This morning I had a great time with one of our
missionaries, Jordan Rittmeyer. Jordan
has a passion to share the Gospel with the Mormon people in Utah. He and his wife are the strong minority and
they are a shining light to a lost community.
He spoke of the powerful forces of evil against him as he strives to do
ministry. He and his wife truly feel
Satan’s attack and desire us to pray for them as they return in a couple of
weeks—I am strongly committed to do this with him. Satan has placed blinders on those who don’t
know Christ and he does not want anyone tampering with those blinders.
Our conversation reminded me of a great article by Dr. Chuck
Lawless who spoke about Satan’s strategy to render the church ineffective. Please take a moment to read this and I’m
sure you will be strengthened and agree.
8 WAYS THE ENEMY ATTACKS CHURCHES
I have studied spiritual warfare for
more than twenty years. During most of that time, I’ve also worked as a church
consultant. I’ve learned these two worlds often collide: churches fail to
recognize the schemes of a real enemy, and they have no plan to respond. Here
are some of the primary ways I’ve seen the enemy attack churches:
1 Congregational division – I’ve seen churches
divided over budget decisions, paint colors, worship styles, Bible versions,
community outreach, global missions, staffing choices, service times, choir
robes, small group curriculum, and church vans. Some of these issues are
obviously more significant than others, but the enemy still knows this truth:
believers make little dent in the darkness when they shoot each other in the
back.
2 False teaching – Most of my work is
with evangelical churches, and I don’t often see blatant false teaching. What I
see is much more subtle than that:
• Small group leaders teaching
unbiblical theology, with no internal system in place to recognize or address
that problem
• No oversight or
accountability about curriculum taught in small groups
• Theologically-suspect
material in the literature rack
• Problematic
“recommended reading” in the church library
• Music lyrics that
promote bad theology
• Poor exegesis of
biblical texts.
3 Family breakdown – I remember the first
time I heard about two believers divorcing. A teenage believer raised in
a non-Christian home, I just assumed things like divorce didn’t happen among
church people. I also recall the devastation I felt as a pastor the first time
a couple whose wedding I had officiated divorced. Now, many churches hardly
pause when another home falls apart – and the enemy is pleased when the
marriage picture of Christ’s love for His church (Eph. 5:25) gets distorted.
4 Hidden sin– The story is tragic,
but true in more than one situation. The church is not growing, and they invite
consultants to help them recognize their obstacles to growth. Attention is
given to infrastructure, programming, staffing, and facilities. Sometime later,
the truth comes out that a more significant obstacle had existed: someone in
church leadership had been living in sin for months, if not years, even while
doing his day-to-day ministry.
5 Transfer growth
diversion
– Let me summarize this point: the enemy is seldom threatened when churches
grow only by “swapping sheep” with other churches down the street or across the
city. I have worked with churches that brag about their growth, but never ask
the question whether they are seeing non-believers turn to Christ. Transfer
growth often distracts believers from doing evangelism – and thus plays into
the enemy’s hands.
6 Self-dependence – Some churches, I am
convinced, would continue to exist for some time even if God withdrew His
presence. That is, they operate in their own strength and ability, but they do
it well. Often they have enough size that decline is almost imperceptible.
Their leaders are natural “fixers,” and they tend to fix first and pray second.
Though these churches may speak passionately about the “power of God,” they
rely more on their own power.
7 Discipleship
distraction
– The enemy delights in churches that have no strategic, effective discipleship
strategy. After all, these churches have no plan to teach believers how to wear
the full armor of God (Eph. 6:11). They frequently leave new believers to
fight battles on their own, select unprepared persons for leadership, and then
provide no training for those leaders. Because no one discipled them, their
members often lose battles in a spiritual war they did not know existed.
8 Hopelessness – It’s easy to get
here. Church leaders give all they have to give, yet with few results. The
church is dying but unwilling to change. Lay leaders protect their turf. Staff
members sometimes battle among themselves. Seemingly, no lives are experiencing
transformation. “What’s the point?” the enemy asks. “Why not just give up?”
We
do have hope, of course, in Jesus’ words: “I will build My church, and the
forces of Hades will not overpower it” (Matt. 16:18b). The enemy is viciously
strategic against the church, but we need not let him win.
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