When a major conflict surfaces in a local church, the pastor usually becomes entangled in the mess … even if he didn’t start it … and even if the conflict doesn’t initially center upon him.
And in too many cases in our day, when the pastor becomes embroiled in a church conflict, those who don’t agree with the pastor’s position seek to force him from office.
Both in my book Church Coup, as well as in this blog, I write a lot about how pastors are negatively impacted by such conflicts.
But pastors aren’t the only casualties.
In fact, the primary casualty resulting from severe conflict may be our message: the Christian gospel.
Paul gives the most complete description of the gospel in 1 Corinthians 15:3-8 when he says that:
*Christ died … and His burial proves He died.
*Christ arose … and His appearances prove He rose.
History tells us that Christ died and rose again.
Faith tells us that Christ died for our sins.
Over in 2 Corinthians 5:18-19, Paul tells us that God “reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation.”
Paul tells us twice within the space of two verses that God has given us [believers] the ministry/message of reconciliation.
Paul’s emphasis in these verses is that God took the initiative to turn enemies [unbelievers] into friends [believers] through the sacrifice of Christ on the cross … and God wants us to share this message of reconciliation with the world.
God wants to reconcile us to Him, but He doesn’t want to stop there.
God also wants those who have been reconciled to Him to reconcile with one another. Jesus told His followers in John 13:34-35:
“A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”
In His High Priestly Prayer in John 17:21, Jesus made a similar statement to His Father:
“… that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have sent me.”
Francis Schaeffer, the Christian theologian and philosopher, called Christian unity “the final apologetic.” The world may be able to argue with our doctrine, but if we love each other authentically, they can’t argue with our community … which is a testimony to the truth of our message.
But the converse is also true: if we don’t love one another … if we backbite and fight and quarrel and separate … then people will not know that we are Christ’s disciples, and the world will not be inclined to believe our message: that the Father sent the Son.
Let me share four ways I have seen the gospel message negated by major church conflict:
First, the bad news of the conflict seems to overwhelm the good news of the gospel.
When a pastor is under attack … when a staff member is engaging in rebellion … when a group threatens to leave the church together … those actions result in negative emotions, and they tend to permeate the entire congregation.
You can feel it when you step onto the campus.
Many years ago, when my wife and I lived in Anaheim, we had the weekend off from our church, so we decided to visit the church behind our apartment complex.
When we entered the worship center, I could sense that something was wrong, even though no one said a word about it. You could cut the tension with a knife.
The pastor spent the first twenty minutes of the service defensively explaining some changes he wanted to make to the church’s schedule. Twenty minutes!
Soon afterwards, that pastor resigned … and I never visited that church again … in part because I didn’t want to experience those anxious feelings again.
My guess is that others felt the same way.
Second, people don’t feel like inviting unbelievers from their social network to church during a conflict.
Imagine that you’re ten years old and you’ve invited your best friend to your house one Sunday.
Since your friend lives a few houses down the street, you wait for him in your front yard … but as he approaches, you hear your mother and two siblings verbally fighting with each other in the house.
Do you want your friend to enter your home with all the tension going on? Probably not … because it’s embarrassing.
In fact, as long as there is the possibility that there’s going to be fighting inside your house, you’re probably not going to invite any friends over at all.
When churches are filled with anxiety and tension, attendees don’t want to invite family, friends, or co-workers over because it’s poor marketing for the truth of the gospel.
Churches don’t grow during times of major conflict … and the gospel message, powerful as it is, falls on rocky ground.
Third, people aren’t attracted to our message during a major conflict.
There is a religious group in our neighborhood that goes door-to-door sharing their message. My wife and I know some people in this group, and they have tried sharing their faith with us.
But their buildings are tiny … they don’t celebrate Christmas or birthdays … and I can’t point to one thing that I find attractive about their faith.
Why would I want to join their group?
Conversely, many Christian buildings are quite spacious … we do celebrate Christmas and most birthdays … and there are many things that are attractive about our faith.
And yet … who wants to believe our message if it seems to result in people despising each other?
If Christians are going to win people to Christ, we have to embody our message … not only that Christ died for everyone, but also that Jesus wants His people to love one another.
And when the opposite is occurring, people stay away from our churches.
In my last church, my wife always talked about “spreading good rumors.” For years, the news that come out of our church was positive, inspiring, and uplifting.
But when a major conflict broke out, it was reported to us that someone in city government … speaking about our church … told a friend, “They’re having problems. You don’t want to go there.”
The power of our message to attract unchurched people was negated by our inability to get along.
Finally, people leave our churches in droves during times of major conflict … and don’t feel like sharing the gospel.
I vividly remember a Sunday during the conflict in my last church when our leaders held two public meetings to discuss some issues that were affecting our spiritual family.
The meeting was hijacked by one person. He shared a litany of charges against me … most of them untrue … and from that time on, the congregation morphed into something unrecognizable.
After the second meeting, a kind and gentle man came up to me and expressed his sorrow for what I had experienced.
I never saw him again … and he never came back to the church, even though he had attended for many years.
That meeting ended his association with our fellowship forever.
Some tried to stay at the church they called home, but over time, many good people gradually left … some finding a new church home … some not going to church anywhere.
God’s people expect that their church will be a place of love and peace and joy … and when it’s like that, they are open to sharing their faith.
But when their church becomes a place of hatred and war and sadness … people resist sharing their faith because their fellow Christians fail to embody the message of reconciliation.
Yes, I know that disagreements between Christians are normal and can even be healthy in the long run.
But when conflicts spill over boundaries … when people conspire to “take out” their pastor … when God’s people are obsessed with winning at all costs … the greatest casualty may not be the pastor’s job … or the well-being of the staff and official board … or a slide in church donations and attendance.
The greatest casualty of all may be the negative impact on the gospel: that God in Christ came to reconcile sinners to Himself … and that when God’s people love each other, we provide a powerful message to a fractured world.
The question that we should ask when we’re engaged in a major church conflict … but rarely do … is this one:
How will the gospel be impacted by this conflict?
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How Severe Conflict in Churches Negates the Gospel
February 19, 2016 by Jim Meyer
When a major conflict surfaces in a local church, the pastor usually becomes entangled in the mess … even if he didn’t start it … and even if the conflict doesn’t initially center upon him.
And in too many cases in our day, when the pastor becomes embroiled in a church conflict, those who don’t agree with the pastor’s position seek to force him from office.
Both in my book Church Coup, as well as in this blog, I write a lot about how pastors are negatively impacted by such conflicts.
But pastors aren’t the only casualties.
In fact, the primary casualty resulting from severe conflict may be our message: the Christian gospel.
Paul gives the most complete description of the gospel in 1 Corinthians 15:3-8 when he says that:
*Christ died … and His burial proves He died.
*Christ arose … and His appearances prove He rose.
History tells us that Christ died and rose again.
Faith tells us that Christ died for our sins.
Over in 2 Corinthians 5:18-19, Paul tells us that God “reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation: that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, not counting men’s sins against them. And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation.”
Paul tells us twice within the space of two verses that God has given us [believers] the ministry/message of reconciliation.
Paul’s emphasis in these verses is that God took the initiative to turn enemies [unbelievers] into friends [believers] through the sacrifice of Christ on the cross … and God wants us to share this message of reconciliation with the world.
God wants to reconcile us to Him, but He doesn’t want to stop there.
God also wants those who have been reconciled to Him to reconcile with one another. Jesus told His followers in John 13:34-35:
“A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”
In His High Priestly Prayer in John 17:21, Jesus made a similar statement to His Father:
“… that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have sent me.”
Francis Schaeffer, the Christian theologian and philosopher, called Christian unity “the final apologetic.” The world may be able to argue with our doctrine, but if we love each other authentically, they can’t argue with our community … which is a testimony to the truth of our message.
But the converse is also true: if we don’t love one another … if we backbite and fight and quarrel and separate … then people will not know that we are Christ’s disciples, and the world will not be inclined to believe our message: that the Father sent the Son.
Let me share four ways I have seen the gospel message negated by major church conflict:
First, the bad news of the conflict seems to overwhelm the good news of the gospel.
When a pastor is under attack … when a staff member is engaging in rebellion … when a group threatens to leave the church together … those actions result in negative emotions, and they tend to permeate the entire congregation.
You can feel it when you step onto the campus.
Many years ago, when my wife and I lived in Anaheim, we had the weekend off from our church, so we decided to visit the church behind our apartment complex.
When we entered the worship center, I could sense that something was wrong, even though no one said a word about it. You could cut the tension with a knife.
The pastor spent the first twenty minutes of the service defensively explaining some changes he wanted to make to the church’s schedule. Twenty minutes!
Soon afterwards, that pastor resigned … and I never visited that church again … in part because I didn’t want to experience those anxious feelings again.
My guess is that others felt the same way.
Second, people don’t feel like inviting unbelievers from their social network to church during a conflict.
Imagine that you’re ten years old and you’ve invited your best friend to your house one Sunday.
Since your friend lives a few houses down the street, you wait for him in your front yard … but as he approaches, you hear your mother and two siblings verbally fighting with each other in the house.
Do you want your friend to enter your home with all the tension going on? Probably not … because it’s embarrassing.
In fact, as long as there is the possibility that there’s going to be fighting inside your house, you’re probably not going to invite any friends over at all.
When churches are filled with anxiety and tension, attendees don’t want to invite family, friends, or co-workers over because it’s poor marketing for the truth of the gospel.
Churches don’t grow during times of major conflict … and the gospel message, powerful as it is, falls on rocky ground.
Third, people aren’t attracted to our message during a major conflict.
There is a religious group in our neighborhood that goes door-to-door sharing their message. My wife and I know some people in this group, and they have tried sharing their faith with us.
But their buildings are tiny … they don’t celebrate Christmas or birthdays … and I can’t point to one thing that I find attractive about their faith.
Why would I want to join their group?
Conversely, many Christian buildings are quite spacious … we do celebrate Christmas and most birthdays … and there are many things that are attractive about our faith.
And yet … who wants to believe our message if it seems to result in people despising each other?
If Christians are going to win people to Christ, we have to embody our message … not only that Christ died for everyone, but also that Jesus wants His people to love one another.
And when the opposite is occurring, people stay away from our churches.
In my last church, my wife always talked about “spreading good rumors.” For years, the news that come out of our church was positive, inspiring, and uplifting.
But when a major conflict broke out, it was reported to us that someone in city government … speaking about our church … told a friend, “They’re having problems. You don’t want to go there.”
The power of our message to attract unchurched people was negated by our inability to get along.
Finally, people leave our churches in droves during times of major conflict … and don’t feel like sharing the gospel.
I vividly remember a Sunday during the conflict in my last church when our leaders held two public meetings to discuss some issues that were affecting our spiritual family.
The meeting was hijacked by one person. He shared a litany of charges against me … most of them untrue … and from that time on, the congregation morphed into something unrecognizable.
After the second meeting, a kind and gentle man came up to me and expressed his sorrow for what I had experienced.
I never saw him again … and he never came back to the church, even though he had attended for many years.
That meeting ended his association with our fellowship forever.
Some tried to stay at the church they called home, but over time, many good people gradually left … some finding a new church home … some not going to church anywhere.
God’s people expect that their church will be a place of love and peace and joy … and when it’s like that, they are open to sharing their faith.
But when their church becomes a place of hatred and war and sadness … people resist sharing their faith because their fellow Christians fail to embody the message of reconciliation.
Yes, I know that disagreements between Christians are normal and can even be healthy in the long run.
But when conflicts spill over boundaries … when people conspire to “take out” their pastor … when God’s people are obsessed with winning at all costs … the greatest casualty may not be the pastor’s job … or the well-being of the staff and official board … or a slide in church donations and attendance.
The greatest casualty of all may be the negative impact on the gospel: that God in Christ came to reconcile sinners to Himself … and that when God’s people love each other, we provide a powerful message to a fractured world.
The question that we should ask when we’re engaged in a major church conflict … but rarely do … is this one:
How will the gospel be impacted by this conflict?
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