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We’ve all heard the complaints about “the church today,” haven’t we?

Perhaps we’ve even expressed some of them ourselves.

a. “The problem with the church today is no one wants to commit any more.”

b. “Today’s problems all come from a church that puts style before substance.”

c. “The modern church wants to be fat and happy, they don’t care about anything but themselves.”

d. “Our church may be small, but at least we’re preaching the Word, unlike most churches today.”

Those are all direct quotes I’ve collected online in the last few weeks.

None of them are from nonbelievers or average church-goers, of course. They’re all from pastors and other church leaders.

Based on these complaints and so many others like them, I’ve come to three conclusions:

1. No one thinks they’re the problem with the church today.

It’s always the other guy’s fault, right?

Very seldom, if ever, do I see quotes like those listed above, followed by serious self-assessment and personal repentance. Oh sure, some of them will throw in the obligatory “search me, oh God…” verse, but the tone of everything is always how bad every other church has become. Or how sinful the community around us has become, as evidenced by the fact that they refuse to throng to our church to hear us complain about them. So we soldier on, convinced we’re the righteous remnant.

Yes, the church has real problems today. But if you’re a Christian—especially if you’re a church leader—complaining about the church without taking a serious look at yourself and your church is like complaining about your reflection in the mirror—and blaming the mirror!

“Them” is US!

In case you’re wondering where my own self-assessment is, this article is just too small for that. It takes a book to even scratch the surface. Literally, a book. Check out The Grasshopper Myth for a lifetime’s worth of “what’s wrong with me?!” self-assessment—and a lot of hope, too.

2. The church has always had these problems.

When people complain that today’s church services aren’t as good as they should be, that our worship is often more about entertainment than participation, that the preaching is often shallow, that discipleship is sometimes non-existent … I have to reluctantly agree.

When they long for the days when we did church better than we do it today … I wholeheartedly disagree.

We’ve never done church better than this. 

Sure, there have been pockets of greatness. There still are today.

And there are always good, healthy churches to be found of all shapes and sizes. I’ve been in a lot of them and I pastor one.

But the less-than-ideal church service is nothing new.

Even the Apostle Paul complained that the church services in Corinth often did “more harm than good.”

In fact, that’s why we have many of the New Testament letters. Paul, John and others wrote long and strong to churches and their leaders about their need to correct the mistakes they were making. Sometimes, the horrific sins they were proud of committing. (Helloooo, Corinth!)

Imagine how much shorter the New Testament would be if the early church had been the ideal place we like to imagine.

The problems with the church are nothing new. But in a way, that’s good news. Because, despite 2,000 years of screw-ups, the church keeps moving forward.

It makes me think someone other than us must be in charge of this thing.

3. The doers seldom complain, while the complainers aren’t doing much.

There seems to be a direct inverse relationship between those who complain about the state of the church and those who are working to change the state of the church.

The harder they work, the less they complain. While those who complain don’t seem to be doing much to change things. As I said in a previous article, "We Can Whine About the New Generation Or We Can Minister to Them – But We Can’t Do Both."

Let’s Do Church Better

The church hasn’t gotten worse. It’s always been like this. A mix of good, bad and indifferent. But it keeps moving forward, anyway.Just like Jesus said it would.

So yes, there have always been bad churches and bad church services.

The answer for bad churches today is the same as it’s always been. Let’s do church better. Let’s learn from our mistakes. Let’s re-invest ourselves in the Great Commandment and the Great Commission.

There’s never been a perfect church—or a perfect era of church history.

God is the same as he’s always been. So are people.

Complaining changes nothing.

Doing the essentials better is all that matters.

And any church, of any size, budget or denomination, can do that.

So what do you think? Can we agree that the answer to bad church is to do better church?

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Talk about it...

Stephen Belokur

commented on Dec 12, 2014

Good thoughts. The Great Commandment and the Great Commission! I love it! PTL!!

Karl Vaters

commented on Dec 13, 2014

It always comes back to those two, doesn't it, Stephen?

Brad Brucker

commented on Dec 12, 2014

"Despite 2000 years of screwups the church keeps moving forward!" Add me to the list! I love this! Thank you Karl!

Karl Vaters

commented on Dec 13, 2014

It's a long list, Brad. Sometimes I feel like a Gold Card member.

Doug Knox

commented on Dec 12, 2014

Excellent post, Karl. Now if the church would just...Ahem. As James wrote in his passage on being doers of the word, those who limit their activities to hearing only deceive themselves. Thank you for calling us to action, and for showing how action changes our focus.

Karl Vaters

commented on Dec 13, 2014

That's one of my favorite passages, Doug. My congregation has to get tired of hearing me refer to James 1:22 all the time. As much for me as for them.

Lawrence Webb

commented on Dec 12, 2014

I guess you're saying complaint about "the terrible state of the church" becomes self-fulfilling prophecy. If we talk the church down, it will go down. It will become what we damn it to be. In most cases, the pulpit is not the best place to confront our problems. If there are serious problems in the congregation, discussion probably should begin carefully and prayerfully with a small group of spiritually sensitive church leaders. If there are problems in the larger community, again, the pastors should start with leaders who will try to do something about it before going public on Sunday morning.

Karl Vaters

commented on Dec 13, 2014

Great point about it being a self-fulfilling prophecy, Lawrence. And about not dealing with those problems from the pulpit. Well said.

Kayode Omotoso

commented on Dec 12, 2014

Great thought. The truth is that if there must be a change, it must begin from us not them. Mere complaints can never change anything.

Karl Vaters

commented on Dec 13, 2014

Interestingly, there are studies which show that people who talk about a problem can actually feel like they've done something about it when they haven't. Another reason the complainers aren't doing anything.

Minister Sanders

commented on Dec 13, 2014

I agree let the church from the Pastors on down to those who sit in the congregation quit complaining about how bad the church has gotten....and begin to work on 1 accord striving to make the church become better knowing that God will keep us!!!!!

Karl Vaters

commented on Dec 13, 2014

"In one accord" is the first step, for sure.

Steven Farless

commented on Dec 13, 2014

Thanks, I enjoyed the article. You are right, people who are busy serving the Kingdom don?t have much time to complain; the same is true with us pastors. ?For everything there is a season? there are times when lamentation is an appropriate response to something; an event, a trend etc, but still, we must be about our Father?s busness.

Karl Vaters

commented on Dec 13, 2014

Great point, Steven! Lamentation can be a mature, biblical response. Complaining never is. Thanks for making that distinction.

Bill Jones

commented on Dec 14, 2014

great discussion, folks. I have also pondered this question recently and I am reminded by Max Lucado "It's not about me" it's all about God. we have got to stop focusing so much on the church on the corner of state and main and start back to focusing on the corner of earth and heaven. People are confused and the church leaders are making it worst. they are making the word of God complicated, it is everything but complicated.

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