New Monmouth Musings: Are You An Active Member? You Might
Be Surprised When You Read This List
Dear Friends,
What makes an active church member? There are a
number of criteria one might offer beginning with one of the most
predicable means of measuring church activity, and that is worship attendance.
It used to be that an active member was considered to be one who attended
church three times a week. They might attend Sunday morning, a mid week service
and maybe a Bible study. Today we have lowered the bar, and many consider
worshipping three times a month qualifies you to be called active member. That
is a difference of 75 percent. What if you were to reduce the time you spent
with your spouse by 75 percent? The marriage counselor might be just around the
corner. Hebrews 10:24-25 exhorts us "to consider how we may spur one
another on toward love and good deeds. Let us not give up meeting together, as
some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another-and all the
more as you see the Day approaching".
But there are other means of measuring active
membership, and let me share some of them with you to see how we stack up?
Secondly an active member will pursue
meaningful relationships with others in the family. One of the best ways to do
that is through small group involvement. A member who is involved in a small
group will be five times less likely to drop out from the church over a five-year
period than one who is not involved in a small group. Relationships are the
glue that holds the church together.
Thirdly, you are giving regularly and
systematically to the church. You are investing in kingdom purposes through the
stewardship of your resources. The bible is clear that "where your
treasure is there will your heart be also" (Matthew 6:21). Your heart will
follow your money which seems counter intuitive, but it is true. If you invest
in the stock market you will be anxious to regularly check the stock prices
because you are interested in your investment. If you give to the church, you
become more interested and more involved as you want to know how your giving is
being used for kingdom causes.
Fourth, you will be involved in some form of
ministry: serving on a cleaning crew, setting up tables for fellowship,
ushering, greeting, teaching, welcoming new visitors, serving in youth
ministry, teaching Sunday School. There
are plenty of opportunities to become involved, and if you are not sure where
you might fit in, let us know and we’ll find an area of service that fits your
interest.
Fifth, you are inviting others to church
because you want others to experience what you have experienced. If you are
excited about something, you will encourage others to become involved. When we
find a good restaurant, one of the first things we will do is to tell others
about our experience, and the same is true for the church.
Sixth You are reading your bible daily,
involved in some form of spiritual discipline like prayer, bible study or
fasting, using a daily devotional or watching a podcast.
Seventh you are able to share the vision and
purpose of the church. Your elders have been prayerfully working to identify
our church's core values, those qualities that identify us and guide us in
developing our mission and ministry. It is important for each member to be able
to identify our values and our distinctives and to be able to communicate
those values to others. Hopefully, within the next couple of months, these
values will be shared with the congregation through a series of messages from
the pulpit.
I write this not to foster guilt or heap
judgment on anyone who doesn't subscribe or measure up to these
above qualities of active membership. I fully realize that none of us will
probably ever fulfill all of them. But the more qualities we do identify as
part of our church's DNA, the more likely we would be considered active
members. The church needs active members, each one bearing and sharing part of
the ministry load. May God help us develop these kinds of members, who can help
us storm the gates of hell and pull down Satan's kingdom. Will you join us?
Yours in faith and friendship,
Pastor Tom
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