Why Churches don’t fulfill The Great Commission (part 1)

We all know the Great Commission,

“Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in[a] the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.”

 

Jesus said this to his disciples just before he left as he was preparing them to become the future leaders of the Church. This is still the basic instruction for the Church today. There seems to be a pretty easy distinction between churches that are doing it and churches that aren’t. From a distance, we can look and identify churches that are fulfilling the instruction that God has given us, but it’s probably not some of the barometers that we normally use.

These things don’t neccesarily mean that we are fullfilling the great commission:

- Large Sunday attendance

- Large impressive faclilities

- Large successful Staffs

- Notoriety from other ministers and speakers

 

For the next few days I want to take a look at The Great Commision and ask ourselves if we are fullfilling what God has called us to do.

Going

“Therefore GO and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them”

God instructs us to go. How often do we encourage our people to go? There seems to be a lot of encouragement for our people to STAY. In generations past the barometer for how spiritual someone was had to do with how long they served in a church position for example, teaching a class for twenty-five years or singing in the choir for thirty years. Is it possible that we have had people who have spent their whole lives serving a church and have never led a person to Jesus? Is our church model set up to attract people and give them a job to keep them there?

“Do the people in our church know that we want them to go? Do we want them to go?”

 

What do I mean by GO ? I don’t mean that we want people to leave our churches to go to other churches. I mean that to attend and serve a church is not the end result that God had in mind for his people. If our people do not understand that it’s more important to do something “out there” than it is to “be here” then we are not fulfilling The Great Commission.

I believe pastor’s insecurities  want their people to be developed, but not for their people to be developed enough that they are able survive without the pastor or the church.

At our service yesterday we told our people that on the upcoming weekends where we are going out to serve our community, “we would rather have them on Saturdays to give than on Sundays to attend. If you’re not going to give up two days a weekend, and you’re only going to come one day…MISS SUNDAY!” We want our people to know that GOING is more important than coming!

Do you spend as much time trying to send people, as you do trying to attract them?

 

6 Comments

Don Warrington  on September 1st, 2008

Leonard Sweet made the same contrast of an attractional vs. a sending model of church. His idea that we spend too much time with the former when the Scriptures command the latter.

We (Lay Ministries) finally have the CD of both of his talks here:

https://lifebuilders.to/store/product_info.php?cPath=26&products_id=668

Jason Isaacs  on September 2nd, 2008

Don,
I think it’s natural for pastor’s to have an attraction model vs. a sending model. Andy Stanley says the people define what’s important to us based on the questions we ask them.

In our system the question the we get asked is…”How is your church doing?” and what they mean by that is how is your numbers and money, so we value the things that people are always asking about.

I can’t remember the last time someone asked me how my community outreach is going.

billisaacs  on September 2nd, 2008

The challenge for us is to change the mindset and redirect the inquiry. Let me explain…

While our usual track is to inquire and value a church by the numbers, each time we redirect the inquiry, we give pause to the other person to consider another way. Jesus warned his disciples that the ways of the world and religious world would not fit the pattern for the kind of church He was building. In fact, much of His teaching on the kingdom was about contrasting the “usual” way of looking at things and the “new” way of looking at things.

As leaders, we are responsible. This is our issue and we must lead with a new model helping each other to think differently. Believe me when I say to you that many want to think/respond differently but have no models to follow. Each of us can be a model to shape a new direction in leadership which values the things Christ values and de-emphasizing the things which are not true indicators of spiritual health in the local church.

Mike Burgner  on September 3rd, 2008

We, the modern church, have replaced the word “go” in the Great Commission with the word “come”. We expect the unchurched to “come” to our services so we don’t have to “go” outside of our Christian bubble and engage them.

The Chief Shepherd : Members going - or staying?  on September 4th, 2008

[...] Link to Forward Leadership Blog [...]

Rodney Mullins  on September 5th, 2008

Jason,

well said.

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