coaching articles
Series: On Congregational Redevelopment
Title:
Part 1 -
Sensing
the Need for Coaching
Click here
to read other articles in this series.
The initial concept of congregational redevelopment may seem a
bit superfluous, especially to those churches
in the United
States which can vouch for a recent increase in their Sunday
morning attendance. However, as
church growth analyst George Barna points out, 70-80% of that growth has primarily resulted
from Christians transferring from one church to another.
(1)
Dr. Leonard Sweet also has shown that nearly three fourths of
churches are actually declining in their numbers. Their members
are joining other churches. Sweet says that
24% of churches are
growing simply by the migration. That means only 1% of churches
in America are
growing by reaching the lost!
Half of all protestant churches have an attendance of 75 or less
and three fourths have an attendance of 150 or less. Only a
small 5% average attendance of 350 or more, and 1% average 1,000
or more in weekly attendees.
The numbers for denomination of the Assemblies of God are not
all that different. In fact, Charles Arn, another church growth
professional, has shown that during the last ten years
membership in Pentecostal churches has declined by 9.5% although
the population grew by 11%. Nearly 85% of Assemblies of God
churches have plateaued or are declining. Of all churches
affiliated with the Assemblies of God, 84% are under 199 in
attendance, while 56% are below 99 in attendance. (2)
When you examine the location of existing Assemblies of God
churches, you find only 25% are in urban areas and 50% are in
towns of 10,000 or less. In1900 America had 27 churches of all
denominations for every 10,000 people. Today there are less
than half that amount (11 total) churches for every 10,000
people. There is an average of 310 churches that close each
month.
Add to those statistics that 80% of ministers leave ministry
before completing 5 years of service and of those with an earned
Masters Degree 50% do not stay in vocational ministry for longer
than 10 years of service. With these statistics it is not
surprising that in the United States 71% of ministers say they
are in deep financial trouble, 65% of all clergy marriages end
in divorce and 1,200 ministers a month are leaving the ministry
as a vocation. While these shocking statistics exist in the
church, we find that outside the church 26% of people who claim
to be born again Christians do not attend church.
The need for redevelopment becomes a little clearer. According
to Bill Easum, the focus of redevelopment in the Assemblies of
God does not need to be institutional. “Institutions construct
buildings, erect structures, and restructure; organisms grow
people, plant deep roots, and develop relationships and networks
with the environment around them. We must go back to our roots,
back to the primitive-before institutions, before
denominations-to raw, miraculous, supernatural power of a
runaway, uncontrollable, spirituality experienced on the Day of
Pentecost (Acts 2)." (3)
1.
George Barna, Growing True Disciples (Colorado
Springs: Water Brook Press, 2001), 17.
2.
Win Arn, The Pastor’s Manual for Effective Ministry
(Monrovia, Calif.: Church Growth, 1998), 41.
3.
Bill Easum, Church Growth Handbook (Nashville:
Abingdon, 1996), 113.
|