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Growing Churches Face Tension: 7 Key Challenges

3. Systems vs. Relationships

At the core … church is family. It’s a network of brothers and sisters that have been impacted by Jesus. However, we’re also called to be making a difference in the world around us. Even in Acts 6 we see the ancient church dealing with the reality is that someone had to develop a system for serving people. We need to develop repeatable and trainable processes that move the church forward … common approaches that help us make an impact on the world around us. All living things are made up of systems … the human body is nothing more than a bunch of systems that work together. But if they are cold and lifeless systems that don’t reinforce relationship, the church is in danger of just becoming like any other business or organization in your community and not the Family of God!

4. Being vs. Doing

Who you are is more important than what you do. We’re called human beings … not human doings. Those sound great … right? They are true statements … as church leaders we are called to be impacted by the ministry we’re leading. We can’t take people to where we haven’t been before. The life-giving message of Jesus needs to penetrate every part of who we are. At the same time … as a leader, we are called to “do” even when we don’t feel like it. We need to move ourselves and our people to a place where we can be impacted by the message of Jesus. Sometimes this means stepping out of the boat before we’re feeling it … sometimes it means doing things that will lead to internal transformation in us that will allow us to lead others there. Sometimes we have to act before we become.

5. Staff vs. Volunteers

The modern church is made up of a core of paid and volunteer leadership. If we become too driven by the “professionals” amongst us, the church loses its touch in the world around us because the dialogue can become too insular and disconnected from the “real world.” At the same time … paid staff help the ministry move forward in a way that totally volunteer-driven organizations just can’t do. It’s not lost on me that a core part of the role of church leaders is encouraging people to “make a difference in the world” … when so much about leading in a church can force you into a cocoon where we don’t have any idea what life in that world really looks like.

6. Discipleship Process vs. Spiritual Formation

We need “three easily understood steps” for spiritual development … at the same the formation of our souls into the likeness of Jesus is a mystery that takes a lifetime to unravel. When we’re communicating “next steps” for people, it needs to simple and straight forward to communicate so people take action toward their spiritual development. At the same time … if we “dumb it down” too much, we risk our churches making the message of Jesus nothing more that a quick checklist to follow. On the opposite end of the spectrum … if our spiritual formation process seems more like “jedi training” only for the elites among us, we’ll lose the opportunity to impact this generation.

7. Contentment vs. Vision

What is happening in our church is pretty amazing … people are being impacted by the message of Jesus, relationships are getting restored, leaders are being released … the list goes on and on. At the same time, the vast majority of the surrounding community voted with their feet last weekend that what our church has to offer doesn’t matter to them. The life change that is happening in our church is a beautiful thing … but we need to worry about how we’re reaching the people who aren’t here yet. We need to be content on the inside with what we’ve done, while at the same time feel the pull to look beyond where we are today.

I’d love to hear about tensions that you’ve felt in leading in your church! Leave a comment … please? 🙂