Illinois Ministries

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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Do #'s really matter?

You can’t measure anything unless you count.  How do you know if a diet is working – count the pounds.  How do you know if your car is getting optimum gas mileage – count the miles per gallon.  How do you know if you baptized 10 people this year – count!
Numbers are important.  They are not the definition to everything.  There are times that growth is occurring in the life of a congregation and the numbers might not show it.  Unless of course you count the increased number of people praying – studying – meeting together.  Ahh, you see even when some numbers don’t show growth other numbers do.  You can’t get around it – numbers are important.
Numbers are important in the Bible – we shouldn’t be scared of them… 10 Bridesmaids, Forgive 70 times 7, Peter denied Jesus 3 times, Jesus spent 3 days in the tomb.  There are 10 commandments and the shepherd left 99 sheep to search for 1.
How do you know if God is moving?  I’ve heard, “we feel that God is moving.”  That’s weak because some will say, they don’t feel a thing.  Feelings are too subjective when determining if things are moving forward.   You have to know numbers.  It’s a strong method of determining if things are working.
In India – 30,000 people a day are being added to the church.  That number is doubled for China.  In Pakistan one church planted 6 more churches in one week!  While in America – 16% of people far from God are saying – no thank you!  But think about that before you shake your head in disgust.  84% are thinking about it.
Reggie McNeal  recently said, the church should be like an airport – it helps get people to the right destination. The airport is never the destination.  Growing the church is not the mission.  The church doesn’t have a mission – this mission has the church.  
How can we count if the mission has us?

Monday, November 1, 2010

Consumerism

I attended the SLAMA 5th Sunday Unity Service last night.  Jeanette Flynn gave an awesome talk.  There was too much to relate in a blog but I do want to touch on one side subject she talked about, “consumerism”.  I’ve been thinking about this - in a good way and a bad way.
The bad way is – followers of Christ being consumers.  We are called to follow Christ through the way of the cross.  We need to grow up on things like whether the music speaks to you or the preaching is as good as whoever you happen to listen to on radio, podcast, or livechurch.tv – followers of Christ need to get up, engage in ministry and stop acting like ‘everybody else has a better show than your church.’
We also need to stop acting like the world shouldn’t be consumers of the church.  That’s out culture.  In many churches I’ve seen noses snarl at the thought of people in the community viewing them like consumers.  I’ve heard this type of saying, “The church is not called to be catering to every whim granting newcomers that comes through our doors.  If they don’t like it, they can find another church. “
I’m staying at a Holiday Inn waiting for a meeting in the St. Louis area in a few hours. I like Holiday Inn; I like the breakfast, I like their point systems, I like that they call me “Eric” when I check in.  I like their soap.”  I could stay somewhere cheaper but I choose to drive early in the morning and late at night to skip staying in too many hotels because when it’s absolutely necessary – I like Holiday Inn.
I could stay at adequate places.  There’s Hampton Inn, Fairfield and even a good looking Motel 6 (although I have to use 4 towels to dry off! Where do they find those tiny towels?) but I choose Holiday Inn because it’s better than good and better than adequate.
When a newcomer attends your church – like it or not – they are looking for affirmation and value.  They are looking for a place to say, “you matter!” I know we are called to lift up Jesus and leave the results to him.  I submit to you, however, the fish and the bread – I am confident it was the best fish sandwich that those 5,000 + ever tasted.  And the wine; it had to be the best tasting wine, would Jesus dare serve wine before it was time? 
If lost people matter to God and we know they do…  Our assignment is to make sure people can see Jesus.  This is the very reason we must meet them where they are – consumers.  We must greet them and wow them with unconditional acceptance and respect.  Our goal should be to do anything and everything to help people see Christ.
John 6.26 – You’ve come looking for me not because you saw God in my actions but because I fed you, filled your stomachs and for free (The Message)
They were certainly consumers and Jesus knew it but the amazing thing is Jesus didn’t’ stop healing or performing miracles.  He continued to play into the people’s consumer’s mind set.  He did this because He wanted them to see the Father.  He didn’t seem too worried about motives even thought they were self serving.
Here’s what the pastor from Granger said - The people who come through your doors on the weekend are initially making decisions as consumers.  Whether they return rests on their entire experiences.  They leave asking the same questions they ask of business throughout the week. “Was this worth my time?  Do the people care about me? Am I valued here?  How will guest answer these questions?
I have to go check out of my room – wait – no I don’t, I have a late check-out because I am a Priority Club Member!  Ahh… the Holiday Inn experience.