
The invitation to discipleship is your consumer point of purchase. Having done all that singing, all that praying, all that preaching, this is the time for the congregant—saint, sinner, visitor, member, church mother, pastor—to decide for themselves where they’ll want to spend eternity. Drowning out meditative thought with up-tempo head-banger music is just stupid. There is no more important, no more vital a moment in your worship service. And this is, likely the very worst thing the black church does.
				
				
             	
				Reason 3: The Invitation To Discipleship
				What the Black Church does well is pageantry. They put on a good 
				show. What they do worst is connect people to Jesus. In 50 years 
				in the Black Church, no one has ever asked me if I knew Jesus. 
				They ask me what church I go to. The church 
				connects people to each other and to itself. But, sooner or 
				later, many move on because there’s no anchor to God. God is 
				often a guest in His own House while we celebrate endlessly and 
				work tirelessly for the next big show: Usher’s Annual Day, 
				Pastor’s Anniversary. There is a rich social contract within 
				these organizations. Leaving feels like a divorce: it’s painful 
				and destroys trust. But, sooner or later, amid all the noise and 
				warm embraces, we find unanswered questions forming the water’s 
				edge between religion and relationship. We begin to mistake our 
				relationship with the church or pastor with a relationship with 
				God. Most of us, myself included, have simply not been taught 
				very well. The dreary task of educating people about the basics 
				of doctrine and the nature of God is often colorless, thankless 
				work performed perfunctorily by willing workers who are 
				nonetheless reading from a pamphlet rather than illustrating 
				from experience. We slog through it over six miserable weeks, 
				and now back to our show.
				
				There’s nothing quite so sad as an empty church. I’ve visited a 
				great many empty churches. Churches with proud legacies now 
				reduced to a shadow of their former glory. Entire pews empty on 
				Sunday morning. Huge gaps in seating with people scattered into 
				little clusters around the sanctuary. Some churches have even 
				taken to roping off pews to encourage people to sit closer 
				together rather than scattered about.
				
				A half-empty or, worse, three-quarters empty church will usually 
				have a hard time growing. The churches that grow are churches 
				that are routinely filled to capacity every week. People want to 
				be where people are. It’s like the night club syndrome. Back 
				when I used to club (and, I really wasn’t much of a club 
				person), me and my crew would cruise the clubs looking for the 
				hot spot. The hot spot was typically the hardest place to get 
				into, the place with the lines out front. Usually, if we could 
				get into a club too easily, or if the cover was too cheap, we 
				knew the place wasn’t happening.
				
				
This mentality extends to the church. People become 
				self-conscious and critical of churches with empty pews while 
				churches busting at the seams are afforded a certain positive 
				outlook. If you expect the service to be good, the energy is 
				going forward. The pulpit has your attention and cooperation, 
				and your positive energy fuels the worship experience.
				If you walk into church expecting it to be tired, because 
				there’s only a handful of over-worked faithful there, chances 
				are you won’t be disappointed. The energy is going the opposite 
				way, and the pulpit, the choir, the deacons, the 
				ushers—everybody has to work three, four times as hard as the 
				packed-out church. Worship at the packed-out church is usually 
				good because people arrive expecting it to be good. Worship at 
				the half-empty or three-quarters empty church is usually tired 
				because that’s what people come to expect.
				Thus, the prosperous church prospers, and the struggling church 
				struggles, dwindles, and may ultimately close its doors.
Now, here’s the harsh realty: many of them need to close.
				Not because they’re small, or even because they’re tired. But 
				many black churches simply don’t need to exist. A quick 
				inventory of what the church is doing, in terms of evangelism, 
				spiritual growth, and community involvement, comparative to the 
				model established in Acts Chapter Two, will tell the whole 
				story. If you cannot name a single family who lives on the same 
				block your church is located on, your doors need to 
				close.
				This has nothing to do with money. This has nothing to do with 
				head count or any of those usual benchmarks. This has to do with 
				effectiveness, with 
				whether or not your church is, in fact, a church. Too many of 
				our churches are not churches at all, They have been allowed to 
				become social institutions—night clubs and elks clubs—moreso 
				than a body of believers.
				
				For God to bless your church, your church needs to be in a right 
				place with Him. Your church needs to be so sold out to God that 
				it is willing to do what God wants done and not stubbornly dig 
				in, clinging to a withering, fruitless branch of the tree. Jesus 
				cursed the fig tree that did not bear fruit [Mark 11:12-14]. It’s fair and 
				reasonable to evaluate your church over the previous months and 
				years and to soberly ask yourself if it is in fact bearing 
				fruit. Not how much fruit—not your head count of members 
				joined 
				(which, is often our mistake; using head counts to measure 
				effectiveness. God is not the least bit concerned with your head 
				count) —but ask God, soberly, prayerfully, about the quality of 
				your fruit. These people who joined your church: are they 
				actually saved? Do they actually have a thriving and productive 
				relationship with Jesus Christ? Do your members actually have 
				family devotion with their spouses and children? That's the 
				tough one—I'd guess 99.999% of our families do not, in fact, 
				have a daily or even weekly time of family worship. we stand up 
				every month and read that lie—that useless and  
				doctrinally questionable Baptist church covenant, and promise to 
				keep "family and secret devotions." Most of us do neither, and 
				our lives reflect that. This is, incidentally, the first of two 
				main reasons our children know nothing of God and do not fear 
				God (which we'll get into in two weeks): (1) your failure to share 
				Christ with them, usually because you yourself do not know 
				Christ and do not worship Him and do not live a life that honors 
				Him and your kids know it, and, (2) you keep paying that cable 
				or satellite bill, literally financing the garbage that is 
				destroying our youth right in front of our eyes.
Bottom line: we're talking about an inconsistent witness, church being marginalized to Sunday mornings. The church should exist in our hearts, should be part of our daily lives. The main reason our churches are struggling is we are not being taught this. we have far too many lousy, useless pastors, their names writ huge on the side of the church bus, but they can't even effectively communicate Christ to their own wives and children, let alone the church flock. Ministry is top-down: the rebellious godlessness of youth is a direct reflection of what is being preached in the home—nothing. The nothing being preached in the home is a direct and accurate measure of the quality of the pastor's leadership.
There's plenty of blame to go around, first and foremost to this pastor writing these words. In seeking answers to the frustrations of church growth, it is important to find the strength of character within yourself to ask God, soberly and in the fear of God, if your ministry actually has much of a purpose. If your church, and your church alone, is not indispensably effective in its community, if the very well-being of people is not directly impacted by your church, then all options can and should be on the table, including the dissolution of your church or a merger with another ministry or ministries. A merging would create a larger body of believers, who can be more effective at serving because the burden of service is spread across a wider base.
The obvious financial concerns can be eased somewhat, and all of the ministries involved can become more focused and more effective. The main objections to such mergers usually have nothing to do with ministry. Those objections are about vanity, about selfishness. Them versus Us. About money, about pastor unwilling to give up their power over the twelve people left at their church or the paycheck those twelve people finance. Churches that resist working together are usually led by people who are not allowing God to speak to them or through them, which is reason enough to allow such places to wither on the vine.


