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Jesus Loves “Mediocre” Churches (and So Do I)

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I recently read an article that, for lack of a better phrase, really cheesed me off (I think that’s what the kids are saying these days).

Titled “7 Signs Your Church Is Honestly Mediocre,” it highlighted the following seven things that characterize “mediocre” (in the author’s opinion) churches:

  • Non-singers and players on the worship team
  • Bad production (sound, lighting, etc.)
  • Poor quality live streams
  • A lame website
  • Out of date information (church sign, uploaded sermons, etc.)
  • A resignation to mediocrity
  • Fear of change

The heart of the article can be summarized in this quote:

When your church is mediocre, it should be no surprise unchurched people aren’t lining up to join you and that you’re not attracting and keeping the amazing leaders who might attend your church but don’t want to get involved because things are so sub-par.

Two things in particular really bothered me about this article.

The Early Church Was Seriously Mediocre

First, none of the marks of mediocrity have anything to do with the things that matter most. When I look at scripture and at what caused the early church to thrive, it wasn’t the quality of the “service” (not that they would have ever called it that).

They met in homes and in the temple. There was nothing flashy about the gatherings, no pageantry or glitz or hoopla (a word that needs to be used more often).

Rather, the meat and bones of the early church were preaching, prayer and biblical fellowship, all fueled by the power of the Holy Spirit.

The church exploded because they preached the revolutionary message of a crucified and risen savior. They resolved to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him crucified. Contrast this with the “Super Apostles” in 2 Corinthians who relied heavily on their oratory skills, credentials and overall flashiness. Paul flat-out condemned their approach to ministry.

The church was sustained and even grew in the midst of persecution because they were dedicated to prayer. They knew that they couldn’t survive apart from the supernatural power of God, and so they pleaded with him for intervention.

E.M. Bounds puts it this way:

What the Church needs today is not more machinery or better, not new organizations or more and novel methods, but men whom the Holy Ghost can use—men of prayer, men mighty in prayer. The Holy Ghost does not flow through methods, but through men. He does not come on machinery, but on men. He does not anoint plans, but men—men of prayer.