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I grew up in a farm community, seven miles from the biggest town in the county. There were never more than about 15-20 families -- around 90-100 people -- attending that church, and that was plenty. It was kind of an odd church, Methodist served by a circuit pastor. But most of the members were Baptist. The nearest Baptist church was in town, and nobody wanted to drive that far (!!) back in the 50s-60s to attend church.Over the years, I have spoken to pastors of small churches. Some seem content that their church remains small.
Is this Godly thinking?
If we are truly seeking and serving the Lord, will we not see increase?
I think I failed to properly explain myself. I am talking about churches that have absoutely no growth over a period of years.
I think I failed to properly explain myself. I am talking about churches that have absoutely no growth over a period of years.
Maybe the better measurement is whether the church is engaged in actual worship and outreach regardless of the results. It could be a dead church but it could be a church in a hard field.
I am curious Ann and since you live in the NE I feel compelled to ask....how many in the church come from a Catholic background?I'd say in some geographical areas, small is the only way a church could ever be. But then you get in an area like we are in and it gets tough. We are in a school district of 15,000 children and 123,000 total people living there. It is entirely underserved by Evangelical churches and there are NO churches there that are over 100 people unless you count the Catholic church or the mosque. We WANT to grow and we are working at it as best we can but it's our job to be obedient and God's job to grow us. I do think once we have a permanent location, we will see some more growth and, most importantly, more lives changed by God. I'm not satisfied being small. I want the entire area to hear the Word of God and respond!! I'm OK with people attending other Evangelical churches - but as long as they are walking with the Lord. I want the herd to grow more than anything. Our particular sheepfold can grow too but that's not the goal as much as the herd.
Hard field is an element of stagnation but not the real cause. Staying in the confines of the church and not going out into the world and displaying Christ and seeing Christ in the least of your brothers is key to growth. Not doing it is the key to stagnation and death. I cant be anymore blunt than that.
Uh you have no idea what you are talking about. There are plenty of small churches that are doing all they can. It is not necessary to assume the worst of everyone across the board.
That still could be more about opportunity than ministry, Salt, as that church in my old community shows.I think I failed to properly explain myself. I am talking about churches that have absoutely no growth over a period of years.
How does a church such as I described "reach out"? The community has already been reached!Ah...yes I do. Every single dead church ive been affiliated with has one distinct characteristic in common and that is the unwillingness to reach out to the community.....really do the work, press the flesh and get out of their comfort zones.
That still could be more about opportunity than ministry, Salt, as that church in my old community shows.How does a church such as I described "reach out"? The community has already been reached!
No you don't.