Invade your community with compassion
By Tommy Sparger
The local church is the hope of the world
Bill Hybels,
pastor of Willow Creek Community Church near Chicago, coined the statement.
Great leaders have reiterated it and I believe it with all my heart.
Just as Jesus was the revelation and representation of His
Father to the world, the local church represents Jesus. When a community sees a
church, they should see Christ. The church is called to be Jesus to its
community.
I think that rocks (and that’s a good thing).
The heart of Jesus’ ministry was and is compassion. Jesus
reached out to everyone including the poor, the sinful, the down and out, and
the marginalized. At North Point Church — where I pastor in Springfield,
Mo. — we strive to emulate Jesus by cultivating a culture of compassion
in our church that extends to our community through outreaches.
Doing so has transformed our church on several fronts:
Dozens of people have made commitments to Christ and countless members of our
church have been spiritually revolutionized.
It’s all good
Since our church started four years ago community outreaches
have been a cornerstone to our growth numerically and spiritually. There is
nothing more spiritual than partnering with God to see Him produce life change
in the hearts of people in our church and community.
To that end, we have given away tens of thousands of dollars
in school supplies, frozen turkeys at Thanksgiving, clothing, shoes, bicycles
at Christmas, food and general services.
Each year we do a school makeover where up to 350 volunteers
from the church paint, landscape, clean, scrub and repair a public school. We
have also done home makeovers and have given away several cars and Christmas
shopping sprees to families in need. In addition to this, we have provided 75
local classrooms with their annual budgets for teachers.
By helping others, we work the DNA of servanthood, giving
and Christ-centered compassion into our church body. One of the unique things
about our outreaches is we do them with no strings attached.
For instance, we don’t corral school officials into a room
during the school makeovers and force them to listen to one of my sermons.
Instead, we give, expecting nothing in return. As a church we are committed to
this philosophy, believing it to be the model Jesus left for us.
Show me the money
Some people tell me, “We can’t afford to do such
outreaches.” I don’t believe this
to be true for several reasons.
First, when a church does compassion outreaches it
automatically falls in step with God’s will, and He provides.
Second, people will give to a big vision — especially
one that is God-breathed and heaven-sent.
Our congregation is made up of lower- to middle-income
families. The fact we are not a rich church has not stopped or even hindered
the outreaches we do.
The first Christmas we had as a church, which was less than
three months after we opened our doors, I wanted to give away 225 brand new
bikes to kids in need with no strings attached.
The bikes cost about $35 each. With refreshments, bows and
all the extras that go along with doing compassion outreaches, I was confident
we didn’t have the money in our general budget for this ministry.
So, I went to
our people and presented the vision. They not only gave above and beyond their
tithes and offerings, but they did so with tears of happiness and grateful
attitudes. They even came in on a Saturday and put the bikes together.
Third, don’t be surprised when your outreaches capture the
attention of the community. I can’t tell you how many of our ventures have been
covered by the local media. We don’t do our projects for this reason and
neither will you, but when the media takes interest, it’s like getting free
exposure.
Consequently more people come to check out the church. Many
of those visitors stay, commit their lives to Christ, and become faithful
members.
Wrecked in a good way
For a myriad of reasons many people are skeptical of
Christians even though they may like the idea of God and Jesus. It’s against
this backdrop we put our faith in action instead of just talking about it.
Jesus came for everybody. The Great Commission is real.
We’re supposed to reach everyone, not just church people, and that’s why we
strive to make our church relevant to the culture and the people.
To do so, we work hard to connect with people during the
outreaches by being authentic and caring. At church we constantly challenge our
people to invest in relationships with family, neighbors and friends, and
invite them to a church service where they will receive the timeless message of
the gospel in a culturally relevant atmosphere.
When missionaries go to another country, they learn the
culture, language and about the people. This helps in being relevant to those
they hope to reach. Missionaries also understand their ministry is for both
believers and people in the world.
We take the same approach.
Begin with compassion
Compassion outreach is great, but people need a church
— they need the Hope of the world. It doesn’t do any good to do an outreach
if a church is not relevant, welcoming and friendly. Such an atmosphere creates
a place where people can feel God’s presence and be challenged for a life
change.
Every week we give people the opportunity to make a decision
to become a follower of Christ. People respond every Sunday and lives are
changed. Jesus’ heart is with people, and He wants to reach those who don’t
know Him.
That’s reason enough to be relevant and do compassion
outreaches regularly. Your church has the resources, ability, and calling to
partner with God in being Christ to your community. You just have to get out
and do it.
If you do, I guarantee the endeavor will transform lives in
your church and in your community for eternity.
TOMMY SPARGER is lead pastor of North Point Church (AG) in
Springfield, Mo.
E-mail your comments to tpe@ag.org.
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