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The Wrong Track
Itâs a recurring dream of mineâa nightmare, really. We are all together on this train. Itâs called the Church Train. Weâve traveled the same track for many years. Those who grew up on the Church Train cannot comprehend any other track. After all, weâve been on this track as long as we can remember. Traveling happily along in the club carâthe church club carâwe are very comfortable with the way we do things. The pastor and staff serve as stewards, keeping us inspired and happy, attending to our needs with great dedication as we travel this track. On occasion our train pulls into a station. Those of us on the Church Train eagerly invite those standing on the platform to join us. Donât they see that our train is a happy place to be? We canât fathom why anyone would refuse a ride in our club car. Weâve done our best to decorate in a way that would be inviting to those outside. Yet, most of them refuse to join us on our train. We donât really understand why.
Lately, some riders on our train have upset us. They look down the track and say weâre headed for disaster. We havenât paid them much attention. They say there is a landslide ahead. We are headed for a plunge into destruction, they claim. How strange to hear those on our own train say such things. Surely God would not allow such a thing to happen to the Church Train. Some keep whispering about how we need to build an alternate track that will take us to a different destination. The radicals say we ought to get off the Church Train and move among the people. But, as hard as I try, I canât get off the train. Itâs a recurring dream of mineâa nightmare, really. We are all together on this train. Itâs called the Church Train . . .
As he approached Jerusalem and saw the city, he wept over it and said, âIf you, even you had only known on this day what would bring you peaceâbut now it is hidden from your eyes. The days will come upon you when your enemies will build an embankment against you and encircle you and hem you in on every side. They will dash you to the ground, you and the children within your walls. They will not leave one stone on another, because you did not recognize the time of Godâs coming to you.â Luke 19:41â44, NIV
During Jesusâ entry into Jerusalem, he looked into the near future and foresaw the Temple under siege by outside forces. He prophesied that this institution of Jewish religion would fall to destruction. Just a few years from that day the prophecy was fulfilled.
Today, the institutional church is under siege. Just as in Jesusâ day, church people like you and me are blind to the part we are playing in the process of its downfall. If we stay on this track we are headed for a landslide.
Have you seen the latest statistics about the evangelical church? Itâs quite possible that you have not paid attention and are still assuming that all is well in our churches. We who have lived most of our lives inside the walls of churches have a tendency to live in our own world, donât we? But if you are paying attention at all, you have an inkling that things are not like they used to be in church. Attendance is down, budgets are tight, and friends are being released from staff positions. Statistics point to the churchâs diminishing influence in society, and we are being laughed at in the secular media. Our Church Train surely is headed down the wrong track.
According to Thom Rainer, president and CEO of LifeWay Christian Resources, in the United States 65 percent of the Builder Generation (born prior to 1946) is Christian, while just 35 percent of the Boomers (born 1946 to 1964) and only 15 percent of the Busters (born 1965 to 1983) claim a relationship with Jesus. The numbers for Generation X and Y (born since 1984) continue this dramatic downward spiral. In Great Britain and Europe, there are places where only one percent of the population is in church on any given Sunday. Even in the Bible Belt of America, church attendance is losing ground quickly. In a 2011 study, the Barna group discovered that 41 percent of all Americans are unable to identify any individual who they consider to be an influential Christian.
Those raised in church can hardly comprehend these facts. We have lived in the comfort and confines of the church club car all our lives. So our worldview is very narrow when we look out the window of the Church Train. But the bad news doesn't end there.
Church growth experts say that as many as 30 to 40 percent of our existing churches could close their doors within the next 25 years. This statistic is not limited to traditional churches only. Churches started just 10 to 20 years ago with contemporary worship styles are just as liable to fall into the church club car trap. Does it alarm you that 25 years from now, one out of every three churches in your community may be closed? Had you realized that the church today is going downhill that fast? Would it really matter to your community if your own church closed its doors today? Would your neighbors miss your church if it no longer existed? Those are tough questions, but we must ask.
This decline is not just limited to those outside the church. Among church members, too, the statistics are telling. According to the 2011 Barna study quoted above, most Americansâroughly four out of fiveâconsidered themselves to be Christians. For this group of professing Christians, the 20-year period from 1991 to 2011 was a time of substantial change in their religious behavior:
- The largest change in belief was the ten-point decline in those who firmly believe that the Bible is accurate in all the principles it teaches. Only 43 percent of self-identified Christians had such a strong belief in the Bible in 2011.
- Whereas 30 percent of the self-identified Christians volunteered at a church during a typical week in 1991, that figure declined to 22 percent in 2011. Itâs no wonder that churches are struggling to provide the number of programs and ministries that were once a staple of their existence.
- Not only has volunteerism declined in church, but also attendance at church services declined among self-identified Christians by nine percentage points across those two decades. These days less than half of those calling themselves Christian (47% in 2011) could be found in church during a typical week.
- Even more telling, less than one out of five (18%) of this group attended Sunday School or a small group Bible study during a typical week by 2011.
The hand of the LORD was upon me, and he brought me out by the Spirit and set me in the middle of a valley; it was full of bones. He led me back and forth among them, and I saw a great many bones on the floor of this valley, bones that were very dry. He asked me, âSon of man, can these bones live?â I said, âO Sovereign Lord, you alone know.â So I prophesied as He commanded me and breath entered them; they came to life and stood up on their feetâa vast army. Ezekiel 37:1â3,10, NIV
Please understand what I am not saying. The body of Christ is not doomed. The kingdom of God and of his Christ shall reign forever and ever! I am not saying we should be the voice of doom. A sign in a national tool distributor shows these words super-imposed over photos of all varieties of tools: âThe Bad News: Our World is Falling Apart. The Good News: Our World is Falling Apart.â To us who have trouble using a hammer, the knowledge that the world is falling apart is bad news. But to those who earn a living by fixing things, a world falling apart means they will never run out of work. Our Almighty God has the power to fix this world. He uses our brokenness to heal, help, and move us to his purposes. The Church is his body, and he is the healer of broken bones. Ezekiel experienced firsthand Godâs power to put us back together when the body of believers seemed dead and disjointed. So we need to remind ourselves every day that, though institutional churches are in trouble, Godâs church for whom Jesus died will endure into eternity. May we never stop praying for revival in our land.
But until revival comes, worship leaders must find the courage to look beyond our job security as stewards of the Church Train and see reality. It requires real courage. It also requires faith in God and in the people of God. Most of all, it requires that we know that God will build his church when we follow his blueprint. Jesus said the people of Jerusalem could not know the way to peace because it was hidden from their eyes. Oftentimes, the people who are most involved in an institution are the last ones to see its decline. We are like homeowners on TV renovation shows. When outsiders tour the home and make negative comments about the design and décor of an older home, the homeowners get quite defensive and angry. The longer we live in one place, the less we truly see what is going on around us. We get blinded by our presuppositions, stuck in deceptive mindsets, held captive by our refusal to see objectively. God must take the dry bones of familiarity and breathe in new life. Only then can we become the vast army he is calling us to be.
Do you have the courage to see what is really happening in our churches? Will you ask God to open your eyes and see the truth? Thatâs not easy. The process is not for the faint-hearted or weak. You will have to confront your own shortcomings and misguided mindsets in the same way that I have had to confront my own. We are people who truly love our churches and our love reflects Godâs love for his church. So I ask you right now for the privilege of leading you on this journey of confronting the old ways of thinking that have led us to decline. I beg your permission to let me guide you lovingly and carefully in the thought process through which God has led me. Will you allow me to speak heart to heart with you from Godâs Holy Word? Letâs ask God to guide us in this journey to rediscover his blueprint for the church. Come alive, dry bones, and go forth as a mighty armyâthe people of God!
Return to the Cross
âWhen I Survey the Wondrous Crossâ is widely regarded as the most popular Christian hymn in the world. Isaac Watts, the English hymn writer, wrote this great hymn of our faith in 1707.
I sacrifice them to His blood.
Oh, Lord, when I see what you have done for me by sending Jesus to die on the cross for my sin, I am overwhelmed. Nothing that I personally could ever achieve could count more than the gift of your Son. Nothing in which I could ever take pride could equal your love for me. Yet Lord, I have taken the cross for granted. Christâs gift of his blood and his body too easily becomes old news to those of us in church. I keep asking this question. It haunts me as I stand to sing another hymn on another Sunday in another worship service across these long years of church attendance. Would you, Almighty God, the creator of the universe, send your Son to die for me just so we can have a somewhat inspiring and mildly entertaining worship service each week? Is that why you sacrificed you...