STRUCTURE
DEVOTION TO SCRIPTURE
More than anything we want people to be lovers of the person of Jesus. Far too often we are lovers of sermons, lovers of music, lovers of good books, lovers of community. But are we primarily in love with God Himself? A church cannot be successful or healthy if the people are not personally meeting with and enjoying God consistently. The greatest command is to love God with all of our heart, soul, mind, and strength, so this must be our greatest priority. We want to be a people who are so devoted to reading, memorizing, meditating, and obeying the Bible. These actions come out of a love and desire to know God more deeply. We don’t begrudgingly open our Bibles to read just for information. We want to be transformed by our creator through His Word. That's why we've devoted ourselves to reading through the Bible together each year and discussing what the Lord is teaching us each week at our gatherings.
WE MEET IN HOMES
If you had no history or exposure to the church at all other than reading the New Testament, what would you expect to see if someone invited you to a gathering of a church? We’ve thought about this question a lot. Based on the more than fifty “one another” commands in the New Testament, we would expect to see a lot of love among Christians when they gather. Based on the way Paul describes the church in 1 Corinthians and Ephesians, we would expect to see people contributing their spiritual gifts. We’d picture people living like a true family inside and outside of the gathering. We’d expect to see a lot of smiling, a lot of hugging, a lot of crying together, a lot of meals shared, and a lot of life connection throughout the week. We wouldn’t picture a huge auditorium or rows or a stage or everyone being quiet while just a few people lead. We’re not saying it’s wrong to do this. But the question is: do our structures undermine or contribute towards God’s commands in Scripture, especially the ones that are emphasized and repeated? And if there are more than 50 “one another” commands that call us to radical, intimate, deep love for each other, why would the thing we call “church” be something where we don’t interact with or know each other?
In order to help us truly love each other, we’ve committed to having groups of 10-25 people meeting in a home. It seems that once a group gets to 30 or 50 or 100 people it becomes increasingly more difficult to live like a family, truly know each other, carry each other’s burdens, and build each other up. Many churches will do this in the form of a community group, which is great. But far too often people view a Sunday morning big gathering as the primary context of church, and the community group as optional. For us, we want to everyone to opt into sharing life, and therefore the primary context of church for them is a spiritual family of 10-25 people.
FINANCES
Another reason we meet in homes is because of the financial implications. Far too often, reliance on buildings or church staffing means a big budget increase in order to have church growth. By meeting in homes and having no church building or paid staff, we have the option to scale exponentially without increasing our budget by much. We also set ourselves up for using our financial resources more strategically for local and global missions. All giving fits in three categories: ministry, missions, and meeting needs. These three categories keep us on track to advance the gospel, help the less fortunate and hurting, and make disciples near and far.
EVERYONE DISCIPLED AND DISCIPLING
Everyone is called to make disciples (Matthew 28:18-20). We are all called to share the gospel with non-believers in hopes that they would follow Jesus. We are all called to take responsibility for the spiritual care of other believers. But discipleship is hard and messy. It involves intentionally getting to know someone, having hard conversations when sin is evident, working through conflict, and spending extra time with them when life gets hard.
Our temptation in the church has been to replace discipleship with various other programs. If there is a married couple struggling, we might often suggest they read a book, enroll in a marriage class, or go on a retreat. But what they need most is older couples who love Jesus to come alongside of them and do life with them through life’s challenges. Though these programs could be helpful, we often hide behind them and ignore our responsibility to make disciples. We intentionally restrain ourselves from starting classes or programs that could start making people feel like discipleship isn’t needed as much. It’s not that these programs would be bad, but they might undermine what is best and most important.
In our church, the pastors are not responsible for discipling everyone, but rather they will each disciple a few and then ensure that those disciples are also discipling a few. And for those who are new to the faith, though they might not be fully responsible for the spiritual care of another person, they are actively engaging in evangelistic efforts and being trained to take responsibility for others.
Another reason we want the entry point to joining our church to be in the context of a small, intimate, intentional group of believers is so that there is no room to hide. Each person’s life is consistently being poked and prodded by someone. It means that each person is expected to be transparent with a few other believers about the things they would want hide, while those believers walk with them through healing, repentance, and believing the promises of God. There shouldn’t be any room for people who just “attend church” when everyone is being discipled for life and ministry.
Discipleship is taking responsibility for the spiritual care of somebody else. It doesn’t mean you’re the only one invested in that person, but it does mean you should be aware of what’s going on in their life. Discipleship is life on life. If you’re discipling someone, have them be around you a lot. One of the tools we use to disciple believers is T4T. Training 4 Trainers is a proven discipleship method that takes people through the Bible (not curriculum) and helps them understand what a basic disciple of Jesus is. On completion, all disciples are expected to replicate and teach someone else.
REPLICATE GATHERINGS
So many churches begin small, relational, and discipleship-focused, but aren’t able to maintain those characteristics as numeric growth happens. Before they know it, they have become more and more of a machine rather than a healthy family. Meeting in homes sounds great, but what happens as the church grows? How does a church adapt as the Lord adds to their number? One word: Multiplication. The true fruit of an apple tree isn’t apples, but rather more apple trees. The true fruit of a strong leader is not followers, but more strong leaders. The true fruit of a healthy church is not congregants, but more healthy churches. God has designed the world to be one that reproduces and multiplies. The apple trees that can’t multiply are ones that are genetically modified. We have too many GMO churches, and not enough reproducing churches.
Multiplication is not something we force, but we do push for it. Rarely does a house go, “we want to multiply and we’re ready!” Almost everyone says, “We don’t want to multiply yet.” Who’s going to want to see half the people walk away? It hurts. But if we don’t aim to multiply regularly, it will never happen. It’s like your English teacher assigns you a 7-page paper. You ask, “When is it due?” He says, “Whenever.” You’re not going to write that paper. You’re going to put it off. Multiplication is one of those things we will put off. You get to 20, 25, 30 people. Before you know it, you will lose the thing you love. At that size, there is not the same level of intimacy and care. We only get to experience amazing family life because churches have multiplied before us, and we want to continue in this practice.
What does “regular” multiplication means? It means as a wider church family we are constantly evaluating whether it is time to multiply. We have target dates, but they are goals. If there are just 5 people in an existing house church, we won’t force multiplication.
SIMPLE GATHERINGS
When things started getting out of control in Corinth, Paul reminded them of how he started the church. In 1 Corinthians 2 he states that he intentionally held back from using “eloquence”, “human wisdom”, and “wise and persuasive words” when starting and building the church there. He didn’t want their walk with Jesus to be built on anything other than the power of the gospel message of Jesus. He then goes on to describe himself in chapter three as a wise, master builder in how he approached building the church. Likewise, Jesus was unwilling to draw people with anything other than Himself. In John 6, people are coming after Jesus because He provided them with food. Jesus refuses to give them physical food anymore to make sure that only those who really want to follow Jesus will remain. Are we willing to do the same in our churches? Are we willing to strip everything away to make sure people are being drawn by Jesus and Jesus alone?
We try to be very intentional that we aren’t drawing people in with anything other than Jesus. There is no impressive service. The church isn’t built on a well-known leader. We don’t have any paid staff or attractive programs. The main thing you get in joining Servants Church is Jesus and belonging to the community of believers He has formed. If you don’t want Jesus and/or don’t want deep Jesus community then you won’t want to be a part of this church. Where many church conferences are about how to create impressive strategies to draw people and build the church numerically, we are resolved to not offer anything other than Jesus and His people. Jesus will build His church. Paul knew it. Jesus knew it. Let’s not do anything different.