Article

How Do We Assess Spiritual Growth?

It is possible, but often not very encouraging.

How can churches know if they are being effective at making disciples?

Many churches are measuring the wrong things. We measure things like attendance and giving, but we should be looking at more fundamental things like anger, contempt, honesty, and the degree to which people are under the thumb of their lusts. Those things can be counted, but not as easily as offerings.

Why don’t more churches gauge these qualities among their people?

First of all, many leaders don’t want to measure these qualities because what they usually discover is not worth bragging about. We’d rather focus on institutional measures of success. Secondly, we must have people who are willing to be assessed in these ways. And finally, we need the right tools to measure spiritual formation. There are some good tools available like Randy Frazee’s Christian Life Profile and Monvee.com, which John Ortberg likes.

In the past people grew through relationships with spiritual mentors and by engaging the church community. Is there a danger that these individual assessment tools will remove the role of community in formation?

Any of these devices must be used in a community setting. Assessment tools that work best are a combination of self-assessment and the assessment of a significant other who knows you well. They don’t work with people who don’t want to be assessed, and they should not be administered like individual personality tests that some employers use.

If you have a group of people come together around a vision for real discipleship, people who are committed to grow, committed to change, committed to learn, then a spiritual assessment tool can work. But there must be a deep fellowship of trust to support that work. I don’t think any group should go into an assessment without that. I wouldn’t advise a pastor to use one of these tools on his or her congregation without first establishing a clear commitment to discipleship. You can’t take your average congregation and just lay one of these assessments on them.

Are you ever discouraged by how few churches have that kind of clear commitment to discipleship?

I am not discouraged because I believe that Christ is in charge of his church, with all of its warts, and moles, and hairs. He knows what he is doing and he is marching on.

But I do grieve for the people within the church who are suffering—especially the pastors and their families. They are suffering because much of North America and Europe has bought into a version of Christianity that does not include life in the kingdom of God as a disciple of Jesus Christ. They are trying to work a system that doesn’t work. Without transformation within the church, pastors are the ones who get beat up. That is why there is a constant flood of them out of the pastorate. But they are not the only ones. New people are entering the church, but a lot are also leaving. Disappointed Christians fill the landscape because we’ve not taken discipleship seriously.

What can pastors do to change this dynamic?

Change their definition of success. They need to have a vision of success rooted in spiritual terms, determined by the vitality of a pastor’s own spiritual life and his capacity to pass that on to others.

When pastors don’t have rich spiritual lives with Christ, they become victimized by other models of success—models conveyed to them by their training, by their experience in the church, or just by our culture. They begin to think their job is managing a set of ministry activities and success is about getting more people to engage those activities. Pastors, and those they lead, need to be set free from that belief.

Dallas Willard is a professor of philosophy at the University of Southern California and the author of The Great Omission: Reclaiming Jesus’ Essential Teachings on Discipleship.

Copyright © 2010 by the author or Christianity Today/Leadership Journal.Click here for reprint information on Leadership Journal.

Posted May 3, 2010

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.

The "We" We Want to Be

The most important growth is not a “me” thing but a “we” thing.

Your Most Important Conversation

Each week, debrief with yourself and God. Here’s how.

This is Your Brain on Porn

The science behind the struggle, and how the church can help.

Incremental Preaching

Many pastors want “fast acting” sermons. But what brings lasting transformation is a steady, intentional plan for the pulpit.

Thy Kingdom Come

Why repentance is always good news.

Let’s Live What We Teach

What we expect from leaders, why we name specific sins, and how that’s working out.

Flipping the Switch

A review of “Switch: How to Change Things When Change is Hard” by Chip Heath and Dan Heath.

Control Tweaks

The right combination of structure and empowerment moved this church toward maturity.

Drastic Times, Not Drastic Measures

Ideas for responding to a decline in church offerings.

Playing the Part

How doing ministry shaped my soul and made me better than I am.

The Leadership Opportunity

Living out the Gospel where conflict and leadership intersect

Animal Instincts

What’s your reflexive response to ministry tensions?

Catching Waves

Francis Chan says we should stop trying to make people love Jesus, and learn to rely on prayer, elders, and the Holy Spirit instead.

Sexual Detox

A review of Tim Challies’ guide for single and married men.

Guard Against Embezzlement

Advice and resources to combat a growing problem.

A Repenting Church

How one congregation turned (and continues to turn) from its sins.

The End of Wanderlust

Will fewer family moves produce more stable churches?

Check, Please!

Remote-deposit capture is an efficient way to handle Sunday offerings.

The Dirt on Organic

Small volunteer-led congregations are gaining popularity and making an impact. But they require more spadework than you realize.

The Young and the Repentant

A proper definition is the key to leading young adults to repent.

Do Programs Help or Hinder?

How churches contribute to spiritual maturity without becoming just a calendar-cluttering distraction.

Pyrotechnic Preaching

A review of “Setting Words on Fire: Putting God at the Center of the Sermon” by Paul Scott Wilson

Five Myths about Emerging Adult Faith

New research on 20-somethings gets past the hype and offers a reason to hope.

Rehearsing the Dramatic Gesture

Can't We Outreach from in Here?

Going Green

View issue


Our Latest

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube
Down ArrowbookCloseExpandExternalsearch