The Strategically Small Church Quotes
The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective
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Brandon J. O'Brien123 ratings, 3.98 average rating, 25 reviews
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The Strategically Small Church Quotes
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“I don’t mean to be overly dramatic. My point is simply this: Our dominant narrative of success is not supported by the story of the New Testament church. Scripture makes it hard to claim congregation size as a foolproof mark of faithfulness.”
― The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective
― The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective
“In fact, instead of illustrating the dominant narrative of success, the Bible testifies to the narrative most pastors experience – the narrative of obscurity. Sometimes faithfulness to God’s work results in the sudden shrinking of a group of followers. People left Jesus in droves when his teaching struck too near the bone. In John 6, just after Jesus feeds the five thousand and walks on water, he tells his disciples, “I tell you the truth, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.” Nobody had any idea what he was talking about; they were confused and offended. “This is very hard to understand. How can anyone accept it?” (v. 60 nlt). Jesus’ hard words had devastating consequences for his ministry: “From this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him” (v. 66).”
― The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective
― The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective
“These insights should adjust our mental image of the size and success of the early church. The three thousand that responded to Peter’s message were dispersed over an area twice the size of Texas and separated by the Mediterranean Sea. Pentecost may have been the first mass revival in history, but it did not create the first mega-church. Instead, Acts 2 records the birth of many small – even micro – congregations.”
― The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective
― The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective
“The overwhelming majority of pastors are living this second story, the narrative of obscurity. According to the Hartford Institute for Religion Research, there are 177,000 churches in America with fewer than 100 weekly worshipers and another 105,000 churches that see between 100 and 500 in attendance each week. On the other hand, there are only 19,000 churches – or 6 percent of the total – with more than 500 attendees. That means that if there were 100 churches in your town, 94 of them would have 500 or fewer attendees, and only six would have more than 500. Mega-churches (regular attendance over 2,000) make up less than one half of one percent of churches in America. The narrative of success may be the one people write books about, but it is not the typical one. We have allowed the ministry experience of 6 percent of pastors to become the standard by which the remaining 94 percent of us judge ourselves.”
― The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective
― The Strategically Small Church: Intimate, Nimble, Authentic, and Effective