Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Should You Know Everyone At Church?

    “Pastor, I miss the old days when we knew everyone at church. I’m glad for the people getting saved, but we’re getting too big. Last week I met some people at a school function and found out they go to our church. I didn’t even know them!”
    That was part of just one conversation I’ve had over the years with concerned church members over the changing atmosphere of the church as it grows. I’ve had many over the years in two different churches.
    I usually respond with an initial question, “Do you think it is really that important to God that you know everyone in your church?” Can we find that value anywhere in Scripture? If God wanted us to know everyone at church, why would he have made the first one, the model, so big? (The church in Jerusalem was several thousand in number.)
    I then often ask, “Isn’t it more important that everyone in our area know Jesus, than that we know everyone in our church?” After all, that’s what the ultimate mission of the church is, The Great Commission, introducing as many to Jesus as we can. If we are really doing that, we can’t remain so small that we will know everyone.
    I fear that by insisting that the church remain small enough for everyone to know each other, we are desiring something for the church that God never intended. We are trying to make the church what we want rather than what He wants. That’s not good.
    That’s not to say that small churches do not matter to God. They most certainly do, and there were plenty of them in the New Testament. I spent my formative Christian years in small churches and for my first ten years as a pastor, my church would have been considered a small church. But if any church is true to its calling, is faithfully offering hope and forgiveness to its community, reaching out and caring for people, and if it is surrounded by any kind of population, it cannot help but grow. That’s the nature of the Gospel. Healthy churches that are faithfully proclaiming God’s Good News in populated areas grow. They just do. And if they do, they don’t stay small.
    I think it's fine for us to reminisce about the past and remember the “good old days” when there were fewer of us. But we have to stop and remember that there were challenges in those times that we do not have today and the good old days were not always good. Remembering fondly the smaller crowd is almost like being ungrateful for the many who have been saved since. How can we rejoice in seeing lots of people saved but still long for fewer people? Remember, the struggles we faced back then were all met with a goal in mind, that of reaching the lost and bringing them into God’s family. So let’s not wish ourselves back. Let’s be grateful for what God has done, is doing, and let’s keep striving to be the church HE wants us to be.
    “And the Lord was adding to their number every day those who were being saved” (Acts 2:47 NET).

4 comments:

  1. Then why come to the service at all? Why don't we all just watch it online?

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    1. Tom, there is a difference between knowing EVERYONE at church and never getting to know ANYONE. And there is a lot more to community and corporate worship than knowing EVERYONE. There is no community or corporate worship watching online. But there were both in the 8,000+ church in Jerusalem, though I doubt anyone there knew everyone.

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  2. I have thought about this for a while and decided to respond. No, not knowing everybody's name is not a heaven and hell issue. Dale Carnegie said that everybody's name is important to them. I do get concerned when a person attends church and nobody knows there name. I, personally, have worked hard on names. While at Hillcrest with Scott, I didn't know everybody but I knew the vast majority of the people who attended. It is hard work to remember names (at least for me). One of the things that I do when I can't sleep is to go through the names of people and specifically pray for the people of the different churches that I've attended. It makes good use of my time. If I didn't know their names, I couldn't pray for them. Just some thoughts... God bless...

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  3. Hi Arnie, Certainly, knowing as many names as possible is good for our relationships with them and for us to be able to pray for them. But this blog is really about the nature of the church. The church is supposed to be continually reaching lost people and thereby, growing, like it did in the Book of Acts. In a growing church, or a large church such as the church in Jerusalem, it is possible to know a large number of people, while still being unlikely that anyone would know everyone. My point above is that "knowing everyone" in a church is not a biblical value. It's not even expressed as necessarily a good thing anywhere in Scripture. I'm more concerned with everyone knowing Jesus, than me knowing everyone. I will always be limited in my ability to connect with others...I can only connect with so many. But a vibrant community is filled with interconnectedness based on a shared relationship with Jesus. I a church like that (the church in Jerusalem), it's not necessary that we know everyone. It would be better that we know a few people really well, than a lot of people on a lower level. I hope that makes sense. :-)

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