Are
You Planning To Leave Your Church? Consider These 7 Bad Reasons First.
Scripture: Hebrews 10:25
If
you’re considering leaving the church you attend, there are a few things you
may want to consider before making the leap.
The
new year is always a time for big decisions, big hopes and big disappointments.
Churches
are no exception.
For
the next few weeks, gym memberships and diets will soar. Job losses and
divorces will rise. Some people will decide to go back to church, while others
will decide to leave their church. Some will leave for another church. Others
will leave the church for good
.
Those
who choose to go back to church will have about the same success rate as diets
and gym memberships. But those who decide to leave will probably succeed at it.
Sadly, it's one of the few new year's resolutions that people almost always
keep.
If
you’re considering leaving the church you attend, there are a few things you
may want to consider before making the leap.
Your
current church may have more to offer you – and you to offer it – than you may
realize.
(If
you’re a pastor who’s considering leaving your church, that will be the subject
of an upcoming post: Transition Without Relocation: 8 Ways to Stay Fresh In a
Long-Term Pastorate.)
Are
There Good Reasons To Leave A Church?
First,
let’s acknowledge that there are some good reasons for leaving a church. Here
are just a few:
•
The church is stuck in dead traditions
•
They’re so determined to do new things, they’ve become unbiblical
•
The leadership is not leading
•
The leadership is overly controlling
•
You live too far away
•
The only thing they want from you is a warm body and an offering
•
You’re hindering the health, unity or growth of the church (yes, the problem
might be you)
and more.
But
there are also some bad reasons to leave a church, even though they may seem
like good reasons at the time:
1.
Because It’s Small (Or Getting 'Too Big')
Many
of us have bought into the myth that, if a church is not growing numerically,
it must be broken. I call it The Grasshopper Myth, and it’s so prevalent I
wrote a book about it.
If
the ‘problem’ with your church is that it’s not getting bigger, I have good
news for you. Small is not a problem.
Is
it possible that the church’s lack of growth is a sign of deeper problems? Of
course. If so, the church needs to address those reasons. But if the only issue
you have with the church is its small size, that’s not a reason to leave.
On
the opposite side of the church size coin are people who leave because the
church is getting 'too big' for them. I may be a small church guy, but I don't
believe a church can get too big. Yes, some churches do unhealthy things to get
big. But other churches do unhealthy things that keep them small. Either way,
the problem is ill-health, not size.
The
size of the church is never a valid reason to leave a good church.
2.
You’re Not Being Fed
There’s
only so much growth we can receive as passive church consumers.
As
we grow spiritually, the amount we can take in from others – even from great
sermons and programs – diminishes until we do one thing: start serving.
Expecting
to grow spiritually by attending church but not participating is like expecting
to get physically healthy by eating better but not getting off the couch.
In
both 1 Corinthians 3 and Hebrews 5 we read about immature believers who wanted
more “milk”, even though they should have been ready for “solid food” (some
translations use the word “meat”). Often, church members will leave a church
because they want meatier sermons. But, while sermons can always be better, I
don't believe we can ever get spiritual meat from sermons. Just milk.
What
makes something milk is that it’s been through the cow. Someone else has eaten
it, chewed it, processed it and fed it to you. Meat is something we have to
chew on. It requires our work and participation.
If
you’re a mature believer who isn’t being fed, don’t look for another church.
Pick up a spoon and feed yourself. Then start serving and feeding others.
The
church is not a marketplace where we pick the spiritual products we like. The
church is a community that worships Jesus together. A family that cares for
each other. And a team that goes out to bless others in Jesus’ name.
People
don’t become giants of the faith by hearing better sermons. They do so by
drawing closer to Jesus and living better lives as a result.
3.
You Haven’t Found the Right Place to Serve
One
of the good reasons to leave your church (see above) was if the only thing they
want from you is a warm body and an offering.
But
before you do that, be sure that’s really what’s going on. If the church
leadership wants you to be involved, but hasn‘t found the right fit yet, keep
trying.
I’ve
known people to stay at our church for years before we finally found the right
fit at just the right time. They were always glad they waited.
4.
Someone Hurt Your Feelings
If
you leave your current church over hurt feelings, you’ll leave your next church
for the same reason. People are people. Feelings get hurt. Sometimes we’re too
sensitive, sometimes the hurts are real. Either way, the solution isn’t
leaving, it’s reconciliation. Or growing thicker skin.
Leaving
a good church because one or two people offended you, only to go to another
church where one or two people will offend you is not a solution.
5.
The Church Is Changing
Every
church needs to change. Not core theology. But methods, demographics,
leadership styles and more.
Buildings
need to be upgraded, new songs should be introduced, clothing styles fluctuate,
demographics shift. And more.
Some
people hit the brakes on every change, good or bad. If you have that tendency,
you need to resist the temptation to assume that a change is bad just because
it’s uncomfortable for you.
If
the leadership of your church is changing things before you think they should,
they're probably being proactive instead of reactive. That’s good leadership.
Society
is changing around us. Fast. If your church leaders are trying new ways to meet
the needs of a shifting society, don’t fight them. Help out.
6.
You’re Hindering the Health, Unity or Growth of the Church
I
know this was listed above as a good reason to leave the church. But not
always.
Before
you change churches, ask yourself if what really needs changing is you.
You
may discover that the change you feared in the church is the change you need in
yourself. I know. It’s happened to me more than once.
After
all, the Gospel is about change. From darkness to light, from death to life,
from sin to salvation. And sometimes, from stubborn to teachable.
This
may not be your time to change churches. It may be your time to let Jesus use
your church to change you.
7.
You’re Giving Up On Church Entirely
If
you’re planning to leave your current church to stop attending church
altogether, please reconsider this very dangerous step.
Very
few decisions are more likely to cause long-term spiritual damage than leaving
the church. Even for a little while. Because a little while almost always
becomes a very long time.
Even
deciding to ‘see what’s out there’ in other churches can be a dangerous
practice. Church-shopping can become church-hopping, which easily leads to
church-stopping.
Christianity
was never meant to be lived in isolation.
We
need you. You need us.
We
need each other.
Karl
Vaters
Karl
Vaters is the author of The Grasshopper Myth: Big Churches, Small Churches and
the Small Thinking That Divides Us. He’s been in pastoral ministry for over 30
years and has been the lead pastor of Cornerstone Christian Fellowship in
Fountain Valley, California for over 20 years
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