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GREAT CONFUSION, GREAT COMMISSION

Outreach looks different depending on which side of the pulpit you spend Sunday mornings. In my last pastorate, one of our young men met me for a hamburger one night, and after some chitchat said, “My wife and I are going to start looking for another church.”

I asked why.

“You’re emphasizing your plan for outreach too much. You need to pay more attention to the needs of those who come to church on Sunday morning.”

With difficulty I kept from shouting, “Are you telling me we shouldn’t focus on reaching out to people who don’t know Jesus?”

Because he was a committed Christian, his comment baffled me. I assumed every conscientious Christian was either passionate about the Great Commission or at least took vicarious satisfaction from a church and pastor who were.

The next day, as I recalled my preaching and leadership over previous months, I recognized how some could take offense, not at the Great Commission, but at how I wanted to go about the Great Commission. I had designed a seven-step strategy for evangelism and persistently urged everyone to get on board, causing some attenders to feel their individuality inhibited. I realized that I could have easily forestalled the resistance-if I had only known.

As a pastor with Matthew 28:18-20 and compassion for unbelievers motivating me, I’m prone to feel right about everything I do. I’m inclined to think, If they argue with outreach, they’re arguing with God. But evangelism stirs up all kinds of feelings and opinions. To successfully coordinate a church in outreach, I found it vital to know both what the unchurched-and the churched-think. We needed to be on the same page.

This survey would have helped me, but of greater value would have been a survey of my congregation. If you want to know more about your church, you may want to devise your own research tool, or take advantage of the CTi research team, which is making their services available to individual churches to conduct the same survey used in this report. If you are interested, write John LaRue, CTi Research, 465 Gundersen Drive, Carol Stream, IL, 60188.

-Craig Brian Larson

Copyright © 1991 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal. Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

Posted October 1, 1991

Also in this issue

The Leadership Journal archives contain over 35 years of issues. These archives contain a trove of pastoral wisdom, leadership skills, and encouragement for your calling.

SPENDING TIME LIKE YOU SPEND MONEY

To Illustrate…

THE UNIQUE ROLE OF THE SMALL CHURCH

Just as small businesses are the backbone of the nation’s economy, so too are small churches indispensable in God’s economy.

THE BACK PAGE

It’s tempting to allow our ministry to revolve around what can be photocopied.

To Verify…

POTENTIAL LEADERS: WHEN ARE THEY READY

How to know when newcomers, whether apparent superstars or humble servants, are ready for church office.

MINISTRY BY MULTIPLE CONGREGATIONS

How to make the divide-and-conquer approach work in a growing church.

THE FOG OF ABUSE

OUR SUFFICIENCY FOR OUTREACH

An interview with John MacArthur, Jr., about his controversial new book.

CHANGING PERCEPTIONS

VISION...AND REALITY

THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT: HOMEGROWN MISSIONARIES

HOW YOUR PEOPLE REALLY FEEL ABOUT OUTREACH

A Leadership survey uncovers the (sometimes surprising) beliefs and opinions people and their pastors have about evangelism.

The Great Divide

REACTIONS TO GROWTH AND DECLINE

REACTIONS TO CHURCH GROWTH METHODS

The Wobegon Preacher

An interview with Garrison Keillor.

A TRULY WORTHY POOR

LEARNING TO BE SOME THINGS FOR SOME PEOPLE

Finding your church’s niche seems to be one key to effective evangelism.

MOVING TARGETS: MINISTRY IN A TRANSIENT SOCIETY

How churches keep from being immobilized by their mobile population.

GETTING WORD OUT AND PEOPLE IN

Church publicity needn’t fall on deaf ears.

The Power of the Small Church

THE LITTLE THINGS

What makes a ministry worthwhile? Sometimes the simplest acts are the most significant.

WIDE-ANGLE TEACHING

How to reach the spectrum of people who attend your classes.

SEEKERS OR SAINTS: THE CHURCH CONFLICT OF INTEREST?

A Leadership Forum

PEOPLE IN PRINT

HOW COMMUNITY CAUSES BENEFIT THE CHURCH

WHEN YOU'RE ASKED TO DO CAREER COUNSELING

LITTLE THINGS THAT MAKE THE CHURCH ATTRACTIVE

IDEAS THAT WORK

CHURCH GROWTH COMES OF AGE

Now that the church growth movement in America is 21, what do Leadership readers think of it?

HOW DO YOU FORGIVE THE UNREPENTANT?

Sometimes victims must forgive their abusers even when reconciliation isn’t possible.

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