The Difference Between Churches Who WIN and LOSE
By Paul Alexander
Not every church is winning. In fact
Thom Rainer, President and CEO of LifeWay Christian Resources has stated in his research that:
“Eight out of 10 of the approximately 400,000 churches in the United States are declining or have plateaued.”
There are a lot of reasons why 80 percent of churches in America
aren’t winning and there’s no “silver bullet” fix. But there are a
couple of things that winning churches consistently do that losing
churches don’t.
1. They make decisions based on who they are trying to reach instead of who they are trying to keep.
The primary filter for winning churches is “What can we do (short of
sin) to reach people who are far from Jesus?” You may think that all
these churches care about is evangelism and helping people meet Jesus
(Is that so bad?), and that leads to the church being a mile wide and an
inch deep. But surprisingly these churches are usually very sensitive
to helping people who have recently said yes to following Jesus take
their next steps in their spiritual journey with Him. If a church isn’t
reaching new people then it’s already dying, it just hasn’t shown up
yet.
2. They embrace change.
Winning churches embrace change. They change their staff and
organizational structure. They change their worship style. They change
their strategies. They change what ministries they offer. They are
incessantly tinkering to try to improve what they do to reach new people
with the Gospel. They take big risks because they have a big God and
they trust Him for big results. They are not afraid to try new things.
They’re not afraid to fail.
3. They don’t just shepherd people well, they lead people.
While the staff at winning churches care deeply about people, they
don’t view themselves as simply caretakers and they don’t view their
role as simply taking care of people. They view themselves as leaders
and feel a responsibility to lead people where Jesus wants them to go
even if that means it’s going to be uncomfortable. After all, when was
following Jesus ever comfortable?
4. They help people take steps, not get into a class.
Most winning churches I’ve been around aren’t as interested in
biblically educating people as they are challenging people to become
obedient to the biblical knowledge they already have. They view
discipleship as obedience not information. Winning churches have a clear
plan to move people from guests to fully involved and people that say
yes to following Jesus. Their goal isn’t to simply get people into a
class.
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