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7 Reasons Your Church Is Overcommitted

Aaron Earls - November 13, 2018 4 Comments

street lights cars busy church overcommitted

zhang kaiyv photo | Pexels

By Thom S. Rainer

Many churches have become too busy for their own good.

They have so many activities, programs, events, and services that they are wearing out their congregations.

Here is the irony. Most of the activities in these churches were started with a noble cause to make a difference in the congregation and the community. But the members became so busy they don’t have time to connect with people in a meaningful way.

The overcommitted church has become the ineffective church.

So how did our churches get in this predicament? The causes are many, but here are seven of them:

1. You equate activity with value. 

Thus busy churches are deemed to be churches of value. And busy, exhausted, and frustrated church members are deemed to be Christians of value.

2. Your programs and ministries became ends instead of means. 

I recently asked a pastor why he continued a ministry that had dwindled from 220 participants to 23 participants. “Because,” he said, “this program is a part of the history and heritage that defines our church.” Warning: If a program defines your church, your church is in trouble.

3. You don’t have a clear purpose. 

Even the best of churches can only do so many things well. Once a church has no clear and defining purpose, it has no reason to start or discontinue a program or ministry. That issue then leads to the next two reasons.

4. Leaders failed to say “no.” 

Some church leaders can’t say “no” to new programs and ministries because they have no clear or defining purpose on what they should do. Others leaders simply lack courage to say “no.”

5. There’s a fear of eliminating anything. 

Once a program, ministry, or activity has begun, it can be exceedingly difficult to let it die. Sometimes leaders lack courage to kill programs. Sometimes they are blinded to the need to kill programs.

Sometimes they hesitate to kill a program because they don’t know a better alternative. We need more churches in the program killing business.

6. Church is defined as an address. 

As long as we think “church” means a physical location, we will try to load up that address with all kinds of busyness.

Many churches are ineffective at reaching their communities because their members are so busy at the building they call the church. That’s both bad ecclesiology and bad missiology.

7. Your church is trying to compete with culture rather than reach culture. 

A church in the deep South had a dynamic basketball ministry where they fielded community basketball teams comprised of church members and non-believers.

But once the church built its own gym and recreation center, the church members started spending all their time playing at their new facility. In an attempt to have a gym as good as those in the community, the church ironically became less effective reaching those in the community.

Busy churches. Activity-driven churches. Overcommitted churches. Ineffective churches.

Thom S. Rainer (@ThomRainer) is President and CEO of LifeWay Christian Resources and author of several books, including his most recent Scrappy Church. Read more at ThomRainer.com, where this post originally appeared.

Dig Deeper at LifeWay.com

Simple Church: Returning to God’s Process for Making Disciples

Thom S. Rainer & Eric Geiger

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Pastor Marylin Carson says

    November 13, 2018 at 10:33 pm

    I truly appreciate this information. I’m thinking keeping the church busy we will accomplish much. But reading this has showed me different. It is best to make disciples and not a name for the church. When it is God’s church the name will be spread by the disciples.
    For this is the importance that I must do as a leader at Abundant Life Apostolic Assembly is make disciples as my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ did when He was on the earth.

    Reply
  2. Michael Cooper says

    November 14, 2018 at 9:14 am

    Great insights.

    Reply
  3. Michael says

    November 15, 2018 at 9:33 am

    We in the church can become so busy that we don’t have time to develop relationships with those in the community (our neighborhood, other community involvement, work, hobbies, etc.). If we want to make an impact on the community for God’s glory, being exhausted from too much church activity is not the answer! We’re becoming too much like the world! Ironically, being too busy in the church can keep us from developing closer relationships with fellow believers! Take time to relax, enjoy life, and reach others for Jesus just because you love people. Jesus often took time to be with friends! He did ministry at the Father’s prompting and knew when to rest and get recharged for future ministry.

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. How I Worked Through a Negative Emotion - Janell Rardon says:
    May 20, 2020 at 4:02 pm

    […] it got even busier. Social media platforms were on fire with so much activity. The American Church is a busy church. I bought into this system for decades, thinking busyness equated with godliness. Thom S. Rainer of […]

    Reply

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