18
Jan

Reach Out

   Posted by: Sonny   in Application, Body of Christ, Discipleship, Fellowship

bodypaint2People come to church primarily for two reasons; for some kind of fellowship with people, or some kind of fellowship with God.  If they are coming seeking God, that is great, but it will not sustain them or keep them in “our” church because, whether they know it or not, they need people.  We all need fellowship.  And without it we ultimately move on.  A lot of people change churches for this very reason and may not even realize it.

If they are coming seeking to make relationships with people, that is actually better in a way.  If we reach out to them and include them then we can probably keep them coming for a while.  There are also potentially two problems with this also.  First, we never introduce them to Jesus, teach them about God, or feed the spiritual hunger in them and they, again, move on.  We can expect this because ultimately someone, maybe even me, will make them mad or hurt their feelings.  Second, we never introduce them to Jesus, teach them about God, or feed the spiritual hunger in them and they do stay, but never mature as Christ followers and may even be in danger of an eternal destination that does not include Him.  Neither of these situations help us grow a healthy church or bring people into the Kingdom.  The first won’t keep them and the second won’t save them.

What is our mission as a church?  It is simple.  It is to make disciples.  But what, exactly is a disciple?

A disciple is one who loves God, loves people, and serves them both.  It is that simple, but yet all too often we mess it all up.  So where are we messing up?  I believe we are dropping the ball right at the start.  We are not properly introducing our Father to them.  Sure, we have preaching, we have worship, we have programs, and we have fellowship; but are we teaching them about a Father in heaven that loved us so much that “He gave His only begotten son, that whoever believe in Him should not perish but have eternal life…” ( John 3:16)  When we speak out to others about our Father and all his love for us, we can help start them down a path of redemption that keeps going and growing.

But we must reach out to them first.  The same people who ask, “Why aren’t we keeping visitors,” are the very ones at fault all too often.  They either see the visitors and don’t care enough, or are too busy, to reach out to them.  We must not wait for the other person to go talk to that visitor.  If we don’t care enough, then we better get to work on our own spiritual health and if we are too busy, we better slow down.

Jesus told us that all we need to do is love God and love people.  The rest of the New Testament writers told us how to serve both.  The whole bible has this simple message at its core.  Yet we have made this whole business of church exactly that, a business.  One church growth program after another is put forward by some great church leader.  There are a wide variety of church marketing strategies that are pushed at any given time.  And they seem to be ever changing, just trying to keep up with perceived changes in seekers needs.  But seekers need only one thing; they need Jesus.  And we introduce them to Him by simply reaching out to them.

Have you welcomed and talked to that couple that has visited for the last month?

Did you truly rejoice and praise God for another brother added to the family when that guy got saved in church last week, or did you just praise God when the pastor quit talking about it so you could get out and miss the lines at a local restaurant?

Are you so busy that you do not even know about either the new couple or that guy getting saved?

All too often we are either too self centered or we have a wrong view of ministry, and we miss the simple fact that we are to reach out and embrace the other.  God created man for a relationship with us.  He sent His Son to show us the way back into that relationship after we abandoned Him.  And He lovingly showed us that we need each other, or we won’t make it.  We must realize that if we want to increase our church membership then we must reach out to people in love and stop trying to determine the best program or the newest strategy.  If we reach out in love, we not only may keep them in our church, we may bring them into the Kingdom and the family of God.

If we do not reach out, we won’t keep them in “our” church and worse, they may not ever be shown that God loves them and simply wants to start the adoption process.

Love you all

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This entry was posted on Sunday, January 18th, 2009 at 12:02 pm and is filed under Application, Body of Christ, Discipleship, Fellowship. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

8 comments so far

 1 

Well written…well said. Thanks for writing about the ultimate “marketing strategy”…and that is to love and serve.

January 18th, 2009 at 4:25 pm
 2 

Thanks for your comment and visit.

January 18th, 2009 at 5:18 pm
Connie
 3 

Amen Sonny. That is exactally what attracted Wayne and I to ACOG and the reason why we stayed. The people reached out to us in a special way. We were INCLUDED immediately. They taught us how to be Christians; because we had no experience of our own. We were hungry and they fed us. Hopefully we (or I) can get back to that.

Love to you all.

January 18th, 2009 at 8:13 pm
TILLER
 4 

I want to use this to spur the group that attend the same meeitng I did today. I think this should challenge anyone with the heart to grow the kingdom of our Heavenly Father.

Thanks

January 19th, 2009 at 12:09 am
 5 

Please do.

Love you

January 19th, 2009 at 7:56 am
Tammy
 6 

Maybe one strategy would be to make the effort to get to the visitor first, then do what we are all guilty of doing…
Rushing past everyone to get home or standing around with the usual crowd discussing where we are going to lunch today. By the time we talk to all the regulars, the visitors have slipped out the door.

I am guilty of this as well. I know there have been several people who have come to our church for weeks before I had the chance to have a conversation with them. Maybe they are rushing to avoid the crowd or slipping out quietly. Often times I get out of the sanctuary, they are gone.

I have been on my way home many times, and realize that I missed speaking to someone. I never want to be so busy or focused on something that I miss an opportunity to make someone feel welcome.

This week in my Sunday School class we discussed how we are drawn to people who lift us up, who compliment us and make us feel good, wanted or welcome, yet we may avoid those who cause negative feelings or bring us down. They determined that we want to feel special. If that is the case, should we not practice loving our neighbor as ourself?

Isn’t that what we all crave? To feel special? To be included? To belong?
We have to be God’s tool in the church to show them what God wants to be for them.

January 19th, 2009 at 10:12 am
John
 7 

sounds like a great lesson Tammy the kids are lucky to have you working with them.

January 19th, 2009 at 12:04 pm
 8 

To love your brother is the command of God. Why is it that we forget this number one way to evangelize?

June 2nd, 2010 at 11:00 pm

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