» The LifeCycle of a Movement

The LifeCycle of a Movement

The Church must be forever building,
and always decaying,
and always being restored.

T. S. Eliot
The Rock, 1934
I was corrupted in my denominational theological college through the study of church history. I discovered denominations and church structures that appeared permanent, were “accidents” of history constructed in response to a particular situation.

No one form of the church is relevant across time, geography and cultures. The true Church is in a constant state of change—both decline and renewal.

The Church is like a garden. New plants are sprouting. Others are growing and reproducing. Others are dying and decaying. Ultimately what matters is the health of the whole eco system rather than any one plant.

Key to this process are movements God births for the renewal and expansion of the Church. Each follows a unique path. The typical lifecycle has five stages:

1. Birth.

A founder or founders make a commitment and risk everything for a cause whose time has come.

2. Growth. 
The idea is effectively put to work and embodied in a growing group of people and effective forms and structures that fuel expansion.

3. Maturity. 
Success has been achieved and the movement seeks to protect its gains through stability, predictability and uniformity at the cost of innovation.

4. Decline. 
Stability, self-interest and survival are placed above the cause. Pioneering leaders are forced out or leave in frustration.

5. Death. 
Form triumphs over function. The institution is hooked up to artificial life support. Nobody remembers or cares anymore about the cause that was once so central.

There is no guarantee that a movement will move through each of these stages. Most new movements don’t survive their birth. Some remain dynamic for a century. Others swim against the tide of history and turn around decline.

In every generation the challenge is to discern where you are on the lifecycle and to discover God’s agenda for the renewal and expansion of the Church.

3 Responses to “The LifeCycle of a Movement” »»

  1. Comment by darren | 08/05/05 at 1:37 am

    i debated on asking this question on your recent post on how jesus would start a movement today.

    i wonder sometimes if jesus started a movement, or if jesus’ followers started a movement.

    if jesus started it and we were to follow jesus’ model of a movement it may not have these stages, it might look like this:

    1. rebirth (his ministry started at baptism)
    2. recruitment (he called disciples, he didnt plant a church and watch it grow)
    3. confusion and learning (i dont think the disciples matured, but they were regularly confused and being taught, which in turn confused them more)
    4. death (i doubt there was a decline in the same way as the movement model above, he died before he could be faced with decline… or growth for that matter)
    5. ressurection (something new, yet the same comes out of the death)

    it’s a weird model, one that dies during growth and ressurects after dying and doesnt seem to mature until after it’s ressurection…

    i think thats why missiologists concentrate on paul’s models instead of jesus’

    jesus’ models wont last long term and they’re too confusing…

Trackbacks/Pingbacks »»>

  1. [...] Steve Addison comments on the life cycles of movements: “The Church is like a garden. New plants are sprouting. Others are growing and reproducing. Others are dying and decaying. Ultimately what matters is the health of the whole eco system rather than any one plant.” [...]

  2. [...] The Middle Ages is regarded as and age of faith. It was also a period of mounting crisis. Into this world came Francis of Assisi—rich playboy, soldier of fortune and one of the greatest movement founders of all time.I’ve just finished a study of Francis of Assisi as a movement founder. The article is available to download below. It’s the first in a series of case studies on Movements in the five stages of development—Birth, Growth, Plateau, Decline, Death. [...]


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