Don't Go Back, Please!

Rev. Mark Tidsworth, Team Leader

When this is over, or over enough, please don’t go back to pre-COVID church.

It was dying. The average church in this USA was either plateaued or declining, with discouraging future prospects.

Remember what it was like?

Nearly every church was asking how it could revitalize, reach younger people, increase its budget, take care of its aging facilities, and generally survive into the future. Anxiety and concern were rampant. Many were rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic (shuffling things around while not addressing core issues), while others were engaged in deep, spiritually driven, hopeful, adaptive reshaping. Every church, regardless of its adaptability and vitality, was dealing with a radically changed environment which did not much appreciate popular expressions of church.

That’s what it was like. No really, that IS what it was like.

Let’s take a good, long, clear-eyed look at what was, way back in early 2020.

Remember those misguided statements we used to hear from sincere Christ-followers sincerely trying to help?

“If we just called a more gifted pastor, or younger pastor with kids, or more outgoing pastor who could reach our community, or a better preaching pastor, or (insert something about savior pastors and church staff), then our church would grow again.”

“If we could just reach teenagers with an excellent youth program, then their parents would come too and give and our budget would grow.”

“If we added a service in a different style that’s more attractive to younger people, then we would flourish.”

“If we could get more of our people to volunteer and carry the load, the rest of us wouldn’t be so worn out all the time.”

“If we built new buildings, or were in a different location, or did better marketing, then our church would grow again.”

These activities may help when your church is located in an environment where many people are actively looking for a church to join. Except in small cultural enclaves in this USA, that environment no longer exists. Only the largest churches will grow numerically with these outdated growth strategies, collecting up Christian refugees from smaller churches.

So rather than return to what was broken, perhaps it’s time to follow our spiritual imaginations, prompted by the Holy Spirit.

Reflecting on those days long ago in early 2020, we can imagine sincere Christ-followers, gathered in a fellowship hall, sipping coffee and talking church. “Maybe we need a wake-up call; something so monumental and so disruptive to our lives that we have to change. Maybe we need something so big to come along that our concerns about the small stuff are stripped away and we are forced to get clear about the purpose of church. Maybe we need some external push, making us adapt in our changing context.”

Lo and behold, the Coronavirus.

If ever there was a time to go all in toward reshaping, it IS now. Sure, it’s complicated. We clearly have to help people move to where they have the capacity for reshaping (See Key Practices 1 and 2 in ReShaping Church Process). Yet, help them get there we must.

Don’t go back, please. For God’s sake, for our sake, for the sake of this world, may we love enough to push ahead, transforming our churches into more robust expressions of this body of Christ. Let’s receive this transformation opportunity gift, compliments of the Coronavirus.