The Paths of a Church

For a conventional church to be effective, there are eight paths that its leaders must navigate well. (Sometimes these paths are called “processes” or “systems,” but the word “paths” seems more biblical and less impersonal.) Each path should function simultaneously and consistently.

The paths of a church are:

  • Outreach - How does the church get people to attend for the first time?

  • Hospitality - How does the church treat guests from the moment they arrive on the church campus until they become members?

  • Worship - How does the church help worshipers experience God in a church-wide setting?

  • Small Groups - How does the church help members and attenders build healthy, Christian relationships?

  • Ministry - How does the church equip leaders for ministry?

  • Stewardship - How does the church receive donations and fund ministry?

  • Pastoral Leadership - How does the church develop pastors and deacons to do their ministry well?

  • Strategic Planning - How is the church structured, and how do its leaders plan for the future?

If the leaders of a church will devote themselves to evaluating and improving these processes on a regular basis, the church will function well.

However, there is one other path that most churches unintentionally neglect. We can ignore it and travel down the other eight paths, thinking everything is fine. But this final path is perhaps the most important of all, for Jesus gave us a clear command to do it.

The forgotten path is Disciple-Making - How does the church bring people from unbelief to becoming devoted followers of Jesus who reproduce this process with others?

David Rhoades

Dr. David H. Rhoades is a believer in Jesus Christ who is passionate about disciple-making. A gifted author and speaker, he is the Senior Pastor at Broadview Church in Lubbock, Texas. He is producing a growing number of biblically-based resources that can help Christians lead the people in their circles of influence to become fully devoted followers of Christ. David was called to the gospel ministry in 1987, and he has been a pastor since 1995. After finishing his Bachelor of Arts in Biblical Studies at The Criswell College, he earned his Master of Divinity degree at the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, where he received the 1995 C.C. Randall Award for Evangelism. In 2005 he graduated from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary with a Doctor of Ministry degree in Missions and Evangelism, writing a ground-breaking doctoral project designed to help churches engage their multiethnic communities in ministry. Since 1995, he has served as a pastor to churches in Louisiana, Ohio, Oklahoma and Texas. David enjoys cooking, reading books, cheering on the Texas Longhorns, and spending time with his beautiful wife Amy and their kids: Timothy, Jonathan, and Mindi.

https://davidrhoades.org
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