If we are changed, congregations will be characterized by how well we love one another. Clusters of Christ-followers will grow in intimacy, enjoy life together, provide for and care for each other, and be the hands and feet of Jesus to one another. People who are not part of the community of faith will seek to learn why they see us caring for each other in such counter-cultural ways. We will see ministries and programs inside and outside the walls of our buildings working together to better serve the larger mission of being God’s people.
If we are changed, people will be excited to find ways to serve. Leaders will help every Jesus-follower discover how God wired them and assist them to explore opportunities that faithfully steward their gifts, skills and heart passions. Worship will become a lifestyle that impacts everything we do rather than a weekly event. Even business meetings will be times of worship, celebrating what God is doing, and dreaming together about what God wants to do next through us.
If we are changed, leaders and people will know one another’s hearts so well that they trust each other deeply. We will see boards, committees, teams and congregations comprised of people who have learned how to disagree passionately about ideas and strategies, but who do so in healthy ways that ultimately allow them to come together around the decisions they make. Those working in a ministry will know that their team leaders have the ministry’s best interests at heart, and leaders will have utmost confidence in those doing the ministry. Everyone will understand how their individual efforts fit into the overarching purpose of God’s plan of redemption and restoration. There will no longer be any meaningless tasks, only differing ministry assignments.
If we are changed, congregations will be eager to have their pastors lead them forward in their spiritual development. Believers will be willing to follow their leaders into new and exciting ways of becoming missionaries to the cultures they already interact with in their daily lives. We will see increasing numbers of previously distant people drawn to the beauty of authentically Christ-centered community, and ultimately join in the journey with Jesus.
If we
are changed, collections of Jesus-followers will celebrate new stories of changed lives and needs met more than they worry about attendance numbers at church events. Pockets of believers who gather in places where real life is happening and who are connecting in relational ways with un-churched people will increasingly become part of our expanding understanding and expression of “being the church” in the world. As these groups of people continue to multiply we will see the natural multiplication of new churches.