Leader's Insight: The Church
Health Self-Test
Five things that can cripple a church.
by J. Gerald Harris, guest columnist
The dear Lord Jesus loves the church and has
given himself for it, and he obviously wants the church to be
healthy and vibrant. The devil hates the church and since its
inception has been hurling all the weapons in his diabolical arsenal
in an effort to cripple its witness and its effectiveness. Let me
mention five of the things that weaken the church and minimize its
effectiveness.
1. Scandalous Leadership
When immorality bred by lust or greed is found among the leadership
of the church the results are devastating. That is precisely why
pastors, church staff and lay leaders such as deacons must have
lives marked by physical chastity, moral purity and spiritual
integrity.
I have pastored a church that was marked by a
staff member who was guilty of immorality of the worst sort and the
results of his sin had a devastating impact, not only upon him, but
also upon his family, friends, the church and even the community. In
fact, the church may still bear the stigma of that heinous sin.
Someone said that it might take the church a generation to overcome
the humiliating and ignominious scars suffered from the grievous
sins of one staff member.
2. A Discordant Member
I am not speaking of the person who registers an occasional
disagreement. I am referring to the person who sows seeds of discord
among the brethren. Such an individual can make life miserable for
the pastor, sandbag decisions in a church business meeting,
discourage other church members, repel the lost and summon an
ominous cloud over the entire church.
3. Apathy
Vance Havner said, "We have anarchy in the world, apostasy in the
professing church and apathy in the true church." An indifferent,
indolent, lukewarm church nauseates God and renders the church
helpless and ineffective.
One pastor went down to the train station every
day to see the one westbound passenger train that came through their
small town each afternoon at 4:30.
One day the ticket agent, who saw the pastor
watch the train pull out of the station each day, asked, "Preacher,
why are you always here to see the 4:30 train pull out of the
station?"
The weary pastor said, "I just like to see
something moving forward that I don't have to push."
Did you hear about the company that makes blank
bumper stickers? They're for people who don't want to get involved.
Too many churches have too many people who just don't want to get
involved. Such apathy cripples the cause of Christ and paralyzes the
effort to build healthy kingdom churches.
4. Inflexibility
Some churches do not grow because the members are so unwilling to
change, so unyielding, so set in their ways. I have known Sunday
School class members that were so married to their class that they
would never agree to serve anywhere else or move to another class or
help start another class.
Some classes have their own budget in order to
purchase their own chairs, carpet their own classroom and purchase
their own television in case they want to watch a certain television
preacher instead of have their own teacher teach the lesson. The
class is like a country club and for the most part visitors and new
members are not welcome unless they are "approved."
Gordon Venturella says, "Inflexibility leads to
idolatry; and change is the only road out of self-centered control
to servanthood." Yet many churches are inflexible, unwilling to
change.
5. Purposelessness
One church put a sign on their church door in 1963 that stated,
"Gone out of business. Didn't know what our business was."
Thomas Carlyle said, "A man without purpose is
like a ship without a rudder: a waif, a nothing, a no man. Have a
purpose in life, and, having it, throw such strength of mind and
muscle into your work as God has given you." The same is true of a
church. Proverbs 29:18 emphasizes:
"Where there is no vision, the people perish …"
Is your church avoiding the problems that cripple
the family of God?