I do not claim any originality in this sermon, it is based almost entirely on the sermons preached at Barnstaple Baptist Church, which can be found at http://healthy-church.blogspot.co.uk, and Robert Warren's 'Healthy Churches Handbook'.
Introduction
- Decision to try and improve my fitness & lose weight
- Trying to exercise more – running and cycling
- Trying to eat more healthily, cutting out sweets, eating
less & not eating after 7pm
If I was to see my doctor and have a health check, he’d tell
me the marks of a healthy lifestyle are
- Eat well – plenty of fruit & vegetables
- Exercise
- Drink plenty of water
- Don’t smoke or drink
- Get plenty of sleep
These are the marks of a healthy lifestyle. But what would the marks of a healthy church
be?
7 Marks of a Healthy Church
Today we’re starting a sermon series, looking at the marks
of a healthy church, based on research on churches that have experienced
growth, numerically and spiritually.
These are different churches from
across the spectrum, from rural to urban, from evangelical to catholic,
from small churches to large churches, but all exhibit the following
marks.
They are:
- Energized by faith
- Outward-looking
- Seek to find out what God wants
- Face the cost of change and growth
- Operate as a community
- Make room for all
- Does a few things and does them well
Energised by Faith
If you went into a gym and asked different people why they
were there, you’d probably get different answers.
- Lose weight
- Get fitter – to prolong life, reduce their cholesterol
- Be fit enough to chase after the children or grandchildren
- Drop a size or two in order to fit into an old dress
Even if their goals are the same, to improve their health,
what motivates them may be different.
A healthy church is one that is motivated or energised by
its faith.
This is illustrated in the book of Revelation. Jesus speaks to a congregation in the town of
Laodicea and what He says isn’t very complimentary:
“I know your deeds, that
you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So,
because you are lukewarm – neither hot nor cold – I am about to spit you out of
my mouth. You say, “I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.”
But you do not realise that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked.”
The faith of many of the Christians at Laodicea had gone off the boil: they had
become complacent, there was no real energy within the church for sharing the
good news about Jesus Christ and, as a result, the spiritual health of the
fellowship was suffering. Where enthusiasm for the gospel has dulled, and where
excitement for the Christian faith has waned, there will be little energy shown
within the fellowship and the health of the church will inevitably deteriorate.
That is as true today as it was when John first wrote the Book of Revelation.
Elsewhere in the New Testament, we find a church community that has lots of
energy, but its energy is misdirected. I’m talking of the church at Corinth to
which the Apostle Paul writes.
The church at Corinth was undoubtedly a lively fellowship, but the energy it
displayed seems to have emerged not from commitment to God and godly living,
but from an attitude of one-upmanship, and disputes over whether someone followed,
Paul, or Apollos, or Cephas.
Paul was at pains to impress upon them the fact that God
alone was the source of their faith and God alone was the one they must honour
– the energy that they were displaying originated from their own selfish
desires and, indeed, was misdirected towards satisfying those desires.
Even today, it’s easy to see how some churches’ energy can originate not from a
healthy source, but an unhelpful one, and be misdirected towards something
inappropriate. Robert Warren, in ‘The Healthy Churches Handbook’ writes:
‘energy may come from a
desire to keep a medieval building in good condition, from having the best set
of bell-ringers for miles, or from wanting to boast the finest choral tradition
in the town. Energy can also come from making sure ‘our group’ keeps control.
Equally, energy may come simply from a desire to keep things as they are, or
just keeping things going.’
It’s not a bad thing to keep a church building in good repair, or to be
resolved to keep things going – but these shouldn’t be the things that energise
the church.
What should energise the church is our faith in the God of
love. And that should be expressed in our
love for God and for one another. As
Jesus says in our Gospel reading “Love one another. As I have loved you,
so you must love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you
love one another.” (John 13:34-35)
It was this love for God that enabled the early church that
we read about in Acts, to grow at such an incredible rate. Here was a church that was energised by its
faith in God, and had a desire to glorify Him alone and because of this it grew
daily.
But, in reality, what do churches that are energised by
faith look like?
Well, first of all, it seems that churches that are energised by faith …
- enable
people to experience God’s love
When healthy churches gather for worship each Sunday, they do so because they
want to encounter the presence of God and, with that comes an air of expectancy
and excitement at the prospect of meeting with God.
In healthy churches, there will be as much emphasis on providing times of
silence as there is upon lively times of praise and worship, to enable people
to hear what God is saying to them. A
healthy church is one which will also allow people the space to share their
testimonies and tell their own stories, recognising that God guides and
encourages His church through what He’s doing in the lives of other believers.
In a healthy church there will be a sense of celebration,
where they can express joy at the goodness and greatness of God whilst also identifying
with the pain and brokenness of the world around them.
- demonstrates
a deep desire to serve God and one another
This is summed up in the great commandment to “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your
soul and all your mind” and “Love your neighbour as yourself.”
In a healthy church it’s not just a very small group of people which does all
the work – everyone is keen to contribute and participate, using the gifts that
God has given them.
This is a message that Paul was keen to convey in several of
his letters to churches: he told them that they were all part of one body; they
were all gifted by God for His service; and, although they were quite different
from one another, they needed one another and had one purpose … to glorify God.
Healthy churches seek to apply the Bible to contemporary life in ways which
people understand and find useful. Psalm 119 describes God’s word as “a lamp to my feet and a light
to my path” – and it still is! A healthy church seeks to show how God’s
word is relevant to people today, and how it affects our values, choices and
lifestyles.
A healthy churches seeks to help people to grow in, and share their faith. This is exactly what Jesus Himself did during
His earthly ministry: He called the twelve and He nurtured their faith and
taught them how to share that faith with other people. He explained the Scriptures
to them; taught them how to pray, and what it means to be a follower of Jesus.
Churches that are energised by faith do exactly what Jesus did, nurturing
disciples, teaching the Scriptures, teaching people how to pray, and what it means
to be a follower of Jesus.
St Martin’s – energised by faith?
The question is how do we at St Martin’s measure up to these marks of a healthy
church? Where are we succeeding, and
where could we do better? Are we a
church that is energised by its faith, or is our energy focused on keeping the
show on the road or maintaining the fabric?
What can we do to enable people to experience more of God’s love, to
serve God and one another better, to engage with scripture, and to nuture
faith?
You have been given a piece of paper, and on that I want you
to score how you would rate St Martin’s, with 1 being low, and 6 high. And I
want you to write one or two things that we could work on as a church.
- - - - - - - - - - - - -
Congregational Responses
These are the congregational responses which were received following the sermon:
How energised by faith is St Martin’s?
1 Weak and holding us back 0%
2 Only a few signs 0%
3 Some evidence of this 25%
4 Making progress 35%
5 Evidence of much of this 35%
6 This is a strength 5%
Energised by Faith: what needs working on….
·
Community engagement -
- More interaction with community
- More wider involvement with focus on youth – young families in local area
- Engaging more with locals who do not attend
church
- Awareness and respect for people of other
faiths living in our community
- Being energised to serve the community more,
to work for those outside the church as the hands of Jesus
- Are there enough people to go out into the
community – outreach groups?
·
Church engagement -
- Involve everyone
- Getting more younger people involved in doing
things in church
- Bringing younger people to faith in Christ by
being more attractive to young families
- Gently involving people who are shy to do
things they have not done before
- More people to volunteer to lead children’s
groups, also to consider joining the prayers for healing rota
- More faith to delegate
- Understand what it means to serve happily,
faithfully
- Less emphasis on money, more emphasis on
knowing people’s gifts and encouraging them to use them.
- Encouraging more people to play a part in the
church rather than using the same people over and over again
·
Services/Scripture -
- Need more time for quiet reflection/listening
to God
- More testimonies
- Showing the link between our actions and the
way we behave and God being the strength and motivation behind them
- Concreate on God and worship rather chairs
and furniture placing
- All the different things the church does need
to be brought together into one church family.
E.g. The lesson in Sunday school should match the main congregation’s,
which can spark conversation in peoples homes. Links between church groups and
the family i.e. regular feedback and prayer as part of the service on Sunday
- Quiet reflection time structured into church
services
- Systematic engagement with scripture – use of
readings in service, theme and sermon
- Encourage more Bible study to help all and
help us to be able to talk to others of our faith
- Faith/prayer groups – supporting specific
mission points of the church
- Feedback/reflection in services on the work
and impact for social justice/mission work, e.g. homeless/street pastors
- Services to be more flexible to allow all the
signs
- Music matures my faith, I would like us to
lead the singing to enrich the worship. My faith has grown at St Martin’s
- Personal testimony
- Need more silence and listening to God
- Maybe encourage people to share their
experiences of God’s love in their lives
·
Other comments -
- Continue and grow as God leads us
- Work and acknowledge fruits of the spirit
- Transforming lives by encounter with the Holy
Spirit
- We need to experience more freedom in Christ
- Everything needs constant working on or we
become complacement
- Training to encourage those less sure to join
areas of life – ‘taster’ sessions of roles
- Good leadership within the church.
- Encouragement on an individual basis
- Tell people story how they came to faith and
not be afraid to show ourselves wart and all
- Would be more enjoyable if all or more
people at St Martin’s were more approachable and sincere
- Be proactive in involving ALL members of the
church in the life of the church
- Get the ministry team to be open and relate
to the WHOLE church
- Nurturing faith in Christ – very important
- There is lots of love in the church
- Developing individual faith through
individual help and support
- Evidence of what we do
- God focused not people centred
- Moving out of comfort zone