"Another mark of spiritual church growth is community impact. Some remarkable results followed the ministry of the early church. In Acts 4, Peter and John are in the hands of the authorities as a result of their preaching and healing ministry. After the trial the writer declares that these authorities "took knowledge of them, that they had been with Jesus." There stood the man who had been healed. The miracle was evident. . . . If we imagine that a spiritual impact on a community will always involve social acceptance, we are mistaken. But whatever the response, we must not be satisfied until the neighborhood around us becomes aware of our presence, and as a result, recognizes our relationship to the living Jesus Christ" (Harold L. Longenecker,
Building Town and Country Churches, 83).
Longenecker provides a couple benchmarks for ascertaining spiritual growth in a local church:
- Find out if "the neighborhood around [the local church] becomes aware of [their] presence,"
- Find out if the neighborhood "recognizes [the local church's] relationship to the living Jesus Christ."
In order to know these, a local church must:
- Proclaim Jesus to the neighborhood, and--
- Then listen to the neighborhood.
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