"Growth" is measured in many legitimate ways. An increase in size; or
advancement toward maturity; or development in ability; or an increase in
understanding; or an advancement in productivity; or an expansion are all
measurements of growth.
A crop growing, a child growing, a business growing, or a marriage growing
all share some common factors. However, growth in each is measured by
different standards. The same criteria for measuring growth in a marriage
and a business, or in a child and a field of corn cannot and must not be
used.
My life is [and has been] spent working among, with, and for Christians in
congregations. All congregations I have known wanted to grow. Regardless
of happenings in the past or present, those in a congregation want present
and future growth to exceed past growth. Every congregation expects to
grow.
I do not grasp expectations in congregational growth. Is growth just
statistical, a matter of numbers? Are three baptisms a week growth, but a
Christian individual using faith to overcome a crisis not growth? Is
genuine repentance growth? Does growth occur in an individual, in a group,
or both? Is quality of faith, or degree of spiritual maturity, or
involvement, or service, or increased commitment, or improved value systems,
or improved relationships growth? Is increased love, compassion, kindness,
and forgiveness growth? Is growth a matter of perception? Is a
congregation growing when over 50% of its members say growth is occurring?
My conclusion: there are many legitimate standards for measuring
congregational growth. Some are statistical measurements. Some are not.
Different spiritual realities are measured by different standards.
Bottom line: when people become more like Jesus in heart, attitude, spirit,
and surrender, growth is occurring. Whether this occurs because people are
coming to Christ or people are developing in Christ, congregation growth is
occurring. "Becoming like Christ" is God's standard for measuring growth
(Ephesians 4:13,15).
We want to grow in every aspect of our existence as Christ's body. Consider
some personal observations. (1) Growth and comfort are mutually exclusive.
Growth commonly creates discomfort. Comfort commonly inhibits growth. (2)
People will want us to teach them when they see the value of our faith in
our personal lives, our marriages, our behavior, and our character. (3)
People must feel wanted, valued, and loved--as visitors or as members. (4)
God's presence must obviously be with us, and worship must honor God. (5)
Our spirituality must be as centered in our daily lives as it is in our
assemblies and programs.
People will trust us to show them how to build a relationship with God when
it is obvious to them that God teaches us how to build relationships with
each other.
Link to other Writings of David Chadwell