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Posted: 03/27/2008
The Overweight Church
Ray Baumann
There is a growing epidemic of overweight churches in America. Week after week churchgoers attend services in giant buildings that attract and entertain people from all walks of life, but the church has not given any consideration as to the real reason people are showing up. Many people see a problem but are afraid to address the issue. What really needs to be addressed is dealing with what caused it to become this way in the first place. Which requires a shift in our focus from church growth to church health.
When churches continue to evolve into entertainment venues preaching a self-centered gospel they become lazy and overweight. They sit in the recliner of contentment and continue to stuff their faces with man-centered theology. They grow bigger and bigger and become ineffective in what they are called to do. Being overweight is not healthy, yet it’s really easy to get there. These churches are not spiritually active and they overindulge in whatever your taste buds desire, with no regard for nutritional (spiritual) value. This is very easy and it is the reason why the majority of American churches have a serious weight problem - it takes no effort or discipline to get there.
I have never heard a pastor say, “Our church went from 1200 to 900 in six months, praise the Lord! We plan to keep off the weight.” Testimonies of how preaching the gospel diminished a congregation but resulted in a happier and healthier church are hard to find. Most churches don’t see any problem with the weight: churches are ignorant to the fact that including unbelievers into the fellowship causes serious health problems for the body.
No one has ever come up with a weight loss plan for our grossly out of shape churches. Our problem has always been that we have glorified size over health, but we have never questioned the health of these oversized churches. We assume that being big is the same as being healthy. Here are a few tips for slimming down the church to the true body of Christ. I will outline a spiritual fitness program that will shed all of the dead weight in less than six months. However, as with any training and fitness program always remember, “no pain, no gain.”
Let’s start with nutrition. A pastor has a vital role in feeding the flock with the Word of God and the best way to do that is by preaching expository sermons – a verse by verse study of the Word. There is power in the Word of God, not our self-help sermons on money, relationships and success - these need to be cut from your diet. In Titus 2:1, Paul instructs Titus to, “teach what is in accord with sound doctrine.” In this strict diet regimen the junk food should be eliminated. Secondly, end every service with a great proclamation for the need for repentance and stress the wrath that is to come for those who choose not to believe as if Christ should return this very week.
Once you’re eating right it’s time to shed the entertainment weight by first pulling the plug on your worship service. No, really, go unplugged without lights and sound and see who sticks around when your worship time has no worldly or emotional appeal, without giving American Idol wannabes the opportunity to show off. There is a lot of weight hanging around that is there to be entertained and to entertain. Next, cut out the giant productions so that those who are just connected because of performances will fizzle out. This will expose the people who attend for the wrong reason.
Now that the focus is on the Word of God and the entertainment lights have been dimmed, for those who are left it is now time to equip and train them. I know this is not a new idea but for getting a church in shape it has guaranteed biblical results. Start holding people accountable for how they conduct business, their relationships, and their families. Let the Elders lead and follow Matthew 18 to the last letter.
Your building may not fit the same as before and these first steps will shed some of that make believer weight. But be warned. With any new diet or exercise plan it takes discipline and there will be many temptations to back away from the plan; it definitely has a cost.
Now that the weight has been removed it is time to rejoice and focus on toning up this body and start running this race. Start with focusing on discipleship as your main objective. If you want to lose the weight and keep it off you must focus on our main biblical objective as a church, which is to train believers.
Continue to guide your church body in their calling to go into the world and preach the gospel. Being active is a key part to a believer’s life. That idea of just bringing people to church and calling that evangelism is no longer an option. Highlight the times for corporate prayer more than the next potluck. As the church takes a new biblical shape you will soon realize the great advantage of being healthy.
This is by no means an exhaustive list; rather, it tackles the main issues confronting the church’s overweight condition, which has been entertaining false converts. Most pastors don’t have what it takes to slim down an overweight church. It is pure resistance training.
Distributed by www.ChristianWorldviewNetwork.com
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Compassion anyone?
| Posted On: 04/04/08 04:01:00 AM |
Age 31, AUSTRALIA |
I understand some of what you're getting at here, and agree that pastors need to be preaching a Christ-centered message, but what I find shocking is your comment "churches are ignorant to the fact that including unbelievers into the fellowship causes serious health problems for the body."
If we aren't welcoming in unbelievers, the lost, and introducing them to Jesus Christ, our God and Saviour, then we have no purpose in being here. We might as well translate straight to Heaven right now. Unbelievers are not fat, they are not bacteria, they are the lost sheep that Christ gave His life for. Without love for the lost we're just another religious institution and become part of the problem, rather than the solution
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Consult your physician
| Posted On: 04/02/08 07:58:15 PM |
Age 49, MN |
"as with any training and fitness program always remember, 'no pain, no gain'". While true, it might be better to first consult your Physician!
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The Church in the Wilderness
| Posted On: 03/29/08 06:54:23 PM |
Age 58, NC |
My new book, The church in the Wilderness, addresses God's message to today's church. It should be in Christian bookstores in another month or so. This issue and many more are addressed in this call to the church to come out of the wilderness and be the body Jesus established us to be. "Arise, shine for the light has come..."
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Trimming the excess also tests your Pastor's motives
| Posted On: 03/29/08 03:10:08 PM |
Age 45, GA |
Great article! Did you ever think about the dualism that is created when a church grows in numbers and not souls? When you need more money for your building expansion plans to house the excess programs that creates pressure to bring more people through the doors. If your church becomes slaves to the lender, weeding out members of the body from the chaff will be very difficult to do. Here's some out of the box ideas that I've seen done: I know of two churches that share a building. While one congregation goes to Sunday school the other worships, and the next hour they switch. Maybe some of these mega churches should start sharing their building. Most definitely two mid-size churches or smaller could do this.Let's get creative. Isn't the Household of Faith church the one that doesn't believe in investing in a building, but rents an empty store front that helps to clean up an eyesore in the community. When they get too large for that space some of the membership that comes from outside the community voluntarily starts looking for a space nearer their homes and plants a church in an abandoned store front. The various men who preach at the locations gather weekly to create the sermon for the week that will be scripturally accurate and consistently presented to all the body. WOW! Just think of the leftover tithe that can be used for real service. Until you can set churches free from the money lenders it will be tough for a pastor or the elders to look at any reduction in numbers as a desired thing.
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Yes but...not quite
| Posted On: 03/29/08 08:46:30 AM |
Age 47, MO |
Ray: Great post timely, needed,, and informative. HOWEVER, I wish to jar your focus a wee bit. You wrote: "Now that the focus is on the Word of God and the entertainment lights have been dimmed, for those who are left it is now time to equip and train them...and focus on our main biblical objective as a church, which is to train believers." Not to take away from what you wrote but I think our MAIN focus as a church is to walk in Spirit and Truth. We have to focus on the completely internal relationship with Christ in Truth to hear and obey the Spirit before we can do the externals. We tend to spend to much time cleaning up our lives, doing good deeds, and ministry, that we forget the real need to hear God and follow HIS way, truth and life. Thus we have Christians that don't really know God but our only able to function in the support group and following others. John
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- I agree
| Posted On: 03/29/08 03:09:35 PM | | Age 35, IL | I assume believers are walking in spirit and truth already. I don't think believers can get any more intimate with God then studying his Word and praying. If your not walking in spirit and truth I wouldn't say you were a believer. I think we are on the same page here. Click here to reply to this post
Right on!
| Posted On: 03/28/08 01:50:54 PM |
Age 41, WI |
Good piece and excellent point. While the actual physical obesity of Christians should be of concern, the spiritual state of torpor and fatness is of greater concern. We really are the Laodicean church in so many ways. Thanks for speaking out.
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Wow, I thought this was about overweight church members.
| Posted On: 03/28/08 12:04:59 PM |
Age 24, NJ |
I seriously thought this was going to be about people who are obese, gluttonous etc. But I suppose that Hebrews 12:1 might apply to this. Very interesting. There was once a house church in Russia that was meeting. Suddenly two Russian guards busted in and said If you're not ready to die for your faith, get out of here. After the tares left, the Russian guards set down their guns, and took out their bibles. They said We're believers, but we wanted to make sure we were worshipping with other true believers. They wanted to separate the wolves from the sheep, the sheep from the goats, the true believers from the false converts and hypocrites.
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Not overweight..big and healthy
| Posted On: 03/28/08 11:25:14 AM |
Age 50, WI |
I absolutly agree that churchs not serving good spiritual food is a tremendous problem. What I disagree with is that a large growing church that has contemporary music is automatically not spiritual. Individuals coming to my church may very well be drawn there initially by the great music or large modern facilities. But when they come in the door, the are greeted by a group of people who are truly mission minded and whose goal is to change their lives with the SAVING news of the cross of Christ. They hear preaching that is sound in doctrine...not what "itchy ears" want to hear. They see a congregation dedicated to being fishers of men, not aquarium keepers...who are sending missionaries oversees from our own congregation, including our youth 5 or 6 times a year. Who are supporting inner-city ministries AND starting our own this spring. We are a congregation of sinners...who know that's what we are...who know only God and save us and who respond to our community out of gratitude for what God has done for us. So please...stop judging us based on our music or the fact that we are growing...you can grow by preaching Christ crucified...The EARLY church certainly did, praise God...or we all wouldn't be here.
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- about the music
| Posted On: 03/29/08 12:53:07 AM | | Age 19, LA | I don't think that he means that the lights and music are unspiritual, but, rather, if you take those away for a bit, then those who are in it for the entertainment will likely leave. Those who are following their leader as he follows Christ and does what God says, and not what they feel "led" to do by their fellings, will likely stay and not mind praising w/ a loud voice. I think that the author intends it to be more of a tester or weeder-outer, so to speak. Doing things like that is often an effective way of seeing what's in a disciple's heart. correct me if i'm wrong.
Michael Click here to reply to this post
- HMMMM
| Posted On: 03/28/08 02:55:19 PM | | Age 35, IL | Nobody said that a church with a good worship team is bad....It is the issue of people coming to church never being convicted to repent for their sin. They are being attracted by programs and kept by a luke warm gospel. Church has become the rich mans form of evangelism. Just bring them to church and pay someone else to do our job. Click here to reply to this post
Clear as a church bell
| Posted On: 03/28/08 11:23:10 AM |
Age 51, IA |
WOW! That is the clearest description of the American church as I have heard in some time, and, a powerful word picture of spiritual discipline. Like the title says, "clear as a church bell." I wonder how many American church-goers even know what a church bell sounds like. This one in is a definite "forward" to friends and family.
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Excess weight that damages the body
| Posted On: 03/28/08 10:25:03 AM |
Age 55, TN |
We did this in our church, which was not even a big church. We started a hour prayer time on Thursday evenings, a verse-by-verse Bible study on Tuesday evenings, a teen group that focused mainly on the Sunday School and worship services. The teens and children attended prayer groups with the adults.
"Outings" for the youth were for the young people that were attending the church services. We included the children and teens praying with the adults, girls with ladies and boys with the men. Our church went down in size for a while, but the growth we began to see was in spiritual growth among the body and healthy family relationships within the body. This included the children and teens becoming a vital part of the "adult church" when they realized that the adults loved them and were praying for their needs. Our church did begin to grown numerically, but the majority of the people who attended were truly interested in learning God's Word, and became truly interested in the teens and children of the church.
Our private motto became "better ten that want to study God's Word and grow and reach the world than fifty that want to play and be entertained." One of the most exciting things that happened was seeing children and teens learning to pray with the adults, giving prayer requests and learning that God does answer prayer.
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