Is Your Church Outsider-Focused? 10 Gauges
By Paul Alexander
There is a tension that exists in most churches in America, a tension between being outsider-focused and
insider-focused.
The majority of churches I’ve worked with would affirm in principle
that the Bible teaches us that the church should be focused on what
Jesus is focused on, and that’s people who are outside of the faith
meeting and following Him. However, in practice most churches focus the
majority of their budgets, staffing, energy and efforts not on reaching
outsiders but
keeping insiders happy. This leads to churches being insider-focused and missing the mission that Jesus has called His church to.
Not every church is insider-focused though. Some churches do a great
job embracing the mission of Jesus and being outsider-focused. In fact,
here are 10 characteristics I’ve observed in churches that are
outsider-focused.
1. Attenders Aren’t Embarrassed to Invite Friends.
Simple enough. Regular attenders know that if they bring their
friends who are unfamiliar with Jesus and His church that they’re going
to have a great experience and that it’s going to be helpful to their
everyday life. There is no cringe-factor that is preventing them from
bringing their friends.
2. Guests Are Showing Up.
Guests are actually showing up and you know it when they show up
because you’ve developed a system and strategy to make it easy for
first-time guests to self-identify and receive the help that they need
to navigate your church for the first time.
3. Guests Are Coming Back.
This is big. Guests had such a good experience the first time that
they came that they actually came back. You know they came back and you
thank them for coming back.
4. New People Are Saying Yes to Following Jesus.
Again, seems simple enough. You know your church is outsider-focused
if people who are outside the faith are meeting Jesus. This means you’re
being intentional about presenting the Gospel and giving people the
opportunity to respond.
5. New People Are Being Baptized.
Healthy growing churches in America are baptizing 10 percent of their
total weekend attendance. That means a healthy church that averages 500
people on the weekend this year will baptize 50 people. But of course
you’d know that if your church has participated in
the online version of the Health Assessment tool provided by the
Unstuck Group and has bench-marked the health of your church.
6. New People Are Taking Next Steps.
An unappreciated evidence of an outsider-focused church is that they
have intentionally thought through next steps and people are moving
forward in their spiritual development by getting into groups,
volunteering and giving.
7. Attendance Is Increasing.
May sound like a no-brainer here, but outsider-focused churches are
growing churches. Is your church not growing? You may not be on mission
with Jesus as much as you thought you were.
8. They Make the Bible Accessible.
Outsider-focused churches understand that people who are unfamiliar
with Jesus and His church are also unfamiliar with the Bible. And so
they are very deliberate about making the language that they use and
concepts that they talk about biblically accurate while remaining
accessible and understandable to the culture they are in.
9. They Work Hard to Be Simple, Not Simplistic.
They create systems that make it clear, simple and intuitive to get
into a group, or volunteer, or give financially to the church. Notice I
didn’t say simplistic. The Apple iPhone is simple and intuitive to use,
but it’s not simplistic.
10. They Embrace the “New.”
Outsider-focused churches create a culture that embraces “the new.”
They know that everything has a natural life-cycle, so they become
incessant tinkerers. They’re not afraid to start new things because they
know new things attract new people. They are robust in their evaluation
about their ministry environments and are candid about whether a
ministry offering is reaching outsiders or developing insiders, and if
the answer is neither then they stop doing it.
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