Part of me dislikes the “business” of church. Sometimes I want to gravitate away from leadership books and focus on the simplicity of the Gospel and Jesus. But if you are in a larger congregation instead of a simple home church or small group, you probably have to at least consider these kinds of recommendations.
Nieuwhof repeatedly states that the US culture is changing to a post-Christian state. Europe has been there for awhile. Canada is now there. The US is closer to completing the change each day. So the book addresses how to deal with that as church bodies in addition to deciding how to deal with changes in technology, generational differences, attitudes, etc.
If you follow Reggie Joiner and Orange, much of what is written in this book will sound familiar. Nieuwhof credits Joiner and Andy Stanley for influencing him. They collaborate in various ways through the Orange organization. Joiner and the Orange staff, which includes Nieuwhof, have written extensively about leadership, volunteers, parents and young people. Kara Powell, author of Sticky Faith, is also referenced in this book. She works with them and offers her important research and ideas too.
I’ve followed Orange closely for the past few years because I wanted to learn a new approach to volunteers and leaders especially when it comes to teaching children and teens. As a parent, I’ve learned a lot about the importance of that role too and how the church should be supporting parents not supplanting them.
The chapter about high-capacity leaders in Nieuwhof’s book really hit home with me. Again, much of it repeats what these other people are saying, but I felt like I could have written it based on our family’s own experience. It seemed to validate what we’ve thought and said.
In approaching and considering any of the suggestions in the book, the biggest challenge will be a church’s willingness to have honest conversations about its current status. Will church leaders truly want to hear from volunteers, parents, visitors, millennials about their experiences? Will they be able to listen openly and honestly to hear what people are saying? Or will they filter any input to fit what they want to hear or even become defensive and shun these people?
If leaders truly listen and work with these volunteers, parents, etc., then there is an opportunity to make changes for the better. Most parents, volunteers, etc want what’s best otherwise they wouldn’t continue to walk through your doors, bring their kids, give hours and hours of their time. But they also know when they aren’t being heard or even when they aren’t welcome to speak up.
One of the things I didn’t agree with completely relates to the reason the church meets on Sunday. For many congregations, their purpose may be limited to singing, preaching, and fellowship. But for others who take communion weekly, there is a different purpose. However, he makes a good point about the lack of guilt people now feel about missing weekly worship. So even for those who attend where communion is the center of the weekly gathering, modern mindsets don’t feel guilt, remorse, or even loss if they only participate once a month or less just as others feel that way if they miss a gathering of just singing and preaching. How to address that is one of the challenges he presents in the book.
I recommend reading this along with Joiner’s “Think Orange” books. They go hand in hand. For churches to grow, they have to have a healthy, vibrant children’s and youth ministry. Vibrant doesn’t mean a place for parents to drop their kids/teens off and let the children’s and youth ministers teach while parents go to class. It doesn’t mean a place that has a lot of activities and trips for kids and teens to take part in. It’s about those ministers incorporating the parents into those programs/activities and supporting the parents as much or more than the kids/teens themselves. When you connect that with Nieuwhof’s suggestions, you have a much greater chance for genuine growth and improved health of the congregation. (I have no connection to Joiner or Orange. We don’t even use their curriculum. But of all the things I’ve read about ministry with children, teens, parents, and volunteers, theirs is the most well researched, thought out, logical approach I’ve seen as a parent and as a volunteer/teacher.)