To some Donald A. McGavran is one of the greatest missiologist in Christian history. To others his name is almost synonymous with the Devil. Those who malign McGavran simply have misunderstood him. They say all he is about is numbers. That he is responsible for pastors building large churches around the homogenous model. They say all he was about is church growth.
The title of my first book was The Church Growth Handbook. I had never heard of McGavran at the time. All I knew was that God had called me to change lives in Jesus and when that happened my church or someone else’s church grew and that was what it was all about.
It wasn’t long before I began to receive hate mail from colleagues who said I had sold out to the Devil. I didn’t understand at the time that they were referring to the work of McGavran. They hated McGavran because in their mind all he and the church growth movement were concerned about was numbers and growing large churches.
Well, that’s only because they hadn’t taken the time to read McGavran. If they had, here is what they would have learned.
- He challenged people to think in terms of reaching “people groups” with the Gospel instead of individuals.
- He called for converts to immerse themselves in the culture rather than be extracted from the culture into mission stations as many churches do today.
- He emphasized calling people groups and individuals to faith in Christ rather than building large churches (most of his work was done on the mission field where large churches didn’t exist).
- The term “church growth” and the emphasis on numbers were always used in relationship to salvation.
- The ultimate goal of the Gospel is not building churches but advancing the Kingdom of God.
- Most of his ministry was done outside any relationship to a congregation.
What many don’t know about McGavran is that much of his work was done in the field totally apart from any form of institutional church. So numbers were never his concern- fulfilling the Great Commission was what drove the man to all that he did.
It’s time we recognized one of the great men of the faith- Donald McGavran- and quit saying all he was interested in was numbers.
Bill Easum
www.churchconsultations.com
easum@aol.com
December 29th, 2009 on 12:20 am
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December 30th, 2009 on 12:47 pm
I have read Mcgavran’s book as mentioned above and also your book on Growing Spiritual Redwoods. My question is how do you make Mcgavran’s methods work in an affluent metropolitan area. You were at my church(St. Peter’s United Methodist Church) in Feb. 2009. I think in your short time at our church you really nailed the church’s strengths and weaknesses. From your recommendations and what I believe are truths from your visit, we are making a lot of changes, in both staff, worship schedules, parking, mission statement, communications. Where we are still struggling is the leadership organization, mission, and evangelism. I worry that all the other changes while meaningful are not the main answer. If you remember us, would look forward to your suggestions.
December 30th, 2009 on 1:34 pm
Jim, I will contact you by email. I need to know more about your issue. You might also consider joining the Next Level Coaching Network to begin in March. you can find out about it here http://churchconsultations.com/church-growth/coaching/next-level-coaching-network/