Thursday, July 26, 2018
MOVEMENT THINKING at DIVINITY SCHOOL _ 2 EVANGELISM
THIS MATERIAL BELOW
is a borrowed material
for DISCUSSION PURPOSES at
HIS LIFE DIVINITY SCHOOL
PART 2 of 10
borrowed from B.M.
------------
THE EVANGELISM FACTOR
I found it written in an old book someone had given me out of their personal library year ago:
“EVANGELIZE OR FOSSILIZE OR GOD’S CHOSEN PEOPLE WILL BECOME GOD’S FROZEN PEOPLE.”
Those lines have made an indelible impact on my life.
If the truth were really known, about 85% of all American churches have lost the vision to evangelize. It’s reflected in budgets, buildings, schedules and a pre-occupation with “maintenance.”
Peter and John were told in Acts to stop preaching in Jesus name.
They couldn’t. the church today is commanded to preach the gospel and doesn’t.
In the first century, without the help of computers, slick brochures, copy machines, television, radio and newspapers the early church hemorrhaged with the gospel.
They were obsessed with winning the lost and planting new churches.
Until we return to that vision, evangelism will continue to be a lost concept.
Therefore, before dealing with methods, I believe that there are some biblical principles to which the 21st century church must give allegiance.
Examine them closely.
PRINCIPLE NO.1:
GOD INTENDS HIS CHURCH TO GROW!
He created it to grow, He designed it to grow, He equipped it to grow, He empowered it to grow.
And, grow it did. On the very first day of the church’s existence, 3000 people were baptized (Acts 2:41). From 3000, the church grew 5000 (Acts 4:4), then on to multitudes” (Acts 5:14).
It is central to its nature to grow and rightly so. Its primary task, that of making disciples, necessitates growth. Church growth is not a means to an end, but the end to the means of evangelism.
Most evangelical churches today are not growing, but rather making time. Their “no growth status is result of no evangelism. Some people are turned off by the talk of “numbers”. They somehow feel that to talk of numbers is unspiritual. Let me remind you that God believed in numbers.
(He named a book in the Old Testament Numbers). All you need to do is read through the book of Acts as shown earlier and you see numerical reports all the way through.
If it’s true that God wants “His banquet hall filled,” and that “He is not willing that any should perish,” then it seems only normal that the church should grow. Yet the condition that exist today is just the opposite. We have been subnormal for so long in evangelism, let a church return to “normality” and everyone think it’s abnormal.”
Today, growing and dynamic churches are singled out. Their stories appear in magazines, others make the trek to visit their campuses to find out how they did it, and often their pastors are constantly asked to speak at conferences and seminars on how it is being done. What a contrast to the original church we read about in Acts. No matter where they planted a church, it grew!
For your church to grow, among other things, your leadership must buy into the principle that truly God intends His church to grow. It is His will, His desire, yea, His command.
PRINCIPLE NO.2:
THE WORK OF EVANGELISM IS FOR THE WHOLE CHURCH,
NOT JUST A FEW “PROFESSIONALS”
Satan’s biggest deception for the church occurred when he convinced most of the church that the task of winning the lost belongs to the trained professionals. one of the fallacies of that deception is that the trained “professionals” represent only one half of 1% of the total membership of any given church! That plan is not of God. Proof of that is found in Acts 8:
And on that day a great persecution arose against the church in Jerusalem; and they were all scattered throughout the region of Judea and Samaria, EXCEPT the apostles….. Now those who were scattered went about preaching the word (Acts 8:1-4).
Did you catch the principle in these verse? When the persecution broke out, all the believers scattered, that is, all except the apostles. It was those who were scattered who did the preaching and the evangelism, NOT THE “PROS” (apostles), who stayed put for some reason. It was the common “laity” that went everywhere preaching, because they saw it as their task, not the task of the professionals. I hope you notice it took some persecution to “scatter the saints”. That may be what it’s going to take to do the same in our generation.
It’s no wonder that during the first 250 years of the church’s existence, the entire Roman Empire was seriously affected and altered by “laymen’s movement”. It was the fastest growing movement in the history of civilization, all because each believer understood it was HIS responsibility to win his neighbor. That movement slowed to a crawl, however, when soon the idea was interjected that the “clergy” was alone equipped to fight all the battles for the church, including evangelism.
PRINCIPLE NO. 3:
EVANGELISM IS MEANT TO TAKE PLACE “OUT THERE”
INSTEAD OF “IN HERE”
This is a difficult principle for our western mind-set to absorb. We are a culture that likes “gathering”. Of course, there is nothing wrong with gatherings, specially church gatherings. A crowd assembles, someone preaches, an invitation is offered and a few people step out to receive Christ. While that is a good thing and certainly every time the Word is preached there needs to be the opportunity offered for the unsaved to accept Christ, the biblical pattern was so different. In the earlier quoted passage, with all the other information we are given in Acts, most of the public gatherings on Sunday were for worship, edification, equipping and fellowship, so the saints could go out during the week and let their light shine and their testimony be given. In other words, there was the gathering and the “scattering” this balance enabled the church to take time for winning the lost and maturing the saints. Sunday services really should not be for the purpose of evangelizing, but edifying and equipping SO THAT evangelism can take place in the market place, the neighborhood, the play place and the home through natural relationships. While there is certainly nothing wrong with mass evangelism, our world for the most part will be won by the one-on-one relationships developed by individual believers out there where they work and play.
PRINCIPLE NO. 4:
PEOPLE ARE LOST, DOOMED AND DAMNED APART
FROM JESUS CHRIST
I’m not sure much of the church really “buys in” to that statement. The facts is that we live in an accommodating culture. For fear of being called narrow minded, much of evangelical Christianity has “graciously” taken in under their umbrella all kinds of philosophies and espousals of people. The early church in Acts marched across the world under the banner of the cross with a firm conviction that men are lost outside Jesus Christ. In fact, Peter’s words in Acts 4:12 gives us a clue as to the tone of the preaching in the area:
And there is salvation in no-one else, for these is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved (Acts 4:12).
That exclusive statement compels the church to peach conclusively and persuasively the gospel. Statisticians assure us that the world population is right at 5 billions. When you stop and consider that 3.5 billion of that figure do not know Christ, that is great motivation for present evangelism. When you stop and consider that 3.5 billion of that figure do not know Christ, that is great motivation for present evangelism. When you add to this the fact that religious groups such as Muslims are staging massive campaigns in America for converts, our motivation for holding up Jesus as the only way is greatly increased.
Recently in our city a little girl became lost. Within a matter of hours, large amounts of friends, relatives, neighbors, and just concerned people banded together organized themselves and began a massive search for the little lost girl. They were later joined by the many others who had heard of the incident on television. Before night over 1000 people had set aside normal activities of work, recreation and focused their entire energies on one objective, finding the little lost girl. Fortunately, just as the sun was setting , she was found, alone, crying, in a wooded area. That group of people, heretofore unknown to each other, had one common goal and felt a camaraderie as they sought to fulfill that goal. If that many people are willing to inconvenience themselves over a physical life, surely the Church can concern and organize itself to seek, find and evangelize people who are lost for all eternity. Jesus made it clear what His mission…. To seek and save the lost. Until we acknowledge the blatant fact that apart from Jesus Christ men are doomed, and relegated to a devil’s hell for all eternity, not much will happen in the way of evangelism.
Jesus said in John 14:6,
I am the way and the truth and the life, no one comes to the Father, but by me.
What Jesus said is clear. Salvation can be found in no one else, no way else, nowhere else, except through Him. If we really believed that, it would totally revolutionize what we do in the way of evangelism from week to week.
Some has said that if you joined all the unsaved people in the world hand to hand, the circle would go around the earth 5 times and the line would grow 22 miles per day! That is staggering and points up the enormity of our task of sharing Jesus as the one and only answer to man’s estrangement.
Until the leadership of the local church acknowledges the reality of man’s lost position, not much will happen in the way of evangelism. Perhaps one of our problems is that we have lost the biblical meaning of “lostness”. In Luke 15 Jesus told 3 parables concerning lostness; He told about the lost coin, the lost sheep, and the lost boy. There is a common theme in that chapter we are prone to miss. It is that each and every lost item, including the lost son, was lost because it was out of relationship to the one and only person who could bring meaning, significance, and worth to it. The coin was not in the hand of the owner, and thus in a state of low or no worth. Its buying power (the very reason for which it was created) was nil. The sheep was outside the fold of its shepherd and thus was in danger. The boy was out of relationship with his father and thus had lost his sense of worth and value. To be “lost” doesn’t necessarily mean to be “bad” or “immoral” or “ungodly”, though lost people tend to fail into all of these things.
Biblically, lostness means to be out of relationship. In reality, God created man for the purpose of being in perfect relationship, and harmony with Him. Until that happens, it matters not how good or bad someone is, he is lost. I personally believe every local church needs to hear from the pulpit these words:
We believe that apart from Jesus Christ, man is eternally lost
PRINCIPLE NO. 5:
IT IS GOD WHO INITIATES SALVATION AND DRAWS PEOPLE TO HIM
We tend to forget that salvation always begins with God. Without attempting to reconcile the sovereignty of God and the free will of man, let the Word speak for itself:
Even as he chose us before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him (Eph. 1:4).
Paul states an amazing truth here. Long before God even created the world, he chose us to be saved. Perhaps this is why Jesus said:
No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him, and I will raise him up at the last day (John 6:44).
‘In fact, as you read on in John 6, you will find these same words again expressed:
And he said, “This is why I told you, that no one can come to me unless it is granted to him by the Father” (John 6:65).
Before God and man can met in salvation, we who share the gospel must acknowledge the call of God on people’s lives. It is God who initiates our salvation. It is God who made the first move in creating us in the first place. It is God who moved again in the coming of Jesus Christ as the divine provision and remedy for sin. In his letter to the Romans, Paul said:
And you also are among those who are called to belong to Jesus Christ (Rom. 1:6).
We usually don’t think of our salvation in terms of the call of God upon us. But I believe this is one of the most important principles of evangelism. When the church realizes that God has called people to be saved, and that we are the bearers of that call, it places a greatly needed urgency upon us. If we don’t announce the call of God to a broken and chaotic humanity, who will?
PRINCIPLE NO. 6:
GOD WILLS OUR SALVATION
Not only is His call upon us, it is His sovereign will that we be saved!
There is a lot of discussion about the will of God. Many are frantically trying to discern God’s will for their life… whom they will marry, where they will live, what is their profession to be, etc. Among many things that can be labeled God’s will in scripture, the most significant is man’s salvation. Who can forget the most quoted scripture?
For God so loved the world that He gave His only Son that whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life (John 3:16)
Jesus made it clear that it’s the world God loves, the whole world, not a potion, not a particular race or culture, but the world. Truly the task of evangelism is cosmic. The great commission is still “all nations.” It transcends cultures, racial barriers, economic strata, and personalities. The cosmic desire of God to see the whole world saved is stressed in II Peter:
The Lord is not slow about His promise as some count slowness, but is forbearing toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance (II Pet. 3:9).
Jesus died for the world. And while we know some will reject salvation, it is the task of the church to make the gospel message known to the world, and in so doing, we are helping fulfill the divine will of God.
Paul made it clear what God’s desire for worldwide salvation:
This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires all men to be saved and come to a knowledge of the truth (I Tim. 2:3-4).
If it’s true, and it is, that it is God’s sovereign will that the world come to Christ, and if it’s further true that God has chosen the church to be the bearer of those unsearchable riches, it is clear that the church’s supreme task, if it would do the will of God, is evangelize.
No church can claim to be at the center of God’s will in its mission and not have on its front burner the objective of world wide evangelism. No church can say “We’re doing the will of God,” if great amounts of energy, large sums of money, and adequate time are not devoted to fulfillment of God’s evangelistic will.
That is why I believe, with a sense of regularity in every local church, the people need to hear “We believe it is the will of God for the world to be saved! And we intend to fulfill that will to the best of our ability.” The primary mission of Jesus is summed up for us in what He said at the outset of His ministry:
The spirit of the Lord is upon me, because He has anointed me proclaim release to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord (Luke 4:18-19).
Even before His birth, Jesus mission was announced by the angel;
She will bear a Son and you shall call Him Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins (Matt. 1:21).
Jesus made clear His mission when He said;
For the Son of man came to seek and save the lost (Luke 19:10)
Contrary to popular opinion today, Jesus real mission in coming to this world was not to make this world a better place in which to live, it was not to improve living conditions ,it was not to make a better government. His mission was clearly to bring man back to God. This He accomplished by His death on the cross. Therefore the pattern is this. God wills our salvation, Jesus came to do the will of the Fater, Jesus accomplished the provision of our salvation by His death on the cross. It is the church’s task now to fulfill God’s will---man’s salvation.
PRINCIPLE NO. 7:
EFFECTIVE EVANGELISM IS DONE IN THE POWER OF GOD
Ours is the culture of the quick fix and fast results. I truly believe that much of the church’s attempt to evangelize the lost, has degenerated into little more than psychologizing and humanizing people. All kinds of gimmiks, tricks, plans, programs, strategies, manuals, films and flipcharts have been created to impress and woo the unsaved. To be sure, there is nothing wrong with dressing the old gospel up in new and shiny strategies, but unless witnessing is done in the power of God, it will never be truly effective.
Just before His ascension, Jesus gave His disciples the game plan to take their world for Him. It goes like this;
You are witnesses of these things; and behold I send the promise of my Father upon you. But stay in the City until you are clothed with power from on high (Luke 24:48-49).
This the disciples did. You read basically the same thing when the great commission is given again in Acts1.
But you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be my witnesses, in Jerusalem and in all Judea, and Samaria, and to the end of the earth (Acts 1:8)
Notice again, “you shall receive power”, .In other words, Jesus gave them the cosmic task of discipling the world, but warned them not to start the task until the power was there. Little is said today about witnessing in the power of the Holy Spirit. All through the Bible we see examples of “power meetings”. These are meetings where the Kingdom of God encounters the kingdom of evil. Of course one of the prime examples was when Elijah encountered 450 prophets of Baal. He witnessed the power of God and God honored his faith. Young David is another prime example of a power meeting between forces of God and the forces of evil when he stood against a giant on a human level, the odds were 1000 to 1 in favor of Goliath. But David said in essence, “You come to me with spear, a sword and a javelin, but I come to you in the name of the Lord our God.”
David was the victor that day; not in his own power. When Jesus encountered the Gerasene demoniac, there was a cosmic encounter. It was conclusive. Jesus had invaded the world of the enemy and demons. He had gone to bttle and by God’s power won the victory.
Act 13 records the tense narrative concerning the proconsul, Segius Paulus, who had summoned Barnabas and Saul to hear the word of God. You will recall the Elymas, the magician, had interfered and withstood them as they tried to share with the Proconsul. The scripture says;
But Saul, who was also called Paul, filled with the Holy Spirit, looked intently at him and said, “You son of the devil, you enemy of all righteousness, full of all deceit and villainy, will you not stop making crooked the straight paths of the Lord? And now, behold, the hand of the Lord is upon you, and you shall be blind and will not see the sun for a time “ (Acts 13:9-11).
The victory was clearly God’s on that day because the scripture later tell us that the Proconsul believed when he saw what had occurred. It further states that he was astonished at the teaching of the Lord. It certainly isn’t coincidence that virtually every conversion that took place in Acts was proceeded by a manifestation of God’s power. Sometimes in the form of a healing, sometimes in the form of death, sometimes by a miracle. I believe the most practical way we can witness in the power of God today is to depend on the Holy Spirit for divine appointments and for holy boldness, for effective results.
PRINCIPLE NO.8:
THERE IS INHERENT POWER IN THE GOSPEL
Close connected to principle 7, this principle relies on the built-in power of the spoken message itself. No one doubts the power of God, but we tend to forget there is power in the spoken message. In Genesis we are told that God spoke the world into creation. By the same token, there is a resident power in the life changing message of the cross. Romans 1:16 tell us;
For I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ, for it is the power of God to salvation to everyone who has faith.
The message that declares the atoning death, burial, and the resurrection of Jesus has a built-in power of its own that is able to blow apart man’s self-sufficiency, his false confidence, and even Satan’s deception. God’s word is effective when spoken. That is the meaning of Isiah 55:11:
So shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth, it shall not return to me empty, but shall accomplish that which I purpose, and prosper in the thing for which I sent it.
Many times we are dependent on the suaveness of speech or the cleverness of the presentation or the speaker, or where what scripture comes where and how effectively we present the close, but I would remind you that the result in evangelism has little to do wi the quality of presentation. Proof of this is that Paul preached very rationally and academically in Athens and the converts were few. On the other hand, he preached by the power of God at Corinth, and many responded. In reflecting on that later, Paul reminded the Corinthians:
When I came to you brethren, I did not come proclaiming to you the testimony of God in lofty words of wisdom. For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified. And I was with you in weakness and much fear and trembling, and my speech and my message were not in plausible words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and power, that your faith might not rest in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God (I Cor. 2:1-5)
Our western mind-set leaves little room for God to operate with His power in the task of evangelism. Our confidence too many times has been in the setting of what is presented the suaveness of the presenter, and the rational way in which it is presented. We conclude that an intelligent message, presented in an intelligent way, to an intelligent person, by an intelligent person, should bring an intelligent affirmative result. Of course, no one would even suggest we be in any way sloppy, or slip-shod in the way we share Christ. But in our own church, I have seen people without a great I.Q., whose memories were bad, “slaughter” the gospel presentation, yet at the close the people they shared with came to faith in Christ! So, it’s not only the power of God working in and on the situation, but the power of message which is shared.
PRINCIPLE NO. 9:
THE CHURCH IS CHARGED WITH THE RESPONSIBILITY OF EQUIPPING THE SAINTS IN EVANGELISM
We learned long ago that if the saints are going to do the work of evangelism, they must be trained in the work of evangelism. That is why it is absolutely essential that there be in every church, regardless of size, an on-going training program to equip saints who are willing in the work of evangelism. I learned this secret in 1974 when I went through the Lay Witness Training Program at Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church, Ft. Lauderadale, Florida. I came home, took two people, committed them to 18 weeks of discipling and training, took them out each Tuesday evening where they watched me present the very gospel outline they were learning. God honored that “pilot” project by having almost half of the people we called on during that period accept Christ right in front of the eyes of my two trainees! In this program, evangelism is more “caught” than “taught.” At the end of the training program, the three of us each took two more trainees and repeated the process. At the end of that term there were now nine of us each taking two more recruits and repeating the whole process. Before very many years, either as “trainees” or “trainers.” Today, we conduct three 11-week sessions per year including on the job training. Over 900 people have been trained and graduated from the training. Many of those are no longer in the on-going program, some have moved to other cities, and some have dropped out altogether. But the important thing is that we are seeking to be obedient to the scriptures:
And his gifts were that some should be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, some pastors and teachers, to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ (Eph. 4:11-12).
“. . . to equip the saints for the work of the ministry . . .”That’s the key. Every pastor’s task is one of equipping, training, coaching, leading. Many pastors have not yet learned that God has called them to equip God’s people God’s tasks. Theirs is no the job of DOING all the tasks, but equipping others to do them as they come alongside and do them with them.
I have found the continual use of the Lay Witness Training program, year in and year out, provided the means of fulfilling our equipping role. Here are some simple rules in using any kind of evangelism training:
1. The preacher must not only endorse, but be involved in the training himself. He can never ask his people to do what he himself won’t this is modeling that is inescapable to him.
2. Be selective. Recruit by name. Invite handpicked people to an explanation meeting where the whole training is explained, then have them sign up at the meeting, for the training will start in two to three weeks.
3. Make sure recruits know that training begins on this date and ends on that date. Be specific.
4. Have high expectations. Make sure recruits understand the demands and rigor of the training.
5. Inspect! During training for eleven weeks, there is a weekly exam before each class. We learned that you don’t get what you expect, but only what you inspect.
6. Establish authority in the training process. Trainees must know who is in charge. Except for unusually large churches, the preaching minister himself should be in charge.
7. Have a graduation time with diploma and ceremonies, and offer graduating trainees the opportunity to become a trainer, thus, fulfilling the II Tim. 2:1-2 principle.
8. Make sure all trainees get to see the gospel presented on a call at least 70% of the time.
9. Conduct a final written and oral exam as a condition for completion.
10. Make sure graduates are also acknowledged in the worship service.
Many people ask us many times if this is the only kind of evangelism that is valid in the local church. Of course there are other valid modes of evangelizing, including training in lifestyle evangelism, coffee cup evangelism, home cell group evangelism, and cold turkey door-to-door evangelism. I sincerely believe, however, that the Lay Witness Training form of evangelistic outreach is the most effective over the long haul; mainly because it raises up an army of trained witnesses who, in or out of a program, will have the tools to witness and train others to witness.
Every local church needs an objective, a goal, and a game plan of how to get there always before them in evangelism. It needs a statement that says, “WE PLAN TO TAKE OUR COUNTY FOR JESUS CHRIST BY____________. THIS IS HOW WE PLAN TO DO IT!” Then and only then will your church, and your community, really know you are serious about your existence as a church.
Thursday, July 19, 2018
MOVEMENT THINKING at DIVINITY SCHOOL _ part 1 VISION
THIS MATERIAL BELOW
is a borrowed material
for DISCUSSION PURPOSES at
HIS LIFE DIVINITY SCHOOL
3rd SEMESTER 2018
oct nov dec NIGHT EDITION
PART 1 of 10
borrowed from B.M.
------------
INTRODUCTION
With a proliferation of books and conferences on church growth, why another book?
While we who pastor churches are deeply indebted to those church growth scientists who have shown us how to measure growth, predict growth, plan for growth, and organize for growth, I think it needs to be remembered that church growth is a consequence, not a means to an end. It is the result of the church truly “being” the church, in worship, witness and word. The abundant growth reports in Acts are actually reports stating normal behavior of normal churches. If such reports occurred in our day, such as 3000 being saved in one day from one sermon in one church, you can bet that church would be written up in every religious journal, and dubbed as “abnormal”. We don’t have normal results today because in most cases we are not dealing with a normal church. I am convinced when the 20th century church resumes “normal” behavior, the kind we read about in Acts, we will see “normal” result again (which the watching community would surely call abnormal!)
In the following pages, you will read principles gleaned from experiences.
Experientialism that isn’t tied to scripture is little more than sugar-coated subjectivism.
These principles were “stumbled on to” by divine providence. Most of them I discovered over years of trial and error. I call them Biblical pragmatics. They work because they are biblically based, not because they are a new and unique technique.
Every church growth student must remember that it’s Jesus who builds His church. He said, in fact, “. . . I will build my church. “He is still in the building business where He finds people who are willing to work with and under Him, using all the wherewithal He’s provided. It’s then the church grows. It must grow, it can do nothing but grow.
In the words of a restaurant owner when asked why his business had doubled, tripled, and quadrupled; “It has to long as we stick to our original objective, feeding hungry people good food.”
This is the day of large audiences. It is a day of always equating crowds with success.
While no right thinking person is naïve enough to believe that is true, we need to be careful about running numbers down. I’ve discovered that in church circles, those that are running numbers down usually aren’t running any up! God is concerned with numbers, He even named a book in the Bible by that name. you can’t read the book of Acts without being convinced that God is interested in numbers. It speaks of the eleven, the 120, 3000 being saved, then 5000, then multitudes. It goes from people being “added” to the number of disciples, to being “multiplied.” With over 5 billion on planet earth, and only a third or less knowing Christ, we know numerically what we must do.
This book is also for those who have met discouragement in non-growing churches.
Hopefully, as ministers and leaders face the exaltation of tradition at the price of maintenance in the local church, these chapters will be an encouragement that you really can break through the wall of provincialism and stagnant faith. God created the church to grow, He planned it to grow, He designed it to grow, He empowered it with supernatural power so it would grow. So the only way it won’t grow is if we stop it from growing by failing to honor those inviolable principles God set in motion. Happy sailing through these pages. God has never destined every church to be a church of three, five, or ten thousand, but He has destined every church to grow. Good growth to you.
THE VISION FACTOR
I have a file folder in my left hand desk drawer labeled “Dreams and Visions”. Into that file I drop dreams and visions from time to time. About once a month I clean out the ones that were “imaginations of my own mind” and pitch them in the trash. The others stay, some become reality, others lie there until their time comes. Every true vision awaits its time.
Thousands of churches struggle from week to week with no vision and no dream for the future.
They plod along, RE-acting to what comes instead of ACTing so as to dictate what comes. Unfortunately, many churches of all sizes major in mediocrity and specialize in status-quo due to lack of vision. The bible says:
And in the last days it shall be, God declares, that I will pour out my spirit on all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams. . . (Joel 2:28)
Peter quoted this verse on the day of Pentecost when the very first church was born. It’s no wonder it was born in power and dynamism. Historically, God has consistently worked through a visionary people who crossed the Red Sea on dry ground, who marched around Jericho seven times, who went into promised land and conquered.
What exactly is a visionary church?
What are the marks of a visionary body of believers?
A VISIONARY CHURCH
IS A
POWER CONSCIOUS CHURCH
The church was born in power!
The sound of a mighty rushing wind set the stage .it’s not just coincidental that the full pouring out of the Holy Spirit and the birth of the church went hand in hand. It was designed that way. Not only born in power, it grew in power. It conquered in power. It met opposition in power. It was evident that the church of the first century maneuvered its way across Asia with a supernatural force that made Rome sit up and take notice. Without the benefit of a computer, a copy machine, a telephone, a video recorder or a word processor, the church grew because of her reliance on God’s power, poured out through the Holy Spirit. Phrases like this occur all through the book of Acts:
And with great power the apostles gave their testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and great grace was upon them all (Acts 4:33).
Their power penetrated paganism, healed the sick, raised the dead, drove out demons, and shook whole cities for the gospel.
The 20th century church needs desperately a recovery of power. God never intended the church to rub by sharp, Madison avenue techniques with slick brochures and suave lines, but by the power of God! A man on death row was walking toward the electric chair for his execution. All appeals had failed, this was the final walk. He walked past other prisoners whom he knew, and each of them had a farewell word for him. One said “ Goodbye Joe.” Another said, “Keep your chin up.” Still another said, “Take it on the chin, Joe.” But one said , “MORE POWER TO YOU, JOE.” Obviously this wasn’t the most appropriate thing to say to someone headed for 300 volts of electricity, but it is appropriate for God to say to His church….MORE POWER TO YOU!
A VISIONARY CHURCH
IS A
WITNESSING CHURCH
Acts 1:8 says, “Yous shall be my witnesses.” It didn’t say, “Will you be my witnesses?”
Witnessing was not an option in the early church. ”…..now those who were scattered went everywhere preaching the word” (Acts 8:4). O, for a rediscovery of witnessing for the church today. Most churches have a bad case of “inwarditis.” Some call it “spiritual navel-gazing.” It is the inward look syndrome, where outreach is not in vogue anymore. If you examine the activity calendar of most local churches today, you’ll discover that very little activity is given over to witnessing, sharing Christ with the unregenerate world. Our presentation perspective is at a very low ebb. Yet churches today that are thriving, growing and expanding rapidly are churches that have caught the vision of outreach. There is entirely too much too much self-satisfaction with the status-quo in many churches. God has called us to witness!! The church exists to witness, it’s the way God planned for the church to grow and expand!
A VISIONARY CHURCH
IS A
GIVING CHURCH
To give or not to give….that was never the question in the early church. There was a spontaneity in giving that caused the church to never lack funds to do God’s work. If you want to know what the tone was in this area, listen:
….and no one said that any of the things which he possessed was his own, but they had everything in common (Acts 4:32)
Also:
….there was not a needy person among them, for as many as were possessors of lands or houses, sold them and brought the proceeds of what was sold and laid it at the apostle’s feet (Acts 4:34:35).
Though a later chapter will deal more in detail about this, suffice it to say here that today, where churches are growing rapidly and doing great things for God, if you look behind the scenes, you will see sacrificial giving on a great scale.
A VISIONARY CHURCH WILL
BE A
GROWING CHURCH
I think it is a point of interest that the very first church God brought into existence was a large church. It had 3000 baptized in one day! That’s growth! Later, they simply counted them by referring to them as “multitudes”. Let me ask you a pointed question. How big do you visualize your church becoming? 400? 800? 1000? 3000? 8000? 10,000? Are you believing God for a large church? In some quarters, “large church” is a naughty word. Some feel if it is a large church, it must be doctrinally impure or extremely worldly. Neither is necessarily true. It may be that it’s large because a little band of believers had a vision for largeness and great numbers. I don’t think God is concerned with the SIZE of any church as long as it’s a growing church. A large church that isn’t growing is just as much an abomination to the Lord as a small church that isn’t growing. God intended the church to grow. He created it to grow, designed it to grow, equipped it to grow, empowered it to grow, SO IT OUGHT TO GROW…unless we stop it. Yet isn’t it strange , when a church does grow consistently and rapidly, we stand in awe! When I came to Overlake, it was a brand new church with only about 85 people. In 18 years it has grown to a membership of over 5,000. Some people stand back and say, “That’s just incredible!” in reality, it’s really sub normal! It should have grown to be a church of nearly 20,000 or 40,000. The church of Jesus Christ has been sub-normal for so long, let it approximate normality and everyone thinks it’s abnormal! Look at the growth progress reports in Acts. They are to say the least , quite impressive.
So those who received His word were baptized, and there were added that day about three thousand souls. And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers and fear came upon every soul; and many wonders and signs were done through the apostles (Acts 2:41-43).
And they arrested them and put them in custody until the morrow, for it was already evening. But many of those who heard the word believed and the number of men came to about five thousand (Acts 4:3-4).
And the word of God increased; and the number of the disciples multiplied greatly in Jerusalem and a great many of the priests were obedient to the faith (Acts 6:7).
And the multitudes with one accord gave heed to what was said to Philip, when they heard him and saw the signs which he did. For unclean spirits came out of many who were possessed, crying with a loud voice; and many who were paralyzed or lame were healed (Acts 8:6-7)
So the church throughout all Judea and Galilee and Samaria had peace and was built up; and walking in the fear of the Lord and in the comfort of the Holy Spirit it was multiplied (Acts 9:31)
And all the residents of Lydda and Sharon saw him and they turned to the Lord (Acts 9:35).
And it became known throughout all Joppa and many believed in the Lord (Acts 9:42).
And the hand of the Lord was with them, and a great number that believed turned to the Lord (Acts 11:21).
But the word of God grew and multiplied (Acts 12:24).
Then the proconsul believed, when he saw what had occurred, for he was astonished at the teaching of the Lord (Acts 13:12)
And they said, “Believed in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved. You and your household.” And they spoke the word of the Lord to him and to all that were in his house. And he took them the same hour of the night and washed their wounds and he was baptized at once with all his family. Then he brought them up at once into his house and set food before them; and he rejoiced with all his household that he had believed in God (Acts 16:31-34).
So the word of the Lord grew and prevailed mightily (Acts 19:20)
In your vision of a great church, make sure you visualize a potentially large church. believe God for something BIG! But … some would object, “you’re just in the numbers game.” God certainly isn’t ashamed of numbers, is He? You read, as above, about numbers in Acts, first 11, then 120, then 3000, then 5000, then multitudes. While the work of church growth is with God, I believe God wants us to have a vision for a mighty church.
How do you translate all this into practical, workable strategy? We learned in the early years of our church’s existence that we had to be headed someplace, there had to be objective, goals, targets. Our commission is to disciple the world! Then, what is our world strategy? What is our national strategy? What is our regional strategy? Our state strategy? Our local area strategy? So we went to work. At this writing, a half million dollars is being given for world missions every year. We are on track to plant a new congregation every other year, not just in the local area, but in the national area where population shifts are going. We project that in three more years, we’ll be giving over $1 million to missions alone! We keep a 10-year updated plan at all times that projects budgets, attendance, conversions, new churches, staff, facilities, ministries, etc.
I have insisted that every pastoral/staff person take one day a month for prayer, fasting, envisioning and meditation. I’ve asked them to dreams and seek God’s face for the future to their ministry in this body. The results have been phenomenal! not all dreams fly, nor are all visions from God, but some are. We don’t even know sometimes which are and which aren’t until we have tried to implement them. Their confirmation often comes at that time when they make it or don’t.
We hold at least two staff/ elder retreats per year just for the purpose of further dreaming and planning. No dream is a bad dream in the initial sharing of ideas, visions, and plans. These sessions have been extremely fruitful and up building. It’s here that web discover what the spirit wants for this body. It doesn’t come quickly, but slowly as we wait upon the Lord.
If the leadership has no vision for the future, the local church will have no future! That will be discussed more in a later chapter. Now, a word of warning to the wise! Ever-present in every church are vision-dampers. They come in the form of people, statements, inuedos, attitudes, and traditions. Here are a few “vision-dampers” you’ll need to watch for.
“The future is God’s business, not ours”.
That sounds very spiritual, and proponents of that often quote Jesus’ sermon on the mount that says, “Let the day’s own trouble be sufficient for the day” (Matt. 6:34). These people would have you believe that it’s not very spiritual to dream, plan, or be visionary about the future. And, they are right if WE are the ones alone who put together the future and then try to drum up support from God and Man for OUR plans! But being visionary is really an effort on our part to find out what God has in mind for the future, and then get in on it. Jesus also told a very pointed parable about a man who started to build, and didn’t first sit down and count the cost. The meaning of that is that we must plan. If we fail to plan, we plan to fail.
“What’s going to cost”
Somebody will always ask that question when visionaries meet and make bold plans for the future. It’s almost like the cost factor is the key determining factor. We are learning not to ask,
“What’s going to cost” but rather, “Is it a great thing for God?” If it’s a great thing for God, Whatever it will cost is not too much. If it’s not a great thing for God, and was free, it costs too much! For some reason, there will always be someone who constantly says, “Can we afford it?” In 1974 we needed busses to pick up scores of kids in our drawing area whose parents attended church nowhere. The need could not have come at a worse time financially. We were strapped, and every dime was designated. But in a move of faith, one of our men said, “Let’s forget what it will cost and concentrate on God’s ability to provide and I move we buy two second-hand busses to begin with!” It passed, we did it, and a donor paid for the first bus completely! For a few years four busses transported some two hundred children in to Sunday school, some of whom are grown, married, and holding positions of service in the church today! Remember, if it’s a great thing for God and helping to fulfill the great commission, the cost is in occidental!
“We never did it that way before!”
These have been called the 7 last words of church. And well they may be! This is one of the most subtle of all vision-damper. When I think of this statement, I will always think of God’s word to Israel, “Behold, I am doing a new thing, now it springs forth, do you not perceive it” (Isa.43:19)? God will only do new things where new things are welcome. God’s message is unchangeable, but ways to present it are changed everyday. A church whose leadership has taught the people to expect new and vital workings of God are growing today.
I have made a habit of asking preachers and people when I visit a church, “What are your future plans for taking your country for Christ?” Some of the looks I get would bring an instant freeze! By far, most pastors, church leaders and others have made no plans for tomorrow. They’ve entertained no vision, dreamed no dreams and few if any plans for the future.
Someone once said that we’ve been subnormal for so long, if a church became normal, most people would think it abnormal! Assuming that the “normal” church we read about in the Bible was a visionary church, we desperately need to seek to be a “normal” church.
Put the following monologue in your think tank and let it germinate.
Have you ever noticed the difference between subnormal churches are frozen together; normal churches move by the Spirit, subnormal churches creep by committees; normal churches do it now, subnormal churches just table the motion; normal churches preach convulsively, subnormal churches lecture calmly; normal churches double their budgets, subnormal churches double their meetings; normal churches evangelize subnormal churches fossilize; normal churches bulges! Normal churches hemorrhage subnormal churches only bleed; normal churches cross Red Seas on dry ground, subnormal churches jump mud puddles and get wet; normal churches are fishers of men, subnormal churches keep aquariums; normal churches multiply, subnormal churches only divide; normal churches are run by God’s power, subnormal churches manufacture their own; normal churches stay in orbit, subnormal churches stay on the launching pad; normal churches make much dust, subnormal churches sweep it under the rug; normal churches reach for the moon, subnormal churches try for the street lights; normal churches attempt the impossible, subnormal churches debate over the impossible!
Normal churches will be raptured by Christ!
Subnormal churches will be ruptured by rot!
END of PART 1
VISION
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