|
To Transform a LIFE
It Takes a GROUP
The first function of Life Transformation Groups removes barriers
to redemption. The second function removes blocks to growth, and
the third invites individuals to open themselves to Gods transforming
power and grace through spiritual disciplines and a life of gift-oriented
service.
Is it possible that in the church today there is an overemphasis
on leadership? Could all the focus on leadership be creating a cultlike
imbalance? Is our obsession with leadership in reality only a noble
appearing facade for the self-serving individualism of our culture?
In his book, Leader to Leader, Warren Bennis wrote:
"Personal leadership is one of the most studied topics in
American life. Indeed, I have devoted a big chunk of my professional
life to better understanding its workings. Far less studiedand
perhaps more importantis group leadership. The disparity of
interest in those two realms of leadership is logical, given the
strong individualist bent of American culture. But the more I look
at the history of business, government, the arts, and the sciences,
the clearer it is that few great accomplishments are ever the work
of a single individual.
"Our mythology refuses to catch up with our reality. And so
we cling to the myth of the Lone Ranger, the romantic idea that
great things are usually accomplished by a larger-than-life individual
working alone. Despite the evidence to the contraryincluding
the fact that Michelangelo worked with a group of 16 to paint the
ceiling of the Sistine Chapelwe still tend to think of achievement
in terms of the Great Man or the Great Woman, instead of the Great
Group." (Chapter 31 in Leader to Leader; Online
Preview)
Groups youth groups, childrens groups, mens
and womens groups, Sunday school classes are a fundamental
part of any church. Groups are critical in the spiritual development
of believers and Christian leaders.
But just having groups does not mean that a church is developing
fully devoted followers of Christ. Groups may meet for years and
accomplish little of eternal value in the lives of the participants
or in reaching the lost.
Groups that transform lives are healthy. Life Transformation
Groups (LTG) by their very nature naturally reproduce spiritual
fruit in the lives of the members and in the advancement of Christs
kingdom.
Every group in the church should be a Life Transformation Group:
Sunday school classes, home groups, greeter group, ushers, mens
groups, the janitors, and the group that meets to work on the church.
Some might ask, "How can the janitors or the ushers or the
greeters become a Life Transformation Group? They are just doing
a task."
A large church in Billings, Montana, has grown to over 4,000 in
attendance in the last few years. Recently, a colleague and I stopped
by the church on a Monday afternoon. We introduced ourselves to
a man working there and asked if someone could tell us a little
about the church. He said that he would be glad to but needed to
give some instructions to several teenage boys who were working
with him. He then gave us a tour throughout which he shared with
enthusiasm what God was doing in the church.
Before we left he said, "We have only four full-time custodians
for this large facility. We hire teenage boys who come from single-parent
homes. We consider it our ministry to be positive role models for
them and help them learn how to work."
This group of four custodians, along with their teenage apprentices,
was a Life Transformation Group. They didnt spend their whole
time studying the Bible but were living out biblical faith, thus
nurturing those boys to become fully devoted followers of Christ,
facilitating life-changing encounters with Christ, and ministering
to their needs. This is possible for every group in the church.
Lets look at what makes Life Transformation Groups tick.
Some characteristics are common to all.
They have a shared and compelling dream.
At the very heart of the group is the compelling sense of a God-given
mission. They believe they can make a difference and change the
world. This shared dream builds unity, camaraderie, resourcefulness,
and energy.
They are guided by core values.
Life Transformation Groups have deeply held core values that dominate,
drive, and guide their lives and activities. They act in congruence
with these core values. These core values keep the group stable,
guarding them from compromising with fads and trends, yet giving
them the drive to adapt and change without compromise. One church
in Washington state claims as a core value, "We will
seek to reach the unchurched, not the churched." This conviction
determines the kind of ministries they provide and to whom and how
they promote their ministries.
They define spiritual maturity as obedience.
When Jesus began His earthly ministry, the religious leaders were
defining spirituality as faithfulness to the Law. The more frequently
one practiced the Law, the more spiritual he was.
Life Transformation Groups define spirituality as obedience to
Christ. The objective is to grow into a life of obedience to the
purposes of Christ expressed in both personal and corporate ways.
Their members pay a personal price.
Commitment is not a bad word. In fact, commitment is essential
to membership. People seldom rise higher than the level at which
they were recruited into the group. Therefore, a group that requires
little or no commitment discovers that members soon become passive,
complacent, and uninvolved.
Developing people is based on commitment. Members pay a personal
price with their time, priorities, and resources, but they are rewarded
by seeing the greater cause, the group, become a reality. This in
turn motivates them to pay an even greater price.
They know they have a real enemy.
Life Transformation Groups are conscious and discerning of the
spiritual enemy of our lives and souls. This is not a mystical or
fabricated awareness. It is a real understanding that we "wrestle
not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against
powers" (Ephesians 6:12). They fight the good fight through
faith and obedience, love and forgiveness.
They produce and reproduce.
Members know they are trying to produce fully devoted followers
of Christ. If this is not happening, they seek to find answers and
new approaches. In other words, they know that they are not meeting
just as a social club or therapy group. They are meeting to transform
lives who in turn reproduce spiritual fruit through their lives
and by reaching and discipling others.
These groups perceive themselves as successful only when they are
reproducing.
These groups know how to bring out the best in people.
Like successful coaches, these groups are able to place the right
people in the right positions at the right time. They intentionally
identify, nurture, place, and coach people to maximum potential.
They see the group as a team with each member faithfully and conscientiously
filling his or her position on the team at a given point in time.
They dont try to appeal to everyone.
Life Transformation Groups are clear about the values and vision.
They know what they are trying to achieve and dont have room
for those who are unwilling to live out the demanding standards
and objectives of the group. Their example is Jesus who knew that
not everyone would be willing to be part of the group. He didnt
exclude people. He was simply very clear about His mission and values.
They dont make methods sacred.
They know there is nothing sacred about a certain approach or method.
Through their willingness to experiment through trial and error,
they often discover increased effectiveness in ministry.
They are always seeking to improve.
Because they fully understand what they are trying to accomplish
reproducing disciples, leaders, and groups they continually
seek to improve. The primary question is, "How can we do better
tomorrow than we did today." They believe they can be more
effective, no matter what they have accomplished already.
Simply put, Life Transformation Groups provide the climate for
true spiritual formation in the lives of individuals and the church
as a whole, so "we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the
Lords glory, are being transformed into his likeness with
ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit"
(2 Corinthians 3:18, NIV).
Resources:
Bennis, Warren, Leader to Leader, (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass,
Inc., 1997)
Collins, James C. and Jerry I. Porras, Built to Last (New
York: HarperCollins, 1994)
Schwarz, Christian, Natural Church Development (Carol Stream,
Illinois: Emmelsbull, Germany C& P Publishing and Church
Smart Resources, 1998)
|