Good Joe for Good Joes! Drink Kenyan Blue Mountain Coffee and Help Kids!
Hearts and Hands International helps kids around the world by assisting with programs and volunteer teams that help the needs of children at risk. Proceeds from your purchase of Kenyan Blue Mountain Coffee will sponsor a child for one month. Great tasting whole bean coffee for your small group or church gathering! Order now! $29.95 order here

« Who are America’s Most Innovative Churches? | Home | Everything I needed to Know about Marketing I Learned from Dr Seuss »

How to Recapture Vision and Start Your Church Growing Again

By chris | August 14, 2007

 stetzer_comeback.jpg     stetzer_comeback.jpg     stetzer_comeback.jpg     stetzer_comeback.jpg     stetzer_comeback.jpg     stetzer_comeback.jpg

It’s no secret that most American Evangelical churches are in plateau and decline, but what can anyone do about it? Ed Stetzer and Mike Dodson have developed a good book for helping these churches recapture their sense of calling and vision and get them back on the road to church health in the book “Comeback Churches: How 300 Churches Turned Around and Yours Can, Too”  

From the book:

Research shows that over time, most churches plateau and then eventually decline. Typically, they start strong and experience periods of growth, then stagnate and lose members. Since 1991, the North American population has increased by 15 percent while the number of “unchurched” people has increased by 92 percent. Large church houses that were filled in the 1950s and `60s now hold a fraction of their capacity.

To counter this trend, authors Ed Stetzer and Mike Dodson surveyed 300 churches from across ten different denominations that recently achieved healthy evangelistic growth after a significant season of decline. What they have discovered is an exciting method of congregation reinvigoration that is shared in the new book entitled Comeback Churches.

The book is based on Dodson’s thinking and work in his doctoral thesis ”An Analysis of Factors Leading to the Revitalization of Comeback Churches“ (links to a PDF). I like this book because it doesn’t give what most are looking for–a cookbook of programs to try to use in church planning. Too many ministry leaders want pat answers and canned resources they hope exist that will automate growth. The mistake I see churches making is too they often choose expediency and pragmatism rather than principles and healthy practices. The “method“ Stetzer and Dodson recommend is to practice sound missiology.

The fact is the belief in programs as a solution for church growth is false. What churches need is more than promotional packaging that makes them “seem” more relevant, they need to “become” relevant by putting into practice good missional thinking. There is no short-cut to missional ministry.

The publishers also give some recommended reading for helping leaders understand how to become more missionary-minded in ministry.

Topics: Define the Mission, Books |

Comments