The Five Greatest Challenges Facing the Church

Posted by Brian | Labels: , | Posted On Monday, December 6, 2010 at 11:48 AM

I was recently prompted to consider what the five most significant challenges facing the church today are.  After considering this for quite some time, I believe I have arrived at how I feel at this time.
We Christians must discover our individual identity in Christ.
“As Wesley emphasized, the image of God is restored within us. If the leading edge of the gospel is that ‘we matter to God,’ the ‘trailing edge’ of the gospel is that Jesus Christ has come to make it possible for each of us to become, in this life, the people we were born to be, conceived to be, and deeply within us have always wanted to be.” (Hunter, 52)
It seems odd that this is a challenge facing the Church. The reality is that we have largely become a religion of people who have become very good church members, instead of becoming very good Christians. This is not to say that there are not people, or even congregations who have become both. This said, it has been my observation that more often than not, the trend is that there is a profound disconnect between the life being declared on Sunday mornings, and the life being lived. This has led to the common perception of Christians being hypocrites.
Hypocracy has been used, and to an extent, abused when targeted toward Christians. There are common accusations of this double standard-living that stem from the cultural opposition to accountability or universal acceptance, and these are debatable in validity. The hypocrisy that Christians must learn to overcome is the temptation to live a complaisant, apathetic faith instead of a compassionate, apostolic faith. The radical life that Christ calls us to live is one of boldness. In God’s ultimate plan, through the workings of prevenient grace, and through the careful attention to the calling of the Spirit, each and every one of us has an identity we are to stand up and respond to in the Kingdom.
"If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it. What good is it for a man to gain the whole world, and yet lose or forfeit his very self? If anyone is ashamed of me and my words, the Son of Man will be ashamed of him when he comes in his glory and in the glory of the Father and of the holy angels." Luke 9:23-26
We the body must work together.
“Churches differ in which … populations they “target.” Many growing churches effectively target unchurched Christians – people who believe but do not belong. Many “renewal” oriented churches show less “numerical growth” than “Kingdom growth” because they target churched non-Christians – helping nominal church members experience reconciliation with God and become genuine disciples. (Hunter, 26)
Many times, it seems as if a churches greatest critical opposition comes from the church up the street. I hear of camp meetings that warn of the Calvinist epidemic consuming America. There are hateful things spoken of Orthodoxy and how they only care about ceremony, and there is uninformed hype surrounding churches that are described simply as experientialists. There is an unfortunate amount of tearing down of churches by other churches, and this is not unnoticed by non-Christians.
There is a level of healthiness for the Kingdom in having a wide variety of denominations and forms of worship. They all have their distinct atmosphere that can be an effective witness to individuals that may be turned off by other atmospheres. While this level of superficial personal preference will need to leave an individual at some point during their path toward authentic worship, it can be healthy from an evangelistic perspective.
The danger is that we make enemies within our own faith instead of rallying as the greater Church toward the mission and calling that God has placed on any healthy congregation. Becoming the bigger man, setting aside the “but they believe…” and living in peace with one another is important. It is likely that a day will not come where all churches suddenly work happily in unison, but not tearing each other down or dismissing them as not being authentic worshipers is essential and must come to an end if the Church is to continue to thrive in our time.
As a prisoner for the Lord, then, I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received. 2 Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. 3 Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace. 4 There is one body and one Spirit— just as you were called to one hope when you were called— 5 one Lord, one faith, one baptism; 6 one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all. Ephesians 4:1-6
We must appropriately leave our buildings and seek the lost.
… many believers confuse biblical word pictures, and this leads to unintended results. For example, one could say that holinessi s a call to heart purity and to be “set apart” for acts of spiritual service. However, this imagery is often confused to mean “come apart,’ thus encouraging the isolation of the church from the world. Such a confusion can cause the church to see itself as a fortress, a refuge from the dangers of a sinful world. (Sweet, 86)
It is safe to stay inside. It is comfortable, to stay inside. It is easy, to stay inside.
We live in a fallen world and this can often lead to messy evangelistic situations. These truths have led to many churches falling into one of three responses.
The first is, we do not leave our doors and wait until someone is willing and open to the Lord to walk in. This is safe, and easy.
The Second approach is one of exstreme boldness by entering into the world, standing on street corners with a bible, bullhorn and signs, boldly declaring the gospel truths. This is abrasive, and often does more harm than good.
The final is to stand around and conversationally talk about what is happening at church, but never turn the table and ask what another person believes.  This approach is easy to feel missional while doing, but rarely leads to actually influencing another person to be reflective in their own life.
The thing about all of these methods of outreach is, they are all incomplete. They lack boldness out of the desire for holiness. They lack compassion or love, out of the desire for boldness. They lack discipleship, out of the desire for love and compassion.
As the church body, we need to try to generate good press. We need to spend more hours in the week ministering to the community than we do hiding within the safe fortress of our church buildings. If the Church does not begin immersing ourselves in the community, carrying with it the uncompromised word of God with it by way of genuine love and gentleness, then our churches will die and our missions will fail.
But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth. Acts 1:8
We must assess what are the core beliefs of Christianity, and make sure to prioritize the teaching of those over guidelines stemmed from wisdom.
In seeking to communicate the core of the gospel among people who have little or no knowledge of who Jesus is or of the biblical stories and concepts, much more time and patientce is required. The same missionary principles must be applied in a Western Context as in other parts of the world, whether pre-Christian or post-Christian. In both scenarios, a great number of misconceptions may need to be cleared away in order for the message to be heard. (Gibbs, 207)
We live in a culture with a rapidly increasing illiteracy rate. With Christians not being immune to this intellectual epidemic, the wisdom in assuming that members of our churches will know the Biblical narrative from their own devotional time is becoming questionable in its wisdom. It is unfortunate that this is a truth we must begin to contend with, but it does not mean the death of Christianity is on the horizon. For nearly 1900 years of Christian history, illiteracy was common place in the regions of the world where it thrived. For these  centuries, people still knew the Biblical narrative through the use of iconography and oral tradition.
While we live in a new era with advanced technology, it would be foolish for us to ignore the need to recognize the likelihood of the majority of our congregations reading their Bibles on their own time. We must therefore respond in ways that may differ from congregation to congregation in order to ensure core knowledge.
It is helpful, when teaching people toward a life of holiness, to teach lessons that give guidelines that come from wisdom. It is also good to teach conceptual, topical messages about day to day living. It is essential, however, that if we are to expect the Church to carry out the call of the Priesthood of all believers, that we offer lessons that teach the Biblical narrative. How are we to expect people to deliver their testimonies and explain who Jesus was if we never tell his story start to finish? Above all this, we must also ensure that before we address culturally focused topics, that people within our faith understand and are dedicated to core Christian beliefs. These can be summed up within the Apostles creed.
And this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless until the day of Christ Philippians 1:9-10
We must train others into the priesthood of all believers.
The New Testament idea of “priest” has so radically departed from the Old Testament that the entire body of believers is now described as by nature a priesthood. . (Gibbs, 88)
There is a widespread attitude among Christians that the majority of the priestly duties fall on the pastor, staff, and perhaps deacons of the local church. This attitude is a symptom of a lack of ownership of identity among Christians. I believe that a serious concern and challenge for the church today is to minimize the perceived gap between laymen and leaders. To raise up the priestly nature, and the authority of those who declare Christ as Lord who are among our churches. To encourage them to visit the sick with an authority and compassion that is equal to the presence of anyone else.
This priesthood is the fruit of finding one’s identity in Christ, of cooperating with others, of leaving the buildings and carrying with us the basic core that Christ laid out for us. This priesthood is God’s destiny for all who proclaim his name.
9 But you are not like that, for you are a chosen people. You are royal priests,* a holy nation, God’s very own possession. As a result, you can show others the goodness of God, for he called you out of the darkness into his wonderful light. 1 Peter 9

Works Consulted





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