The Hidden Factor Behind Your Church’s Struggles

One of my team members at Church Answers suggested I respond to a call from a pastor in the Midwest. The pastor, it seems, could not contain his enthusiasm. After four years of divisions and decline, his church had turned around. And he told our team member he had discovered the “secret” behind the comeback of the church.

Okay. That comment piqued my curiosity. I made the call.

The “secret,” I learned, was not so much a secret as it was a hidden factor in most churches. Because we are so busy doing the activities and programs and ministries of our churches, we often are not aware of this major hidden issue.

Stated simply, many church members do not understand the basic truths of the Christian faith.

That is the hidden factor. That is the reason behind many churches’ struggles.

That single call was a major factor behind why I wrote a book called I Believe. We cannot function well or at all as members of the body of Christ unless we know what we believe and why we believe. Look at these five major implications of belief.

  • Without a clear understanding of our beliefs, we might stray to false beliefs. The pastor who called me told me that a church survey revealed that over half his congregation did not believe that Christ was the only way of salvation. They did not affirm John 14:6: “Jesus told him, ‘I am the way, the truth and the life. No one can come to the Father except through me.’”
  • Church members will not be motivated to reach others with the gospel if they don’t understand the basics of the Christian faith. Why should they share the gospel of Christ if he is not the only way of salvation?
  • Church members will seek to serve themselves if they do not embrace biblical truths. The Apostle Paul said with potent clarity in Philippians 1:2: “Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in others, too” (NLT).
  • Ministry volunteers will be sparse without a biblical understanding of church membership. If your church members truly understand and embrace 1 Corinthians 12, they will eagerly serve in ministries in the church. They must believe with conviction what it means to be a part of the body of Christ.
  • Church members will not have an attitude of gratitude without understanding and affirming the joy that can only be found in Christ. Paul again reminds us. “Always be full of joy in the Lord. I say it again—rejoice!” (Phil. 4:4).

The pastor began leading his church to understand the basic beliefs of the Christian faith. Over a few months, many church members began making substantive changes in their lives for the better. The church became more joyous. The church became more serving. The church became more evangelistic. Many members of the church experienced a profound and positive change in their attitudes.

The change in the church really was neither a secret nor a hidden factor. At least it was not hidden once the church members understood the beliefs of the Christian faith and responded obediently to them.

“Now,” he told me, “when my church members say, ‘I believe,’ they are not only affirming what they learned intellectually. They are affirming that those beliefs have changed their lives.”

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Thom Rainer
Thom Rainerhttp://ThomRainer.com

Thom S. Rainer serves as president and CEO of Church Answers and executive director of Revitalize Network. He served for 12 years as dean at Southern Seminary and for 13 years as the president and CEO of LifeWay Christian Resources. Also a respected researcher and former pastor, he has written more than 25 books, including many best sellers, such as I Am a Church Member. Rainer and his wife, Nellie Jo, have three grown sons, several grandchildren and live in Nashville, Tennessee.

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