Number
17
How to Build a Strong Men's Ministry
by Patrick M. Morley
THE DYNAMICS OF MEN'S MINISTRY
TODAY
Almost unimaginable numbers
of men are attending Promise Keepers stadium rallies. Why is that? What
are these men looking for? What motivates them to go?
Promise Keepers has created
a new Christian culture among men. Promise Keepers responds in a culturally
relevant way to men who know there must be more to their Christian faith.
PK meets men where they feel comfortable-- in football stadiums. I've
met men who didn't know what to expect, but never a man who wasn't deeply
touched by attending. Many men are supernaturally transformed by attending
a single stadium event. It is truly a unique work of the Holy Spirit.
The difficulty with all mountain-top
experiences, of course, is that you must return to the valley. Many
men go to large-scale momentum events, get fired up, come back excited,
try to start a men's ministry, and find men respond --for awhile. But
then other pressures set in, there are bills to pay, they get distracted,
they can't generate big numbers, the flame burns down, and they become
less and less interested in the work of building the kingdom. So the
leader becomes discouraged, gives up, and waits for the next mountain-top.
What are the components of
a strong men's ministry? Why do some men's ministries lose steam? Why
does the initial excitement fade away? Is it inevitable? How can we
keep the passion? How can we build other men in their faith? Those are
some of the questions we will address in this equipping newsletter.
THE KEY PRINCIPLES OF A STRONG
DISCIPLE-MAKING MINISTRY
1. Five Groups To Reach.
In every church there are five groups of men:
The mass of unsaved men
The mass of cultural Christians
Men who are or want to be disciples
Men who are or want to be leaders
Men who are hurting -- men with "broken wings"
For a men's ministry to be successful it must address the needs of each
of these five groups. In other words, you must offer something for every
man. The goal should always be to point men to opportunities to rise
to the next level of growth.
2. Long Term, Low Pressure.
It takes a long time to make a disciple. We must give men permission
to stand around the rim of what we are doing and observe. Men come along
at different speeds. Give them permission to buy in at their own pace,
and allow them to come on board at their own level of involvement.
3. Show Men Christ Versus
Fix Their Behavior. Once a man at our outreach Bible study received
Christ, but he was slow to let Christ influence some aspects of his
behavior. One morning at a leader's meeting, one of our leaders suggested
we get a group of men to take this fellow to lunch and confront him
on his behavior. After some discussion, we agreed that we should show
him Christ rather than just focusing on his behavior. The Holy Spirit
must change men's lives, but we can point them to Christ.
4. Relationship Based Versus
Task Oriented. The foundation of successful men's ministry is building
relationships. Without real and deep relationships, men will feel no
sense of community with one another. If we only call men together to
"do" there will be no glue to hold them together when the
planned event is over. Events attract men, relationships make them stick.
5. Five Goals For Every Man.
Over the years we have discovered five things a man can do to keep his
life on track. These five disciplines in no way earn salvation, but
they are wise. The man who wants to know God will put himself in the
way of falling more deeply in love with Jesus.
A consistent quiet time
An organized Bible study
An accountability group
Active church involvement
A personal ministry
(We develop these five ideas more fully in the A Look in the Mirror
entitled "The Five Defining Disciplines of Growing Men" which
you can request by contacting our office).
When men do the first four
of these disciplines they will find themselves filling up to the overflow
in their own personal relationship with Jesus. Then, out of the overflow
of gratitude for all that God is doing in their lives, they will virtually
burst to do something in service to express that appreciation. Give
these men opportunities to serve on the leadership team, as discipleship
group leaders, and as planners and executors of momentum events.
If you want the men of your
church to get fired up, then point them to these disciplines.
6. Five Responsibilities
Of Every Man. Every man must be taught that he must take personal responsibility
for his own private life in five areas:
His walk with God
His relationship with his wife
His relationship with his children
His personal finances
His health
Your men's ministry should focus on encouraging men to take responsibility
for their own private lives. No one else can or will do these for a
man.
7. Senior Pastor's Support.
Perhaps this is the #1 ingredient. Without the support of the senior
pastor -- not only in word, but involvement -- your church's men's ministry
will never develop. When you ask for his support, don't scare him to
death. Remember, he's been trying to get his men out of the pews and
into action for decades. Now, suddenly you come on strong like you're
the one who finally thought of it. Actually, your interest is the fruit
of his ministry. The reaping now taking place among men is the result
of years and years of our pastors and men's ministry specialists faithfully
sowing the seed into men's lives.
WHY MEN'S MINISTRIES LOSE
STEAM
Why do some men's ministries
overflow with life and vitality while others lose steam?
Recently I visited a church
trying to start a men's ministry, but the church was full of burned
out "workers." They had put the cart before the horse.
The Bible tells us, "Go
and make disciples
baptizing them in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" (Matthew 28:19). Often we get
this confused with, "Go and make workers
browbeating them
in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit."
The Bible doesn't call us
to make "workers," but "disciples." The purpose
of ministry, then, is to make disciples, not workers. Men don't enjoy
being made to go on a forced march. True disciples will become workers
out of the overflow of their growing relationship with Jesus Christ.
The Bible does, however,
call us to "pray" for workers:
"The harvest is so great,
and the workers are so few," [Jesus] told his disciples. "So
pray to the one in charge of the harvesting, and ask him to recruit
more workers for his harvest fields" (Matthew 9:37-38, TLB).
So we might put it this way:
God calls us to pray for workers and make disciples. Too often we try
to "make workers, and pray for disciples."
Here's a key idea: If your
church and men's ministry focuses on getting its men to do "works"
rather than "making disciples" it will burn them out. You
will lose all your steam.
THE THREE COMPONENTS OF A
STRONG DISCIPLE-MAKING MINISTRY
1. Leadership Team. Bill
Bright has often said, "Everything boils down to leadership."
The height of your men's ministry will be determined by the depth of
your leadership.
Pull together a leadership
team of four to twelve men who want to see God do something among the
men in your church. Meet as brothers once a week and begin building
among each other what you hope to build among the men of your church.
Spend your time together in Bible study and prayer. Don't spend your
time in an "operations" type meeting, which is the tendency.
Challenge each of your leaders
to start a discipleship group of his own. More about this in the section
which follows: "3. Discipleship Groups."
Identify men who are disciples
and are ready to move to the next level. Share your vision. Don't waste
time trying to persuade men not that interested -- they will only pull
you down and hold you back later.
If you don't have men ready,
then spend the time to disciple some potential leaders until they catch
your vision. Don't worry about how much time it takes -- the investment
will be worth it in the end.
Think long term. Richard
Foster well said, "Our tendency is to overestimate what we can
accomplish in one year, but underestimate what we can accomplish in
ten years." Remember, it takes a long time to make a disciple.
Encourage each leader to
live his life in such a way that others can tell he has been "with
Jesus" (see Acts 4:13). As a team, encourage the men to become
to each other what they want their church to become. That will create
a model so attractive that other men will then want to be part of it.
As Tom Skinner often said, "We must become the live demonstration
here on earth of what is happening in heaven, so that any time anyone
wants to know what is happening in heaven all they have to do is check
with us."
At each church where we go
and speak, we tell the staff that if they only relate to each other
as a committee, then they will reproduce a church full of committees.
But if they will relate to each other as brothers and build loving relationships,
they will reproduce a church full of brothers and sisters in Christ.
It's the same for your men's
ministry. If you only get together as a planning committee you will
never show men the model of what you want them to become. The leadership
team must become the model -- the live demonstration -- of what you
want to reproduce. The other men in your church will emulate your leadership.
2. Momentum Events. Holding
periodic momentum events or attending a Promise Keepers meeting (which
are large-scale momentum events) are adrenaline for your men's ministry.
Momentum events are motivational.
They create excitement, interest, converts, and get the message out.
They will give you a quantum leap forward.
Plan to hold an event not
more than quarterly (rest your players) and not less than twice a year
(an entire year between events seems light).
Invite a men's speaker to
your church. Host a Success That Matters Seminar. Hold an evangelistic
luncheon in a downtown club or country club. Plan an evangelistic fishing
retreat. Buy tables at your Mayor's Prayer Breakfast. Find out which
national and regional men's ministries are active in your city and meet
with them to find out how you can work together. Support and co-host
city-wide men's events sponsored by others.
Caution: The problem with
momentum events is that they only create momentum. The momentum must
be captured, and then relationships must be built to sustain momentum.
If the only reason men get together is to plan and execute events, what
do they do when the event is over? What is the basis for continuing
to be together?
Remember, relationships are
the glue that will keep men together. Maintain a dual focus between
events to provide energy and relationships to keep your men together.
Be proactive in the planning process as to how an event is going to
deepen relationships among the men. This leads us to the third component
of strong men's ministry.
3. Discipleship Groups. The
third component of a strong men's ministry is the discipleship group.
This is the place where men receive ongoing spiritual care. There is
no such thing as a Lone Ranger Christian. Men cannot do it on their
own. We need other men to become all God wants us to be.
Disciples are "pupils."
They are students of Jesus. They are men who desire to become more like
Christ. These goals can best be accomplished in two types of discipleship
groups.
First, and most important,
is an organized Bible study. I can say with confidence that I have never
known a man whose life has changed in any significant way apart from
the regular study of God's Word. The Bible is the living Word that changes
lives. And, in the end, success in ministry is changed life.
Some groups study Christian
books (like mine, for which I'm grateful), but book studies, fellowship
groups, and prayer partner groups are no substitute for bringing men
into direct contact with the living Lord through His living Word.
Second, and a close second,
is an accountability group. We define accountability: "To be regularly
answerable for each of the key areas of our lives to qualified people."
Accountability groups are a tool for men to get beyond news, sports,
and weather. Accountability means to give permission to a small group
of men to ask you how you are really doing.
Accountability brings objectivity.
Other men are able to help us add to our lives everything God would
add and subtract from our lives everything God would subtract.
We produce a wallet-sized
card printed on both sides which can be used as a guide for a weekly
or bi-weekly accountability meeting. At lunch one day a wealthy businessman
stared at the card and said, "Isn't it interesting that everything
a man needs to know to keep his life on track will fit on the two sides
of a business card." (Contact our office for free copies).
For a more full treatment
of accountability you can request a copy of the A Look in the Mirror
issue, "How to Start an Accountable Relationship."
SUMMARY
To have a successful men's
ministry you must have something for every man.
For the mass of unsaved men
you need evangelistic meetings. Also, you must offer training to men
about how to share their faith.
For the mass of cultural
Christians you need momentum events to motivate them and discipleship
group opportunities to help them move forward.
For those who are or want
to be disciples you need discipleship groups -- Bible studies and accountability
groups. Don't overlook book studies and prayer groups. Offer many things
for many interests.
For those who are or want
to be leaders you need a leadership team. Have a core group that meets
regularly, and also, a wider, growing circle of leaders that you are
discipling.
For men who are hurting,
identify men in your church uniquely gifted to minister to them. These
will be men who have the gift of encouragement, wisdom, and/or mercy
and who can be good listeners. They should also know the resources available
within the church and larger Christian community (such as counseling
services).
Here's an idea to help focus
your men's ministry: Love your weak men, and disciple the strong.
The great need today is for
tens of thousands of men who truly do love God to help other men move
to the next level by first becoming disciples themselves, then by making
disciples, sharing their faith, becoming leaders, and praying for workers.
We can't browbeat men into
serving God. Serving God must come from deep wellsprings of gratitude
for all that God has done and the hope of what He will do through Jesus
Christ. Once men really know Christ they will be willing, even anxious,
to show other men Christ.
And what about that man who
thinks becoming executive vice-president of his company is the greatest
thing to which he should devote his life? When, because of the way we
live, men see that the kingdom is more attractive than the world, then
they will want to build the kingdom, not the world. They will forsake
loving the world.
APPLICATIONS
1. Have you gone through
the experience of getting "pumped up" for Jesus, only to find
your enthusiasm wane and lose your momentum? If so, what distracted
you and why?
2. Read the passages in Matthew
9:37 and 28:18-20. God calls us to "make" disciples and "pray"
for workers. How does this get turned around, mixed up, or confused
in your own mind? In your church? What should be the goal of men's ministry
in light of these verses?
3. See if you can restate
each of the following principles discussed in your own words:
Five Groups To Reach
Long Term, Low Pressure
Show Men Christ Versus Fix Their Behavior
Relationship Based Versus Task Oriented
Five Goals For Every Man
Five Responsibilities Of Every Man
Senior Pastor's Support
4. Three components of a successful men's ministry were mentioned. What
were they? Do you agree or disagree? What else is important for effective
men's ministry?
5. Which of the five groups
mentioned are you in? Are you ready to go to the next level? What are
some practical steps you can take to keep you from being distracted?
6. Is your church ready for
a men's ministry, or to go to the next level? If so, what's your next
step? Pray and ask for wisdom as to how you can have an impact on the
men of your church and community.
Business leader, author,
and speaker, Patrick Morley has been used throughout the world to help
men and leaders think more deeply about their lives, to be reconciled
with Christ, and to equip them to have a larger impact on the world.
© 1995. Patrick M. Morley.
All rights reserved.
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