3 Ways Your LIFE Group Can Take Advantage of the Fall Attendance Boost

By Jay Fennell

Historically, the summer season is the lowest attended time of the year for church activities. Travel, vacation, camps, etc. all make for sporadic and lower attendance, even among the most committed church attenders. But as the fall season rolls around and school starts back, people begin settling into routines and adding a bit more normalcy to their calendars. The fall is a time of the year where people begin making church attendance a priority again, and it becomes a great opportunity for LIFE Groups to reach out to those families who are looking to connect.
Let me give you three easy ways that you can leverage this season to reach more people and grow your LIFE Group.

  1. Participate in Group Connect or a LIFE Group connection event that your campus provides. These events typically give one or more days of heavy attention to LIFE Groups.  They are events that speak to the value of group life, encourage those who are unconnected to find a group, and provide easy on-ramps for them to plug in. Participating in these events allows you to promote your group, meet new people and develop new relationships. It’s a win-win.
  2. Reach out to absentees. Who are the people on your group role you haven’t seen in a while? This season provides a great opportunity to reach out to absentees and invite them back to your group. It typically happens that folks are thinking about returning anyway but indecisive and then receive the call from someone in their group that expresses a desire to have them back. It’s exactly what they needed to make the decision to return. Don’t let them fall through the cracks. Instead, be warm and intentional and tell them they’re missed.
  3. Use worship venues to recruit new people.  Tell me if I’m correct: you normally sit in the same seat, in the same service every Sunday. And you know the people that sit around you. You may not know their names but you know their faces because they sit in the same place every Sunday also. But from time to time you see a new face, someone you’ve never seen in that section before. Chances are they’re visiting. In those moments, be brave, introduce yourself and invite them to join you in LIFE Group.

 
I had a story like that come across my desk just recently. A guest was noticed by a LIFE Group leader and was invited to his group. That guest was so grateful and impressed that he sent me an email to express his gratitude.
Ultimately, our primary goal isn’t merely to grow our LIFE Groups numerically. Rather, our desire as leaders is to lead people toward Christlikeness, and to do that in community with others who are going in the same direction. But as a part of that, we must at all times be intentional about helping more people connect in those environments so they can experience the love of Jesus, through His people, and for His glory.

Sharing My Testimony

By Paul Wilkinson

In light of last week’s post about “how” to give a brief testimony and the power in our Christian testimony, I thought it would be good form to share my testimony with you. As someone who grew up in church and never suffered a crisis leading to faith, I always thought my testimony was subpar. I did have crises in my life, but they were generally external to me and were not the genesis of my faith.
What I learned, however, is that a testimony singing praises about God’s guiding hand, God’s security in the face of rebelliousness, God’s patience, and God’s providence can be quite powerful for an individual seeking just such a relationship. Remember our framework: who was I before Christ, how did I get saved, and who am I after Christ. I would also recommend giving a Gospel invitation.
Who was I before Christ?

Though I always wanted to be a pastor at some point in my life, I desired to fulfill what I thought were more pressing needs. I was generally a good kid, though I sought attention through humor at the expense of other virtues. I did fairly well in school, both high school and college, but I was a lethargic, perennial underachiever. And yet, even as an underachiever, I was able to get the things I wanted. Granted, what I wanted was not elaborate: a large TV, a proper stereo system for my car, etc., but it was what I expected to make me happy. Even with desiring to drop out of college each semester, I managed to limp my way to a chemical engineering degree which procured a job that paid fairly well for one’s initial employment.
Yet, with all my stuff and my job, I was miserable. I began to hate the money and hate the stuff. I came to the realization that not only was I an underachiever in the classroom, but I was an underachiever in life. I despised my bi-weekly pay check and gave most of it away. However, it wasn’t until I was willing to give myself away that I gained what I had been missing.
How did I become a Christian?

Though I was “saved” and baptized at age 8, I’m not entirely sure I understood what that meant. I certainly wanted to avoid Hell, but I did not fully grasp why believing in Jesus accomplished that end. So, 15 years later, at the age of 23, I came to realize what being a Christian entailed. Because of my misery in my achievements, I decided to take the opposite approach. I decided to flee what I had attained. I put in my two weeks’ notice and headed to Jamaica to do mission work and teach math and science to 4th and 5th graders. While I may have been redeemed at age 8, it wasn’t until age 23 that I became committed. From Jamaica, I applied to seminary and began classes the following fall semester.
How am I different now?

After making a full commitment to Christ, I am now able to live each day fulfilled. I now invest in the lives of other people to see them become more than the underachiever I was. When I mentioned that I was an underachiever earlier, it was not because I was unsuccessful. I consider my former self to be an underachiever because I was denying my calling. I was called to be a discipleship minister, to nurture the body of Christ to maturity, and to seek the lost wherever I was. For some, their calling is precisely to be a chemical engineer and keep the processes upon which society is so dependent functioning at highest efficiency. And in their workplace, they are the minister and shepherd to their colleagues.
What my life shows is that God has a special calling for which He designed each of us. And no matter how lethargic, how rebellious, or how underachieving we are, God will wait for us. God wants us to reach our maximal potential which is only found in proper relationship to Him. Then, we can live our lives in fullness. What I wanted didn’t fulfill me and now saddens me. The One I rejected is the One in whom I now find complete contentment, motivation, and joy. That significance is available to anyone who will respond obediently to God’s call.