Growing a Healthy Congregation
Introduction
Christ calls His people to a sound, living fellowship that honors
His reign. We will consider the future of the Lord’s church and the
essentials of congregational health (Luke 10:27).
The Future of
the Lord’s Church
Scripture secures the future of Christ’s kingdom. Daniel saw a
kingdom established by the God of heaven that shall never be
destroyed and shall stand forever (Daniel 2:44). He also saw the Son
of Man receive dominion, glory, and a kingdom—an everlasting
dominion that shall not pass away (Daniel 7:13–14). The angel
promised Mary that her Son would sit on David’s throne and reign
forever; of His kingdom there will be no end (Luke 1:30–33). Jesus
promised to build His church and entrusted the keys of the kingdom
to open the way to the obedient on Pentecost (Matthew 16:18–19).
Peter preached Christ’s resurrection and exaltation, declaring that
He sits on David’s throne now; the apostles witnessed these things,
and the obedient were added to the number (Acts 2:29–36, 41, 47).
Therefore the kingdom remains unshakable (Hebrews 12:28). Local
congregations may appear, mature, decline, or cease, yet the
universal church endures by the promise of God.
What Does
Not Determine Congregational Health
Buildings facilitate work, but the church exists without them. In
the first century, disciples gathered wherever space was available,
and the gospel flourished. Good locations may help visibility, yet
every location places believers among neighbors who need Christ.
Prominence, wealth, or numbers never define faithfulness. Paul
reminded Corinth that not many wise, mighty, or noble were called;
God chose what the world calls weak so that all glory belongs to Him
(1 Corinthians 1:26–31). The messenger’s polish is secondary to the
message’s power. Paul came in weakness, fear, and trembling so that
faith would rest in God’s power rather than in human speech (1
Corinthians 2:3–5). Health rests on spiritual realities that remain
steady in any place and season.
What God
Declares Essential for a Healthy Congregation
Jesus named the first things. The greatest command is to love the
Lord with all the heart, soul, strength, and mind; the second is to
love one’s neighbor as oneself (Luke 10:27). Congregational health
grows where love for God and love for people fill motives, habits,
and decisions. A second essential is an unwavering commitment to
God’s word as the guide for faith and practice. Soundness is health;
holding fast the pattern of sound words keeps teaching wholesome and
life-giving (2 Timothy 1:13; 2 Timothy 3:16–17). The community
should see the lights on and the people gathered, and should know
what those people stand for—Christ first and His word as the rule of
life. A third essential is a steadfast love for the lost. The
mission field begins at the doors and stretches down every street.
The Lord’s charge is clear: go into all the world and preach the
gospel; make disciples, baptizing and teaching all that He commanded
(Mark 16:15; Matthew 28:18–20). A fourth essential is a pulpit that
proclaims the whole counsel of God with patience and courage.
Timothy was charged to preach the word, reprove, rebuke, and exhort,
remaining steadfast when hearers prefer myths (2 Timothy 4:2–5). A
fifth essential is a membership that lives what it teaches.
Hypocrisy harms souls and weakens witness, while integrity adorns
the doctrine of God. Where believers practice what they preach, the
gospel shines and the congregation grows in credibility and love.
Guarding
Health Through Discipline and Endurance
Christ walks among His churches. In Asia, congregations were warned
to repent and renew their first love, to resist false teaching, and
to reject moral compromise, lest their lampstand be removed
(Revelation 2:4–5, 14–16, 20–23). Scripture provides a path for
loving, restorative discipline so that the sinner may be saved and
the church kept pure (1 Corinthians 5:1–5). History shows seasons of
teaching battles and cultural pressures; yet the promise
stands—Christ’s kingdom endures. Steadfast love for God, fidelity to
Scripture, genuine evangelistic concern, whole-truth preaching, and
consistent daily holiness foster a congregation that remains strong
across generations.
Entering
and Continuing in the Kingdom
The same way souls entered the kingdom in the first century remains
the way today. People heard the gospel, believed, repented, and were
baptized for the forgiveness of sins; the Lord added them to His
church (Acts 2:38, 41, 47). Christ reigns now, and His invitation
stands. Those who have wandered can return through repentance and
prayer, for the Lord is merciful and faithful to restore.
Growing a
Healthy Congregation Sermon Outline:
-
Introduction
-
I. The
Future of the Lord’s Church
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Prophesied, established, and everlasting kingdom (Daniel
2:44; Daniel 7:13–14).
-
Promise
to Mary of an endless reign (Luke 1:30–33).
-
Christ
builds His church; keys of the kingdom (Matthew 16:18–19).
-
Pentecost fulfillment; Christ enthroned; the saved added
(Acts 2:29–36, 41, 47).
-
Unshakable kingdom (Hebrews 12:28).
-
II.
What Does Not Determine Health
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Buildings and locations serve but do not define vitality.
-
Prominence, wealth, and large numbers are not requirements
(1 Corinthians 1:26–31).
-
The
message’s power exceeds the messenger’s polish (1
Corinthians 2:3–5).
-
III.
Essentials for Congregational Health
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Love God
wholly; love neighbors genuinely (Luke 10:27).
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Scripture as the guiding pattern; sound doctrine as health
(2 Timothy 1:13; 3:16–17).
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Visible
witness and known convictions in the community.
-
Love for
the lost; evangelizing as we go (Mark 16:15; Matthew
28:18–20).
-
Full-truth preaching with patience and courage (2 Timothy
4:2–5).
-
Members
who practice what they teach; credibility through holiness.
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IV.
Guarding Health
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Christ’s
warnings and promises to congregations (Revelation 2:4–5,
14–16, 20–23).
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Restorative discipline for purity and salvation (1
Corinthians 5:1–5).
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Endurance through teaching battles and cultural pressures.
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V.
Entering and Continuing
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Obedience to the gospel and baptism into Christ (Acts 2:38,
41, 47).
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Restoration by repentance and prayer for the wandering.
Call to
Action
Love the Lord with your whole being and your neighbor as yourself.
Devote yourself to Scripture as the governing pattern for faith and
life. Pray for one neighbor by name, invite them to hear the gospel,
and offer to study. Encourage faithful preaching and resolve to live
what you teach. Ask God to strengthen this congregation in love,
truth, and mission so that Christ’s light shines steadily in this
community.
Key
Takeaways
-
Christ’s
kingdom is everlasting; His church endures by promise (Daniel
2:44; Daniel 7:13–14; Luke 1:30–33; Matthew 16:18–19; Acts
2:29–36).
-
Local
congregations remain healthy through love for God and neighbor
(Luke 10:27).
-
Scripture
provides the pattern for sound teaching and practice (2 Timothy
1:13; 3:16–17).
-
Evangelism
is the congregational heartbeat (Mark 16:15; Matthew 28:18–20).
-
Faithful
preaching sustains health in every season (2 Timothy 4:2–5).
-
Integrity
protects witness and strengthens influence (1 Corinthians
2:3–5).
-
Christ
purifies and preserves congregations through loving discipline
(1 Corinthians 5:1–5; Revelation 2:4–5, 14–16, 20–23).
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Entrance
into the kingdom remains the first-century pattern (Acts 2:38,
41, 47).
-
The kingdom
cannot be shaken (Hebrews 12:28).
Scripture
Reference List
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Daniel
2:44 – God establishes an
indestructible kingdom.
-
Daniel
7:13–14 – The Son of Man receives
everlasting dominion.
-
Luke
1:30–33 – Promise of David’s
throne and unending reign.
-
Matthew
16:18–19 – Christ builds His
church and gives the keys of the kingdom.
-
Acts
2:29–36 – Peter proclaims
Christ’s resurrection and exaltation to David’s throne.
-
Acts
2:41, 47 – Those who receive the
word are baptized; the Lord adds the saved.
-
Hebrews
12:28 – Disciples receive a
kingdom that cannot be shaken.
-
1
Corinthians 1:26–31 – God calls
the humble so that glory rests in Him.
-
1
Corinthians 2:3–5 – Faith rests
in God’s power rather than human eloquence.
-
Luke
10:27 – The great commandments:
love for God and neighbor.
-
2
Timothy 1:13 – Hold the pattern
of sound words.
-
2
Timothy 3:16–17 – Scripture
equips for every good work.
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Mark
16:15 – Proclaim the gospel to
all creation.
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Matthew
28:18–20 – Make disciples by
baptizing and teaching.
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2
Timothy 4:2–5 – Preach the word
with patience and courage.
-
1
Corinthians 5:1–5 – Loving
discipline seeks salvation and purity.
-
Revelation 2:4–5, 14–16, 20–23 –
Christ’s warnings and calls to repent.
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Acts
2:38 – Repentance and baptism for
the remission of sins.
Prepared by Bobby Stafford of the church of Christ at
Granby, MO
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