God did in the hearts of the baptized, we can say for sure that this growth strategy for the local church was not effective.

Another foreign church plant that we have worked with had virtually no growth for the first ten years! But the next ten years have seen an abundant harvest.  I would like to suggest that great churches understand two principles that help them develop strategies for real growth.

1.      Great churches understand that harvest is the result of a process that is particular and cannot be abbreviated.   Notice in this generic website explanation of how to achieve “successful growth” of seeds, what seem to be God’s laws about growth, then apply them to your efforts:

A seed is an embryo plant and contains within itself virtually all the materials and energy to start off a new plant. To get the most from one’s seeds it is needful to understand a little about their needs, so that just the right conditions can be given for successful growth.

  • One of the most usual causes of failures with seed is sowing too deeply. . . .
  •  Another common cause is watering. Seeds need a supply of moisture and air in the soil around them. Keeping the soil too wet drives out the air and the seed quickly rots, whereas insufficient water causes the tender seedling to dry out and die. . . . .
  • Most seeds will of course only germinate between certain temperatures. Too low and the seed takes up water but cannot germinate and therefore rots, too high and growth within the seed is prevented.  . . . .
  • Some perennials and tree and shrub seeds can be very slow and erratic in germination. This may sometimes be due to seed dormancy, a condition which prevents the seed from germinating even when it is perfectly healthy and all conditions for germination are at optimum. The natural method is to sow the seeds out of doors somewhere where they will be sheltered from extremes of climate, predators, etc. and leave them until they emerge, which may be two or three seasons later.

2.     Great churches have a strategy for each stage of development. The process begins with ground preparation and seed planting. After germination (length varies), the young plants must be cultivated and protected. Finally, the time—the right time–for harvest arrives.  Churches that hurriedly skip from one stage to the next—sometimes even omitting the more time-consuming steps—if they have any results at all, often  produce genetically weak Christians.

Two Questions:

  1. What are the implications for mission philosophies that set specific timetables for new church plants to mature?
  2. What are your church’s specific strategies for each stage of development in the people you hope to harvest for the Lord?

 Next:  #4  Great churches are the result of group efforts, not individual efforts.

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We visited a long-established congregation in Europe a few years ago to talk about future LST projects there. It was a wonderful group of people—around 40—but they were located in an area of town that was widely known to be dangerous because of gang violence and drug trafficking.  These Christians were moderately affluent, drove to their building from other parts of the city, and were not prepared to reach out into their neighborhood. Their vision was for people like themselves and their strategies for the occasional public events were directed to people like themselves—who would likely never come to their part of town for any reason. For quite obvious reasons, this was not a growing church, but one that had settled into a comfortable size and a resignation with things as they were.

So why were they located there and why didn’t they move?  The answers were simple: they had been at the current location a long time and had invested heavily to make their facility very nice, and it would cost too much to move out of this district, so they accepted their circumstances asfait accompli. 

Another European church that LST has worked with over the years started from the desire of one national family to plant a church in their city. Before they even had a meeting place, they hosted an LST team with outreach to their entire city of several hundred thousand. Their first meeting place was quite adequate for perhaps fifty people, but after only a few years and long before they reached fifty, they moved to a larger more central facility, which itself was replaced a few years later by another larger, better situated facility. This group of Christians never outgrew their facility, but moved because they intended to outgrow their facility.

Great churches expect to grow, not just to assemble. They have a “be-fruitful-and-multiply” Vision and they make their decisions and plans (strategies) based on a trust in God’s promise that His Word will not return empty-handed. The fields they are given to work may be difficult—as is the case in Europe in general—but what God states in the familiar Isaiah 55 passage is, “my word…will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it.”

Great churches seek the vision of God in prayer, then expect and plan accordingly, assuming that God is both truthful and faithful.  Great churches seek both their goals and strategy in what God can do, not what they themselves can accomplish.

Question: Not what are the wishes, rather what are the expectations of your congregaton?

Next: Observations on Great Churches #3: Process Precedes Growth

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I am out of pocket for a couple of weeks, so I am going to re-post the very first series I did–long before any of you were reading this blog–on Great Churches.  I hope you find it relevant.

Sherrylee and I often joke that all we have ever seen in the 60+ countries we have visited is the airport, the road to the church building, and the missionary’s living room. While this is not literally true, it is true that we have had opportunity to visit with hundreds of churches around the world and to talk with hundreds of missionaries and national Christians. This proximity has given us an unusual vantage point for observing what I believe to be essential qualities for great churches.  And by great I do not necessarily mean the largest, but I do mean those churches that seem to me to be truly living and breathing as a strong body of Christ in their culture/country. Allow me to share these with you over the next few days.

Great churches and great missionaries realize that neither the church nor the work belongs to them.  “Unless the Lord builds the house, its builders labor in vain.” (Psalm 127:1) Missionaries/Ministers/Leaders may give their lives to a country or a congregation, but regardless of how much they have given for how many years, the church belongs to Jesus who paid for it with His sinless blood. Too many mature congregations have been “owned” by charter members, by large contributors, by family dynasties, or special interest groups. Equally as many have been owned by founding missionaries, legacy ministers, or irreplaceable elders. I have seen churches forced to literally ban their founding missionary from their building to escape their ownership.

Great churches have leaders who know that they are replaceable; in fact, great leaders plan to replace themselves. It may feed some egos, but it is no compliment to admit that a work might die if a particular leader were not there. A great leader would be working intensely to remedy that situation quickly.

Even Jesus, the Greatest Leader, said, “Don’t believe me unless I carry out my Father’s work” (John 10:37). He also said, “But I tell you the truth: It is for your good that I am going away. Unless I go away, the Counselor will not come to you” (John 16:7).

Great churches have great leaders who acknowledge with every word and deed the One who owns them as slaves and who intentionally give up a posture of “ownership” for the health of the body of Christ. The practical result of accepting this principle is the absolute end of turf wars, of jealousies over resources or results, and of battles over authority and control.

Question:  How would you know if YOU were acting as an “owner”?

Next:  Great churches work from a prayer-sought Vision with a prayer-based Strategy. 

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Just got back from taking four of the gkids to the Friday children’s matinee where we saw Despicable Me (2010, PG), which was a surprisingly good film. Somehow we had heard a bad report on it when it first came out, so had avoided it. I loved the little minions, but especially the transformation of one of the villains. Did everyone else think that Vector was supposed to look like Bill Gates??

Anyway, it reminded me of how helpful recommendations for kid films are, and since we have been doing grandkids now for a week and have seen several, I thought I’d give you a short review of several current movies playing.

Cars 2 (G) was entertaining for all of the grandkids, but the younger ones (4-6) lost interest several times.  This sequel brings back characters like Lightening McQueen (Owen Wilson) and Mater (Larry the Cable Guy) from the first movie, but introduces new British car-characters Finn McMissle (Michael Caine) and Holley Shiftwell (Emily Mortimer) for the James Bond – like plot.  In the spirit of Wall-E (2008), this film has an eco-message about oil and alternative fuel, but don’t worry because this message is totally lost on all the children.  It does open good conversations about the need to adapt to different cultures and about the value of every person’s culture—even if it doesn’t seem like culture at all.

Super 8 (PG-13) As you probably have heard, this is a nostalgic piece by J.J. Abrams and Steven Spielberg, so it is everything you hoped it would be.  I have described it to friends as a mix of Stand by Me (one of my favorite films ever!), Goonies (one of our kids’ favorite films ever), and E.T. (one of everyone’s favorites ever!), so how could it go wrong.  The children are the stars, the government men are the bad guys, and the alien is the victim.  I’m sure the PG-13 rating is for bad language (just like Stand By Me and Goonies) and for some pretty heavy emotions (just like ET).  I would pay attention to the age recommendations on this one, but for teens and you adult kids, you’ll love it.

X-Men: First Class (PG-13) The whole X-Men series has been especially good for a superpower series. For the most part, it has avoided silliness and has maintained some level of real human emotions to carry the characters. Hugh Jackman, the best of the X-men, only has a cameo in this prequel, but even that is done well.  Those of you who have seen the others will enjoy learning the backstory of Professor X and Magneto.  For those who need a redemptive message to enjoy this kind of fantasy, the ongoing conversation about “others” is more significant in this film than in previous four X-men films, i.e., how the society treats people it deems to be different. If you can’t generate a meaningful conversation with your teens from this film, then you weren’t paying attention!

I have given up completely on the Pirates of the Caribbean series. I really like Johnny Depp, but these films deep sixed about two sequels ago! We won’t be seeing Mr. Popper’s Penguins either because Jim Carrey’s films of this genre are the same exaggerated gags over and over again.

Harry Potter: Deathly Hallows 2 comes out this week. Sherrylee doesn’t like the Potter films, so I’ll probably go with someone else, but I have intentionally avoided seeing Deathly Hallows 1, so I could see the whole finale at once. I’d love to see it at an IMAX.  We certainly will take the kids to see The Smurfs and I hear good things about Green Lantern.

Just for you adults out there, I think Midnight in Paris looks like it could be the movie that brings people back to Woody Allen. Many of us who were fans of his earlier films have yearned for something truly interesting and intelligent instead of what he has offered over the last couple of decades: quirky and off-color.

Any word on Captain America: The First Avenger?  I usually don’t care much for revenge films, but I have not really seen what the storyline is yet.

Our grandkids loved Hansel and Gretel which we downstreamed on Netflix, and they loved the Yul Brenner – Deborah Kerr version of The King and I (1956). Anna designated it her now most favorite movie! But she prefers the original name Anna and the King of Siam. That’s a pretty big award for a classic film from an eight-year-old!

Hope that helps you in your summer film watching. I’ll try to update as we see more.

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Gkids Camp 2011 is history–and a big success–at least everyone survived! These pictures will tell the story with just a few comments to let you know what we will try to improve on next year!

Seven of the nine gkids came at 2:00pm. The babies came at bedtime! That was a good idea!

We decorated T-shirts which worked OK except for the perfectionists among the kids!

 

We took everyone to see “Cars 2”. The hardest part was getting the popcorn, candy, and drinks distributed correctly!! Oh, and Carter did hide Caroline’s shoe from her, for which we looked for ten minutes!!  That’s all part of the fun!

 

 

 

We came back to the house and jumped in the pool. That’s always lots of fun for the cousins.

 

It’s nice to see them connect with the California cousins!

 

 

 

 

 

 

We roasted hotdogs, marshmallows , and made smores. Then we sang around the fire and told ghost stories!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Off to bed. They were so tired they all fell asleep before the movies really even got going. Just as well!

 

 

 

 

 

 

The boys serenaded the girls awake at 7am the next morning. Then we went out and played Capture the Flag while the sprinklers were on! They loved it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The kids poured and flipped pancakes for themselves and their parents who joined us for breakfast.

If children are a blessing from the Lord, then Grandkids are a double blessing! Loving them, singing devo songs around a campfire, doing something for others, getting along with one another–Gkids Camps are just great times for being a blessing to the gkids!

My last task is to make a photo album on Snapfish and send one to each family, so that they remember!  And so they look forward to next year–like we do!

 

 

 

 

 

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