Luke 11:1-12:59
The Book
of Acts is the most frequently used Scripture for church growth. It records the
explosive beginnings of the church in Jerusalem at Pentecost (Acts 1-2), its
continuing growth through the witness of Peter and John (Acts 3-5), the
enduring impact of Stephen's martyrdom (Acts 6-7), the scattering of the church
of Jerusalem under Paul's persecution and Philip's consequent impact in Samaria
(Acts 8), and the subsequent spread of the church through Paul and Barnabas
(Acts 9-28).
Luke was
the author of both Acts and the Gospel of Luke. The two books actually are one
account, stretching from the birth of John the Baptist in Luke 1 to the death
of Paul in Acts 28. The Gospel of Luke is less frequently used as a reference
for church growth. In Luke, however, the foundational ideas are laid that
support the growth found in Acts.
The
Gospel of Luke is prescriptive, whereas the Book of Acts is descriptive. The
Gospel of Luke focuses on why things happened in the church while the Book of
Acts focuses on what things happened in the church. The Gospel of Luke turns
our attention to principles, while Acts turns our attention to practices.
Much
literature has been developed on the phenomenon of church growth. Its focus has
been to develop positive prescriptions by describing the practices or actions
necessary for managing church growth. Its thrust has been on what the church
must do to be successful. Our focus will be on church health, on determining
what the church must be to be successful.
CHURCH
GROWTH VS. CHURCH HEALTH:
Church
growth and church health are related concerns but deal with different agendas.
Church growth requires a sensitivity to the organizational dynamics of
planning, communicating, motivating, controlling. Church health requires a
sensitivity to the spiritual dynamics of service, holiness, outreach, and
worship.
The
Gospel of Luke provides a number of insights into the spiritual principles of
church health. Beginning in Luke 11, Jesus turned his attention to the church
of his day—the synagogue—and leveled a variety of charges against that church.
So strong was his condemnation that one of the synagogue leaders remarked to
Jesus, "Teacher, when you say this, you insult us too," (11:45).
Jesus'
charges all pointed to a sick, unhealthy church. The church was accused of
being internally corrupt (11:39), being oblivious to its own faults (11:40),
wasting energy on trivia (11:42), getting caught up in ego massaging (11:43),
being spiritually dead (11:44), being rule-bound with excessive bureaucratic
baggage (11:45), being hypocritical (11:47-51), and stifling personal growth
(11:52).
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY THE QUALITY OF ITS SPIRIT THAN THE
QUANTITY OF ITS SUCCESS: (Luke 11:24-26, 12:4-5)
Here
Jesus focused attention on the spiritual battle of the church. Jesus warned of
the threat the church faces from the malevolent spirits of Satan. Earlier, in
Luke 4:1-13, Jesus was tested by Satan in the wilderness. Satan made three
appeals: turning stones to bread, ruling over the world, and protecting himself
in leaping off the Temple. These appeals speak to the spirit versus the success
dilemma facing the church:
A. One tendency in seeking success
is to reduce everything to "bread", to the measurable, the immediate,
and the short-term. The temptation is to get caught up in the temporal
realities of budgets, attendance, and buildings and to forget the more
fundamental, spiritual battles that threaten the church.
B. Another tendency in seeking
success is to focus on means rather than ends. The temptation is to get caught
up in methods and programs of church growth and to forget the more fundamental
spiritual issues of why we want to grow, what we are growing toward, and from whom
the growth comes.
C. A third tendency in seeking
success is to attempt the dramatic and showy. The temptation is to get caught
up in marketing and publicizing the church and to forget the more fundamental
call of God to ordinary service and quiet holiness.
THE HEALTHY
CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY WHAT IT WAITS FOR THAN BY WHAT IT WORKS FOR: (Luke
10:38-42, 11:5-10, 12:35-38)
We live
in an era that prizes activity and motion. The assumption is that a healthy
church is busy. Yet Jesus' call is to a quiet anticipation, a reaction to God's
will rather than an anticipation of it. In Luke 10:38-42, Jesus commented on
the busyness of Martha versus the waiting and listening of Mary.
In Luke
11:5-10, we read of Jesus' command to ask (and keep on asking), to seek (and
keep on seeking), and to knock (and keep on knocking). It is instructive to
note that Jesus began with the word "ask" (the Greek word used is aiteo,
suggesting the attitude of a humble supplicant) and closed with the phrase
"the door shall be opened". The implication is that we are first the
requestors and recipients of God's action and only secondarily initiators of
our own action.
In Matt.
25:1-13, Jesus told the parable of the ten virgins who took their lamps and
went to await the coming of the bridegroom. The five foolish virgins had not
brought sufficient oil; and while they had gone for more oil, the bridegroom
came. The door was shut as the wedding feast began. When they returned, the
foolish virgins were not admitted to the feast. Jesus admonished: "Be on
the alert then, for you do not know the day nor the hour," (v.13). In a
reference to a wedding feast (Luke 12:35-40), Jesus implored, "You too, be
ready; for the Son of Man is coming at an hour that you do not expect," (v.40).
The
waiting implied in this verse is from the Greek word prosdechomai, which
means "to look for with a view to favorable reception." It is the
waiting of one who knows the master will act and waits for clear and specific
direction from the master. The healthy church waits for God to reveal his will
and exercise his power in his time and in his way.
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY WHAT IT PROCLAIMS THAN BY WHAT IT
PROGRAMS: (Luke 11:23; 12:8-9)
We have a
tendency to evaluate a church in terms of how much it is doing, in the numbers
and variety of its programs. In Luke 12:8-9, Jesus focused the church's
attention on its call to proclaim.
The
primary role of the church is to proclaim the gospel. That purpose must
permeate everything the church does. Each program and activity must clearly and
directly contribute to that purpose. The church is not first of all a social or
charitable organization; it is the proclaiming body of Christ.
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY ITS COMPASSIONS THAN BY ITS PASSIONS: (Luke
10:27-37: 11:45; 12:6-7)
There is
a tendency to judge a church by the intensity and favor of its people and
programs. There is an equating of church effectiveness with the degree of
emotion with which worship is carried out.
In the
book of Luke, we catch a glimpse of the quiet compassion that Jesus taught
should characterize the church. In Luke 10:27-37, we read the parable of the
"good Samaritan" who met the needs of his "neighbor"
quietly and compassionately. In Luke 11:45 Jesus condemned the religious
leaders for their lack of compassion. And in Luke 12:6-7, Jesus gave some idea
of the depth of His compassion by noting that God cares even for the sparrows
sold as temple sacrifices and cares so much more for us that he knows the very
hairs on our heads!
The
healthy church has at its heart two responses, to love God and to love other
human beings (Luke 10:27). Neither of these responses need be characterized by
loud, emotional displays. God's call is to a caring, sharing ministry, an
intimate compassion for others. The depth and breadth of that compassion are
the measure of the healthy church.
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY WHAT IT IS CONFIDENT OF THAN WHAT IT IS
COMPETENT IN: (Luke 11:11-13; 12:32)
As
churches grow in size, they tend to put greater emphasis on training and
developing skills. A greater premium is placed on placing "competent"
people in the right slots so that the church's performance will be guided by
proven experts.
Jesus
chose as his core leaders men who were not "competent" in the usual
sense. Peter, whose sermon on Pentecost so stirred the city of Jerusalem, was
chosen as a relatively inarticulate Galilean fisherman. Perhaps as revealing
was Jesus' choice of Judas, his eventual betrayer. What led Jesus to select
these "incompetents" as his allies? We find in John 2:23-25 this
observation: " for he knew all men, … for he himself knew what was in
man."
The
healthy church is fully confident of God's provision. God can and does use
talented people. But God's ability to work through a church is dependent not
only on available skill or competence but also on faith. We should never forget
that God's primary desire is to reveal himself, not to display the talents of
his spiritual children.
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY PRAYER THAN BY ITS PERFORMANCE: (Luke
11:1-4)
A church
in prayer is in its most distinctive state. Prayer is both the distinctive act
and the distinctive attitude of the church. In Luke 11:1-4, Jesus' disciples
made this request, "Lord, teach us to pray," (Luke 11:1). Jesus'
response was short but offers a model of the healthy church at prayer.
We live
in an era that prizes performance and achievement. The healthy church
understands that its role is to be a channel for God to perform through and for
God to achieve his purposes through. Prayer positions the healthy church to be
God's instrument.
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY ITS DISCERNMENT THAN ITS DECISIONS: (Luke
12:54-57)
Often we
find ourselves evaluating a church by how wise or timely its decisions are. The
budget committee is praised if its budget projections come close to actual
gifts and expenditures. The personnel committee is praised for its insightful
handling of a new staff insurance program. We are sensitive to the results of
the decisions made in a church.
Less
visible is the church's capacity to discern, to spot spiritual challenges, to
establish spiritual priorities. In Luke 12:56-67, Jesus clearly articulated the
church's primary need to discern.
The word
"analyze" in this passage comes from the Greek word dokimazo,
which often meant to assay metal, to test or scrutinize so as to ascertain a
basis for approval. In particular Jesus seems to be calling for the church to
discern those things which are of God's intent and action, and which are not.
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY ITS COMMITMENT TO OPENNESS THAN BY ITS
CONCERN FOR OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY: (Luke 11:33-36; 12:2-3)
Secular
organizations have a driving need for efficiency; communication is used to
ensure uniformity and compliance. In the church, communication serves not to
force uniformity but to enhance interaction. The church is not a religious
mechanism; it is the organic body of Christ. For the church, openness in all it
does is to be an essential characteristic. Such openness may well result in
what appears to be much useless discussion and much wasted time. But the church
exists to do God's will not to be simply a goal oriented, efficiency driven
organization. God is much more concerned with transparency in our dealings with
one another and with the world.
In Luke
11:33-36, Jesus called for the church to "be full of light" (v. 36).
In Luke 12:2-3, He noted that there will be a time when "whatever you have
said in the dark shall be heard in the light" (v. 3). Christ himself was
called by John "the light of men" (John 1:4). In the Sermon on the
Mount, he called for his disciples to be "the light of the world"
(Matt. 5:14).
The
healthy church maintains an openness that maximizes visibility and sharing. It
is not willing to sacrifice participation merely for the sake of smooth
operations. Its primary concern is not operational efficiency; rather, it is
openness. The church is a community not a company, an organism not an
organization.
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY ITS GODLY PRIORITIES THAN BY ITS HUMAN
POPULARITY: (Luke 11:43; 12:49-53)
A
church's success is sometimes gauged by the crowd drawn to its programs. Since
the growing church is customarily viewed as an effective church, it is easy to
get caught up in the process of developing more and more activities to appeal
to the varied congregational segments. The assumption in many churches is that
more is better, more space, more people, more budget, more programs.
In Luke
12:49-53, however, Jesus addressed the inherent conflict between God's
priorities and human popularity. The church today is called upon to place a
priority on God's holiness. In a real sense the church stands opposed to the
worldly system. Too often the church announces a one-sided message of love and
forgiveness while avoiding its calling to confront the world's sinful and
hostile rebellion against God. In Romans 1:18-32, Paul spoke of the battle line
drawn between the church and the world.
Today
more than ever the healthy church must be characterized by what it stands
against. It must champion causes of holiness, sacrifice, and justice in a world
increasingly hostile to such a message. Seeking to be popular and acceptable
must inevitably compromise the church and damage its capacity to be used of
God.
THE
HEALTHY CHURCH IS CHARACTERIZED MORE BY THE QUALITY OF ITS MOTIVES THAN THE
QUANTITY OF ITS MONEY:
Many
churches show a noticeable concern for money, getting it and spending it.
Church programs for the year are often tagged to expected revenues. Wise
stewardship, we are told, demands that churches be fiscally conservative. Luke
12 contains a rather long discourse concerning Jesus' view of money.
The
church must be aware of any tendency to spend too much time and energy on
issues of financing. While the church needs to handle money responsibly, there
is a tendency to elevate, for instance, the finance/budget committee, to the
place of the most important committee. In too many churches the finance
committee acts de facto as the program committee, making decisions as to what
the church's program agenda will be.
The
healthy church is sensitive to the spiritual implications of financial matters.
Too often budget decisions are made without real spiritual discernment. Budgets
should reflect spiritual priorities. Furthermore, when a church is experiencing
financial difficulties, it ought to trigger the prayerful search for spiritual
as well as fiscal causes.
The
healthy church knows that its handling of money sends a message to the world. A
church that piles up debt beyond its ability to pay "advertises" that
the Christian community is irresponsible and out of control. A church that
spends 90 percent of its budget to finance internal operations "advertises"
that the Christian community has little vision and limited faith.
Churches are healthy to the extent that they
serve God spiritually. Even though numerous organizational measures of church
health can be cataloged, it is the spiritual attributes that really matter to
God.
Jesus was
speaking to churches as well as individual Christians when he entreated us to
seek first the kingdom and righteousness of God. In so doing, the local church
will thrive spiritually in the body of Christ and will indeed have all things
added to it.

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