Before going further, let me simply say that hoping, praying, and working for the growth of the Church does not mean you are willing to do whatever is necessary to make it grow. That is the lie of evangelicalism in which nearly everything is up for grabs in the quest to pack the pews. Indeed, the mega church side of this seems to suggest that those things that you must hold is smaller than those things you can discard for the sake of growth. I am not saying this. I am not at all suggesting that fidelity to the Scriptures, doctrine and creed, worship and piety, and service to others are less important than reaching out. Indeed, what is the purpose of reaching out (except numbers) if you are not reaching out with the faithful Gospel of Christ crucified and risen?
What I am asking is not what you are willing to give up in order to get more folks in the pews. What I am asking is whether or not we have become so accustomed to the decline of Christianity (or at least orthodox Christianity) that we suppose that this has become the new normal for us? Has it? Have we give into the idea that growth is either not possible or not normal anymore? Does Jesus not care if His Church grows or declines? Do we?
I am not at all holding myself up as an example. The Lord has granted success despite my many failings, to be sure. But He has granted success. My first parish was in a local that long ago had seen its better days. The main drag was pretty empty and in disrepair. The industry that once fueled the economy was in tatters and there was nothing to replace it. The congregation was also in rough shape -- afflicted by division over doctrine and practice, accustomed to disappointment, not sure that Lutheran was a positive word or negative one, and suffering from a building in disrepair and an empty checkbook. I was convinced that the reason so many pastors showed up at my installation was to see the guy who was foolish enough to accept the call (which I did and was though it was my first placement out of seminary). By the end of nearly 13 years there, doctrine and practice was solidly Lutheran, the congregation was united, the building was in better shape, and the numbers were up (attendance and membership).
In contrast, my second and last call came to a city on the move but a congregation which was not moving at all. Divided, overcome with disappointment, short of people and funds, with a building debt and in disrepair, and known as a congregation which was for people who were not from here, the congregation was barely keeping the doors open. Somehow we became one of the most liturgical congregations in Synod, built and paid for an impressive building and a huge pipe organ, and became well known in the community. Even more surprising, we grew by 250% and continue to see new people walk through the doors each week. Again, I am not at all lauding my example or gifts. What I am suggesting is that faithfulness in preaching, teaching, and worship along with a warm welcome bear fruits. Are we surprised? We should not be. Sometimes the dynamics around us leave us with little except decline (like my home congregation in a rural area where the numbers of people and especially those under 65 continues to decline significantly every year!). But that does not mean that we should become so comfortable with decline that we no longer expect to grow. I fear that we as a church body have become resigned to the fact that we can do our best but will not seem much happen. My own experience is that this is not the case and I am confident we are but one of hundreds of examples of congregations and pastors whose faithfulness brings new people into the pews every week.
So what am I saying? Expect the Lord to grow His Church. Even when you do not see it and labor faithfully through the years, expect the Lord to grow His Church. Pray for it. Do not trade off faithfulness in doctrine or fidelity to God's Word or liturgical worship for the promise of bodies in the pews. Expect that faithfulness in doctrine, fidelity to God's Word, and faithful catholic worship (like our Confessions expect) will result in growth. We should not be consoled by the years when our decline is less than in other years or less than we predicted. We should only be consoled by trusting that He is Lord of the Church when we are doing everything we can in faithfulness to the Lord's Word and will and growth does not come. But we should not get used to it. It may be safer to expect less and be surprised by more but that is not the way of the Lord. Trust does not mean resignation to the things that disappoint us. Trust means hoping against hope, when nothing gives a sign of that which is to come, that the Lord will grow His Church.




