An outstanding post by Make Lake.....
The addiction to addition can be one
of the greatest factors that limit a church’s expanding influence in the
community and world. I’ve been reading from Acts lately and it’s challenging me
to have a greater mindset for multiplication. One of the things we always
marvel at when reading the story of the early church is the rapid addition of
more and more people to the church. Consider these passages from Acts 2-19,
- “and that day 3000 were
added to their number”
- “the Lord added to their
number daily”
- “and believers were
increasingly being added to their numbers”
- “the number of disciples
grew greatly in Jerusalem”
- “They increased in
number daily.”
There’s no doubt it’s exciting to be
a part of a growing environment. We love it when our small group spills over from
the living room into the dining room. It’s thrilling to see the ushers putting
out more seats in the auditorium because so many people have arrived for the
11:00 service. We celebrate when our church-wide serve event has 51%
of attendees showing up and using their gifts. These are all good things and
good signs of addition.
But when you look underneath the
surface of Luke’s record of the early church it’s not a book about
addition, it’s the story of multiplication. The disciples could’ve
easily become addicted to the rapid addition to their numbers in Jerusalem.
They could’ve settled in and made plans for bigger buildings, more seats and
increased capacity. These are all good things. But the disciple’s
obsession was not with addition, they recognized it was a movement
that called for multiplication. The early church leaders begin to move
the Gospel out, reproduce leaders and start a multiplication movement.
Somehow, as tempting as it must’ve been, they avoided the allure of
addition.
What are the signs we’ve become
addicted to addition?
- We’re more concerned
with expanding seating capacity rather than sending capacity.
- We’re more concerned
with how many people are in groups rather than how many people are leading and
multiplying groups.
- We’re more concerned
about how many show up to serve together at one time rather than how many we
can empower to serve 24/7
- We’re more concerned
about how many people are “following me” rather than how many people are
“leaving me” to go to lead a movement of their own
- We’re concerned only
about our community or our sphere of influence rather than the world and the
nations.
One of the biggest temptations in a rapid growing environment is to
become addicted to addition. Don’t get me wrong addition is good. But
multiplication is better.
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