Churches that hit dead end need to turn around, consultant recommends_72604
Posted: 7/23/04
Churches that hit dead end need
to turn around, consultant recommends
SAN ANTONIO–When a person hits a dead end, he needs to turn around. And congregations that have plateaued or are declining need to do the same thing, according to a Dallas Baptist Association consultant.
Roosevelt Broach, the association's director of church planting and development, noted 85 percent of Southern Baptist churches have either level or declining membership, indicating a lack of healthy congregations.
“We've got to turn it around,” he said. “We've got to stop this.”
Congregations have life cycles, Broach said. They typically start with a purpose and move toward goals. In the process, they create a structure for growth. When that is established, a church is at its height, with strong ministry.
Then the church begins to fade. Members become nostalgic and remember the way it used to be. They start questioning why the church is not as strong as it should be. Then the congregation becomes polarized. Finally, the church splits.
To prevent a congregation from weakening, leaders must start a new cycle when they sense the church needs it, Broach said.
Restructuring is painful for the church and the leaders, he acknowledged. But it is essential.
Strong pastoral leadership is the key to reinvigorating a congregation, he stressed.
This method of leadership matches the biblical model of shepherding more closely than the traditionally accepted pattern of gentle guidance, Broach noted. Shepherds guide sometimes, but they also have to prod, push and drag other sheep to get them to move in the right direction.
Still, a fighting church will not grow, Broach said. He urged pastors to meet with church leaders every few months, if not each month.
Ministers are responsible for building congregational unity, and leaders must be consistent models of a Christian lifestyle, Broach said.
Their actions must match their words, and they need a healthy family life. Biblical teaching in all facets of the church is necessary.
A church that faithfully lives out its mission through an appropriate structure will be effective and grow with unity, Broach predicted.
