A Foundation for Health

2/10/21 By Larry Barker

What foundation are you building your church upon to ensure it is healthy? Jesus said He would build His church and the gates of hell would not stand against it.  There are five functions (fellowship, discipleship, worship, ministry, mission) clearly seen in Acts 2:42-47 and all of them must be bathed in prayer.  These functions can take many different forms in different churches and in different cultures.  With the Great Commission as a direct command from our Lord and Savior there is a need to examine core values, mission, vision, and strategy.  

How can a prayerful, intentional, deliberate process enable your church to be the church Christ intended her to be?  These, back to the basics, foundational items will help you to successfully plan towards a healthier church.  It will require a lot of prayer, becoming more outwardly focused, dreaming God dreams of your preferred future, and then actually living these imperatives out.  A healthy church has a clear understanding of what they value, their mission, vision, and strategy to be effective.   

How does God want you to express Him through your church in your community?  With that challenge some begin to work diligently on a really cool mission/vision statement that is scriptural, catchy, and flows off the tongue.  It sounds great but here is the reality check.  Having a vision statement in no way guarantees that your church will be a visionary congregation.  But realize that discerning and governing your core values and developing a mission and vision statement is a great step in the right direction.

Ken Priddy says this, “Most congregations claim allegiance to the Great Commandment and the Great Commission, but few truly demonstrate a sacrificial love for neighbors or a serious commitment to outreach and evangelism.”  When churches are no longer functioning as they should they begin to fall prey to becoming insider focused on those they already have involved.  The voices of people inside the church become louder than those outside the church and outside the faith.  A church not living on His mission has actually lost its reason for existing. 

As you consider values, mission, and vision you must prayerfully seek a way for greater buy-in and ownership of your congregation to make sure you value what God values.  Are your values actual values (your behavior backs them up) or are they aspirational values (who you desire to be)?  Churches say they value making disciples because Matthew 28:18-20 says you should be making disciples.  Then the question you must ask is, “Are you making any disciples?”  If you are not making disciples, why are you not making disciples?

Let’s do a quick overview of these foundational elements.  A great starting place is with your core values since they are why you do something.  They describe what you believe but they are more than that because they determine how you behave.  Values are what move you from head knowledge into action.  Mission is what you are suppose to be doing.  Mission is your identity and it determines your direction because it is why your church exists.  Mission is God’s mandate and we move our church into obedience of that mandate.

Vision is where you are going by carrying out God’s mission.  It is seeing the possibilities of a brighter future (Ephesians 3:20) but also being aware of the difficulties and challenges in the journey (Luke 14:28-30).  Vision is the motivator to get you to God’s preferred future.  Strategy is how you are going to get there and it is as much choosing what you should not be doing as it is what you should be doing.  Many things we call vision are actually the strategies we have developed to live on mission.  Strategy is your road map to following His commands and direction. 

These foundations empower you to develop a clear articulated “vision proper” because you have prayerfully determined where God is taking you and how He desires you to get there.  A necessary ingredient  for these foundational elements is a clear definition of success.  What does “success” look like for your church?  Success is being faithful to who God has called you to be.  Success is doing what God has called you to do as well as you can.  It is the investment of your church into the ministry opportunities that He opens up for your congregation. 

This process (core values, mission, vision, and strategy) will allow you to set your focus on discovering and implementing what God wants you to accomplish.  God measures success by how faithfully you follow Him and not what you accomplish.  Biblical success focuses on the internal not the external, the eternal not the temporal, and divine standards not human standards.  Biblical success comes out of humility and is not concerned with notoriety, praise or recognition.  True biblical success is doing everything for God’s glory.   

God measures success by how faithfully you follow Him not by your outward accomplishments.  Our job is to remain faithful to His calling and direction while His job is to accomplish results.  You must trust God for the fruit while you focus on being obedient, faithful, diligent, persistent, and committed.  You are called to serve Him faithfully with excellence by doing the best you can with what he has provided.  The good news is that we are developing video trainings for all of these foundations with tools and worksheets.  If we can help please let us know!