Are We Living And Ministring In A Fog?
Dr. McGavran's mantra about the scientific nature of the Church growth discipline was that "abundant accurate information makes us good stewards of the grace of God and effective communicators of the gospel of Christ".
In this lecture he outlines why gathering of data is not a waste of time but an investment in strategic missional planning.
He contended through his life there cannot be accountability for the mission with accurately counting.
SEEING THE ACTUAL FACTS
ABOUT CHURCH GROWTH
Lecture 7
The Final Lectures
Dr. Donald McGavran
Are We Working Blindfolded in Our
Churches?
In many
congregations and denominations good Christians—lay and clerics—are engaged in
many good works and do not really see the church growth situation. They are not vividly conscious of where their
new members are coming from. They do not
know which segments of society are responsive.
They are resigned to whatever degree of growth or decline they are
experiencing. They do not really believe
that every church should be giving birth to new congregations. In short, they go into the white fields
blindfolded. They are theologically
quite sound, know a great deal about the Bible, live good moral lives, and come
out every few days with a ripe sheaf.
Dr. Donald McGavran |
A day later
he called me saying, “Thirty of the 50 members we added last year were children
of existing Christians—biological growth.
Sixteen were Christians who had moved to Vancouver from other
cities—transfer growth. Only four, I
fear, were converts from the world—conversion growth.” He added, “I am amazed at the small number of
converts.”
His own city
church might be growing a little, but his denomination in that part of the
world was standing still. It was not
winning many of the 70% of the population which had little or no church
allegiance.
Let me give
you another illustration. I carefully
studied two great mission stations in the heart of Africa. In the previous 17 years the Christians in
station Dombe had risen from 3,000 to 33,000.
In station Yeka the Christians had decreased from 7,000 to 3,000. Each of these stations was manned by eight
missionaries and was received by the home board about the same number of
dollars.
When I
stated this finding to the home board in the U.S., I was assured that I must be
wrong. Such a thing could not be. The mission executive said emphatically,
“While I do not know the actual facts, I am sure that your facts are
wrong.” When further investigation
proved that my facts were right, he realized that the mission board had been
carrying on missions blindfolded. While
they spent much money doing many good works—evangelism, education, medicine,
and leprosy work—they had not spent a single dime in assembling the facts as to
what growth was taking place, where it was coming from, and what needed to be
done to assure even greater growth in the future. Hundreds of similar illustrations could be
given.
I asked a
Presbyterian minister, himself a third generation Hispanic, who were the most
responsive of the 25 million Hispanics now in the U.S. He replied without hesitation, “Oh, the recent
arrivals and especially the illegals.” I
asked him, “If you were to seek to win these into your congregation, could you
succeed?” Without a moment’s hesitation
he replied, “Man, they would swamp us!”
In short,
his congregation was made up of respectable, well-to-do, second, third and
fourth generation Hispanics and did not want a lot of recent immigrants and
illegals. They would bring in too many
problems. Furthermore, they would not
understand his carefully prepared sermons.
They wouldn’t know that much English.
Nor would they speak his type of Spanish.
If we are to
carry out Christ’s command to disciple all the peoples of the world, we must
take off the blindfolds. We must do
whatever research is necessary to find out the actual facts. We must discover which ways of proclaiming
the gospel God is blessing to the increase of His church and which ways He is
not blessing. Believe me, many ways of
carrying on the work of the church are theologically sound and academically
quite impressive and bring back very few lost sheep. We must, of course, be theologically
sound. Being academically impressive is
also desirable, but what really counts is obeying Christ’s command to reap the
ripe fields. We must know which are the
ripe fields and what methods of reaping are being blessed by Him. Church growth research on a thoroughly
reliable basis must have a high priority in every minister’s program.
Double Your Denomination in Ten Years
Goal-setting
is important. So is research which tells
us how far the goals are being achieved.
Eight years
ago the Christian and Missionary Alliance decided prayerfully to set a goal of
doubling its membership in the next ten years, so that by 1987, both in North
American and around the world, it would have twice as many members as it did on
December 31, 1976. A year ago I wrote to
the chief executive of that small vigorous denomination in Nyack, New
York. He replied that the denomination
as a whole would more than gain its objective but that in North America they might
lag a little behind their intention to double the membership. The Alliance not only set that goal but
insisted that in all the countries where Alliance Churches were found careful
records as to growth should be kept.
Every minister, therefore, knew how fast his church was growing, from
among what segments of society it was growing, which of the many methods of
evangelism tried were most successful, what ways of evangelism God was
blessing.
Goal setting
and careful research as to the degree of growth achieved are something that
every denomination and every congregation can easily inaugurate. Yet a typical denominational executive,
minister, or—I am sorry to say—theological seminary professor is not keenly
aware of the growth or decline patterns which mark his congregation and
denomination. It remains true that among
the most orthodox and biblical denominations in America are also found some of
the least growing.
One of my
students did a very careful survey of the Conservative Baptist
denomination. He found that during the
40’s and early 50’s, it grew quite rapidly.
But after that it slowed down and was in danger of becoming static. He also found that the early rapid growth
came as congregations of the American Baptist Church, displeased with the
liberalism of many of their leaders and seminaries, decided to join the
Conservative Baptists. Growth was taking
place not from the world but from existing Christians. When all those who wished to leave the
American Baptists had done so, growth slowed down amazingly.
This research
reveled that while the denomination as a whole had slowed down, here and there
individual congregations were growing quite rapidly. A few were planting new congregations. Evidently growth was to be had if
congregations wanted it. Those ministers
and laymen who were keenly conscious of Christ’s commands were growing. Those who were not keenly conscious were not
growing. They were, to be sure, doing
many good works, preaching soundly biblical sermons, and conducting impressive
worship. But they were not finding many
of the lost. This research, I am sorry
to say, while factually correct, was not welcomed by the leaders of the
Conservative Baptist denomination. It
did, however, play a considerable part in arousing them to the situation. The Conservative Baptists, like all other
denominations, can grow in the U.S. today provided they determine to. If they will but pray the Lord of the harvest
to send forth laborers into the harvest and will look toward the fields white
to harvest, God will bless them with much church growth.
Multiplying New Congregations is
Important
Dr. George
Hunter, III, Dean of the E. Stanley Jones School of World Mission and
Evangelism in Asbury Theological Seminary, is a church growth specialist. In April, 1986, his book, To Spread the Power, will be available
from Abingdon Press. In it we find the
following exact figures about the growth of ten denominations in the
Philippines, 1971-81:
…the
Christian and Missionary Alliance grew from 22,527 members in 366 churches to
70,000 members in 1,037 churches. That
is significant decadal growth indeed, but represents only an average membership
increase per church from 61.2 members to 67.5.
The Wesleyan Church grew from 2,406 members in 46 congregations to 7,158
members in 113 congregations, showing a somewhat larger per church increase
than the CMA (52.3 to 63.3). The
Nazarenes showed quite significant growth per church: 937 members in 24 churches (39 members per
church) to 6,009 members in 109 churches (55 members per church). Two denominations in the Anabaptist tradition
experienced, as denominations, very significant growth, but their membership
average per church actually declined!
The convention Baptists reported (1971) 34,429 members in 302 churches
(114 average), and (1981) 56,000 members in 541 churches (103.5 average). The Southern Baptists grew from 15,045
members in 161 churches to 61,040 members in 722 churches, reflecting a decline
in average membership per church from 93.5 to 84.5. But the Conservative Baptists showed an
increase in average members per church, from 53.5 to 86.8 (1971): 1,657members in 31 churches; 1981: 10,245 members in 118 churches). The Lutheran Church reports revealed
countertrends like the first two Baptist groups. They grew from 3,180 members (in 62 churches)
to 5,870 members (in 135 churches), reflecting a decline in average membership per
church from 51.3 to 43.5. So there are,
understandably, variations within the general correlation between
denominational membership strength and the number of churches in the
denomination, but that this general correlation is one of the factors behind
denominational growth or decline is beyond reasonable doubt.
There are
many other principles involved in explaining (or planning) the membership strength
trends of Churches, but this persistent correlation has a strategic importance
too often ignored by denominational leaders.
In the U.S.A. today, in most years, 1) The denominations that are
growing are starting more churches than they are closing. 2) The denominations that are starting more
churches than they are closing are growing.
3) The denominations that are declining in membership strength are
closing more churches than they are starting.
4) And the denominations that are closing more churches than they are
starting are declining. Now there ought
to be a lesson in that kind of persistent correlation!
Discipling New Ethne
If Branches
of the Church are to obey eternal God’s command, they must give birth to new
congregations in new segments of the population. This principle is usually not seen. Often it is attached as sub-Christian. Yet it has an easily observable and probable
relationship to reaping ripe fields.
Those congregations and denominations grow which discover unharvested
ripe fields and multiply new congregations among them. Those congregations and denominations which do not grow as a rule are confining
themselves to their own segment, to an already discipled segment of the
population. Illustrations of this
principle are numerous. I set forth one
of the most striking.
In 1983, it
was my privilege to speak to the Church extension Department of the Southern
Baptists in Texas. The executive
secretary of this state organization said, “In Texas we have 4,000 Baptist
Churches. We have determined to plant
2,000 more by the year 1990. This means
that we will be planting about 300 new congregations a year.”
Later I was
talking to the pastor of a large Baptist Church in east Houston. He said, “Near the part of east Houston where
I work there is a section of the city in which live 15,000 people. We are planning to start four new Baptist
congregations there.” I remarked, “I am
surprised that in Houston there is any section of the city with a population of
15,000 in which there are not already several Baptist Churches.”
“Oh,” he
replied, “we do have two Baptist Churches there, but they are more than fifty
years old, and their members are well-to-do middle class people. Most of the other people in this section of
the city are working class Anglos. Since
they do not as a rule join middle class churches, we are planning to start four
congregations of working class people.
We already have seven house gatherings of two or three families and four
house churches of six or eight families.
Within a year or two we will have at least two new Baptist congregations
thriving in that part of the city, and by 1990 we will have at least four.”
The Church Extension
Department of the Texas Baptists had clearly recognized that in Texas there are
many ethne. Please remember that
Kittell defines as ethnos as a group of similar individuals—a swarm of
bees or a herd of cattle is an ethnos.
In a similar fashion, middle class Anglos are one ethnos, and
working class Anglos are another ethnos.
Each must be disciple; that is, each must be incorporated in the Body of
Christ. In short, congregations of
baptized believers must be multiplied.
Only so can any ethnos be disciple. If we are to carry out the clear command of
Him to whom all authority in heaven and earth has been given, we must disciple ethnos
after ethnos, both in the United States and around the world.
In the
United States, the multitudinous ethne (segments of the population) are
not highly visible. We are all American
citizens. We all speak English. We all are free. There is no apartheid here. Yet as we have seen again and again in this
course of lectures, many such segments of the population do exist in the United
States.
In many
countries of the world, however, notable India and Africa, caste and tribe
divisions are very much more clearly marked.
Men belonging to the Narmadiya Brahmins will never intermarry with
Kankubj Brahmins. Both, to be sure, are
Brahmins. But each is keenly conscious
of its existence as a separate unit of society.
It intends to remain separate.
There are at least 3,000 such castes in India. Each African nation is full, not of Africans,
but of tribes. In the great country of
Zaire, there are 127 tribes. Each not
only intermarries very largely within itself, but speaks a somewhat different
language or dialect and thinks of itself as an entirely separate people, just
as separate as the Amorites, Perizites, and Israelites were 1500 years before Christ.
It is
essential, therefore, not only in the United States, but around the world , to
realize that carrying out eternal God’s command can be done in only one
way. That is by multiplying
congregations of devout, Bible-believing men and women in every ethnos
in the world. This is what we mean by
discipling new ethne.
How Many of the 300,000 Congregations
in the United States Are Growing?
That there
are in the U.S. slightly more than 300,000 congregations is a well known
fact. However, how many of these are
growing, static, or declining is not known.
Furthermore, why each is growing, static, or declining is not known.
This
information is readily available. It can
be easily discovered. It can be exactly
stated. But this is seldom done. Many excellent congregations, pastured y
devoted ministers, remain static or declining.
So often is this the case that most ministers and seminary professors
are inclined to say that the duty of the minister is to preach theologically
sound and well expressed sermons, care for and love his congregation, lead an
exemplary life, and care for the flock.
If he does this and it is God’s will, his congregation will grow. He should not be too concerned, they often
assert, in mere numerical growth.
Let me
emphasize again that no one is advocating gathering numbers of unconverted,
nominal Christians. No one is advocating
adding “mere numbers.” Effective
evangelism never brings in merely one additional warm body. Church growth is as much concerned with
soundly Christian life as with finding the lost. Be assured that the lost are never truly
found until they are incorporated in the flock, obey the shepherd, walk in His
way, and are filled with the Holy Spirit.
We now come
to a most important question for this assemblage. This seminary serves certain
denominations. It is supported by donors
belonging to certain denominations. It is
known as a seminary of the reformed orthodox branch of the great Presbyterian
Church. What effect does study in this
seminary have on the growth of the congregations and presbyteries to which
students will go and from which members of the faculty have come? What are the growth patterns with which each
one of us is most concerned? How is our
congregation and our presbytery doing, as regards finding the lost and reaching
white harvest fields?
Such
questions bring sharply to the fore the need for accurate information. In a typical presbytery, there may be fifteen
or twenty congregations. Each one of
them faces different opportunities for effective evangelism. Each one has a different conscience on church
growth. This one will regard church
growth as of no importance. That one is
working hard at it. This pastor hopes
that his sermons and his services will bring many to his church but does not
really know how many unsaved there are in his community and how best to win men
and women belonging to the many different segments of society.
What ways of
obeying eternal God’s command is He blessing?
In what segments of society within three miles of the church building
are largely unwon, largely lost, most findable sheep? Many more such questions need to be asked and
answered accurately. We gathered
together in this room must not seek to carry out God’s commands blindfolded as
to the real situation.
An accurate
account of the multitudinous parts of the human mosaic surrounding us and of
the degree to which each part is winnable and has been won can be
obtained. It will cost some effort,
prayer, and money. But when we have the
picture clearly in front of us, much progress can be made.
Twelve years
ago, I was speaking on church growth to a gathering of ministers in Winnipeg,
Manitoba. One of them was the pastor of
a bilingual North American Baptist congregation. In 1970, the congregation had been solidly
German speaking. It was losing its
children and grandchildren who did not speak German. In 1970, the new pastor, therefore,
instituted an English service. By 1973,
200 attended the German service and 100 the English service.
The pastor
was deeply touched by the church growth seminar. He believed that not only could the children
and grandchildren of the German-speaking pastors be won into an English-speaking
church, but that two great undiscipled segments of the population in Winnipeg
could also be won, within a mile of the church, a Canadian medical community
and a university nursing community. None
of these at present were members of his church.
He carried on a program of effective evangelism (church growth) in both
these unreached segments of society. By
1978, 26% of the congregation came from the German-speaking community, 51% from
the medical and nursing community, and 23% from others in the neighborhood.
Once any minister or seminary professor really believes that God wants His lost sons and daughters found, surges of growth may be expected to follow. Each will be somewhat different from the others, but each will bring sheaves into the master’s barn. Information as to the exact situation is highly essential in this process.
What Are the Causes for Non-growth,
Moderate Growth, and Great Growth?
Essential to
our thinking at this point is to realize that knowledge concerning numbers of
American born Christians and life-throbbing congregations is only one part of
the knowledge needed. Such knowledge is
a good beginning. It must be followed by
knowledge as to what causes non-growth, moderate growth, and great growth. There will be scores of answers to each of
these questions. What causes non-growth
in the inner city will not be the same as what causes non-growth in a mining
community in West Virginia. Once God’s
command to preach the gospel to all ethne leading these ethne to
faith and obedience has been heard, the courses of action required will vary
with every situation. What will work for
one person will not necessarily work for others. What will work in one segment of the
population may not be nearly so effective in other segments of the
population. The degree of education
needed by effective pastors and church planters in a population of grade school
graduates will be quite different from that needed in a population of college
graduates. Convinced humanists will need
a different statement of the same unchanging gospel from the one needed by
fallen nominal Christians.
Exact
information on all of these topics must be continually sought. I hope to see the Bible-believing,
Spirit-filled denominations in North America surge ahead. They all have the power. They all hold the great theological
convictions. As soon as each of them
hears God’s commands and enlists in His unswerving purpose, each of them will
start growing rapidly.
All the
hundreds of varieties of church growth (effective evangelism) present somewhat
different situations. The degree of
Christianization in each is different.
The receptivity to the gospel in each is different. The problems which must be solved in each are
different. The ability and dedication of
the workers in each are different. In
this lecture I have been saying that if we are to carry out eternal God’s
command effectively, we must have accurate information about all these aspects
of each segment of the population.