How Old Is Your Church?
People celebrate birthdays and count years, but we still say things like, ‘Act your age!’ and, ‘You need to grow up!’ We say that some people are ‘young at heart,’ and others act like they have ‘a new lease on life.’ The implication seems to be that it’s more than just biological age that affects the maturity and development of a person. It turns out that the same is true of the church. I read a doctoral thesis by George Bullard recently called, “The Life Cycle and Stages of Congregational Development,” and it compares the development of a church to various stages of human growth. It was helpful because our tendency is to just think of the church as a static entity but it’s more like a living organism that is either growing or dying. Let me explain the stages in the life-cycle of a church that Bullard presents.
Birth & Infancy: When churches are planted, they are all about the vision. They have a clear direction and a deep burden to reach people with the gospel and build up disciples. At first, though, that’s all they have. Vision is strong and relationships are natural, but programs are lacking and management systems are weak. This is why church plants can be so exciting but also so volatile in the early years.
Childhood & Adolescence: After about five to six years, a church moves into childhood and from there into adolescence. It’s at this phase when the numbers have grown to the point that more energy needs to be invested in programs and organizational structures. The vision is still strong and programs have been introduced, but relationships often suffer as a result. As in human adolescence, there’s an awkwardness in this stage of the church’s growth, because there’s been an infusion of new people to the church without an adequate plan or resources to handle them.
Adulthood & Maturity: A church reaches adulthood when the management systems or processes in the church have finally caught up with the growth, so that vision, relationships and programs find a healthy balance. The church feels like it has finally arrived. Unfortunately, though, it this feeling of having arrived that often leads the church into complacency. And the vision slowly fades from the clarity it once held. In the second half of this stage, as vision continues to diminish, younger age groups in the church start to decline. Although the church is facing an impending crisis, it is often oblivious to this fact because its programs are strong, its finances are healthy and it has a strong history of success. He quotes Peter Drucker who said, “It’s just human propensity to start in a clearly defined direction and then to veer off the path somehow and to wind up not doing what you originally started to do.”
Empty Nest & Retirement: Twenty-five to thirty years into the life-cycle of a congregation, the church enters the empty nest phase. Now the lack of intentional investment in the vision of the church begins to show and programs wane in their effectiveness as a result. Relationships are the glue which hold the church together and management systems control what happens. Nostalgia, dissatisfaction and conflict are common at this stage, but people often feel that the problem is a lack of commitment.
Old Age & Death: A congregation in the retirement stage is spinning its wheels trying for renewal. When it gives up hope and runs out of the resources to change, it enters old age. In this period, vision, relationships and programs are all weak and in decline and only management systems are functioning in a significant way.
While Bullard wouldn’t claim any scientific precision to the various stages, it is interesting that Grace Baptist is 31 years old and showing at least some of the symptoms of a church somewhere between maturity and the empty nest phase. How old would you say the church is?
The good news is that decline isn’t inevitable; resurrection is possible! By returning to the mission Jesus gave us and making His vision central, a church can begin a new life cycle and avoid the decline and death that would otherwise follow.
With God’s grace, we as a leadership are committed to doing just that. It will involve some soul searching for all of us as individuals, groups and ministries. We’ll ask questions about our burden for the lost and our passion to make disciples. We’ll look at where we focus our time, energy and resources. And we’ll pursue the changes that God would call us to in order to align ourselves with His plan and purposes.
May God give us help as we do!
In awe of Him,
Paul