I'll keep it simple just like I would in business. The amount of business that a company does it directly related to the number of workers. Again I ask do you know of any pastors involved in GCM who are personally making disciples and teaching their congregation how?
Do you remember when your denomination was growing the most and why? (That was many years before the CGM).
I know of one church that is doing an extraordinary job of making disciples. His church is 15,000 in a town of 23,000. It was started in 2000 with 14 people. The entire focus is discipleship. They make disciples. If someone comes with a seminary degree they are not allowed until to teach until they learn to make disciples and prove themselves.
I know that your big deal is discipleship, and that we've had these conversations before, but you seem to blast everyone who does not do things the way that you think is correct even when they are demonstrating that they are in fact successful in a biblical manner.
For instance, our church in Louisville did not (DO/DID NOT) have a dedicated "discipleship" program of any sort. Yet they have over 80% congregational participation in the ministry of the church, which is the true picture of discipleship in the Scriptures. They lay out a task and people do it, including selling their homes so they can move to a new neighborhood so as to bring the gospel to that area! They place a call to give and people give. They place a call to study and people study. They place a call to train potential pastors and potential pastors come, eager for training. And, so it goes. What goes on at that church would be unrecognizable to you and yet we have other communities handing us checks so that we come to their neighborhood and start new church work. That is because they see the fruits of our efforts -- which are not enclosed by the walls of the church or taken up by a lot of book studies within the church.
In any case some of the CG congregations have made a tremendous impact in the church life of other congregations and in the missions effort around the world. Take Rick Warren and Saddleback Church for instance, easily reviled because he is so little understood, yet he has influenced a great number of other pastors and churches -- and yes, disciples -- to better study their Word, to DO what Christ said to do, and to plant and grow new churches across the land and around the world. Church on Brady is another example. They remain small in number because they are one of the largest mission SENDING congregations in North America. I can go on and on about this, all about churches that have embraced CG as a means to deal with the culture in a missional sense while holding fast to the Scriptures of God at the same time.
They would all tell you -- to a man -- that without God and God's Word no church growth movement would amount to a thing.
So, I propose doing a few diagnostic questions about your own congregation...
1. Do you have a climate-controlled building? Is it heated and air-conditioned?
2. Do you have adequate parking to hold the number of people that turn out for worship on a regular basis?
3. Do you have seating enough to hold 80% capacity at all times and some room to grow if the congregation exceeds that number?
4. Do you teach or preach in such a way as to be recognizable to the people who attend your church?
5. Do you sing music in your services of worship that the people attending that worship appreciate and are in tune with, stylistically?
6. Does your church apply any outside advertisement, list themselves in the Yellow Pages, have a web site, etc.?
7. Have you ever looked to special materials or speakers that come from a larger congregation somewhere for a concert, evangelistic event, or conference of some sort?
8. Do you believe that "healthy congregations grow naturally?"
9. Do members of your church go into the community to do outreach?
10. Do you support planting and/or assisting other congregations?
I will be most interested to see your answers!