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Restore: Church, Get Right!
Topic: #264 of 1608 for Sermons on Church: Body of Christ
Scripture:
James 4:7-4:10
Sermon Series: 4 R's for a Great Fall
Denomination: Christian/Church of Christ
Date Added: August 2001
Audience: Believer Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
“Restore: Church, Get Right!”
August 19, 2001
Introduction
In his book “The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership”, John Maxwell tells the story of one of the most incredible restorations in American business history. It happened at the Chrysler Corporation in the early 1980’s. Chrysler was in a mess, despite a long history of success. At one point in Chrysler’s history they had captured an incredible 25% of the entire domestic automobile market. By the time the 1970’s rolled around, the Chrysler Corporation was in a steady decline. By 1978 they only had 11% of the market. Things looked bleak. The company was headed toward bankruptcy. In November 1978, Chrysler brought a new leader to take over the company. His name was Lee Iacocca. Iacocca had just left Ford in 1978 after serving as their president. When he left Ford, the company, under his leadership, was earning record profits of 1.8 billion in each of the last two years. The task of turning around Chrysler proved to be enormous. Iacocca described the company as having been run like a small grocery store, despite its size. There were no viable financial systems or controls in place, production and supply methods were a mess, products were built poorly, and nearly all of the divisions were run by turf-minded vice presidents who refused to work as a team. Morale was very low throughout the company, customer loyalty was low, and the company continued to lose money. Iacocca did everything he knew how to turn things around. He replaced 33 of the 35 vice presidents. He brought in the best leaders he could find. He reduced as many expensed as he could. He grudgingly and humbly went before Congress for loan guarantees so that Chrysler would not go bankrupt. Finally, he reduced his own salary to $1.00 a year. Iacocca brought about a total restoration to the Chrysler Corporation. By 1983, Chrysler was able to pay back its loans. Before he retired, Chrysler had gained 16% of the market, double what it was in the first years he took over. The company has fought its way back and been restored to a growing, profitable industry.
Today, I’m the third leg in our 4 R’s sermon series, “Restore: Church, Get Right!”. This sermon has been a difficult one for me to put together. I don’t want to preach a doom and gloom sermon on the state and future of the Church. I believe very strongly in the Church. I love the Church deeply. I’ve committed my life to Christ’s Church. That being said, when I take an honest look at the Church, especially the Church in America, I’m troubled. We don’t look like, act like, or function like the Church I read about in my Bible. One of my favorite passages in Bible is in Acts 2:42-47 describing the early Church right after Jesus’ ascension into heaven and the Day of Pentecost. These verses describe the Church as being devoted to the teaching of God’s Word, to each other, and to prayer. It describes the great love that the Church had for one another and for those who weren’t Christians. It describes how they met everyday, joyfully and genuinely pouring out their hearts to God in praise and enjoying being with each other. And the Lord blessed them.
I want you to listen to the words of George Barna in his book, “The Second Coming of the Church”. Barna writes, “Despite the activity emanating from thousands of congregations, the Church
August 19, 2001
Introduction
In his book “The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership”, John Maxwell tells the story of one of the most incredible restorations in American business history. It happened at the Chrysler Corporation in the early 1980’s. Chrysler was in a mess, despite a long history of success. At one point in Chrysler’s history they had captured an incredible 25% of the entire domestic automobile market. By the time the 1970’s rolled around, the Chrysler Corporation was in a steady decline. By 1978 they only had 11% of the market. Things looked bleak. The company was headed toward bankruptcy. In November 1978, Chrysler brought a new leader to take over the company. His name was Lee Iacocca. Iacocca had just left Ford in 1978 after serving as their president. When he left Ford, the company, under his leadership, was earning record profits of 1.8 billion in each of the last two years. The task of turning around Chrysler proved to be enormous. Iacocca described the company as having been run like a small grocery store, despite its size. There were no viable financial systems or controls in place, production and supply methods were a mess, products were built poorly, and nearly all of the divisions were run by turf-minded vice presidents who refused to work as a team. Morale was very low throughout the company, customer loyalty was low, and the company continued to lose money. Iacocca did everything he knew how to turn things around. He replaced 33 of the 35 vice presidents. He brought in the best leaders he could find. He reduced as many expensed as he could. He grudgingly and humbly went before Congress for loan guarantees so that Chrysler would not go bankrupt. Finally, he reduced his own salary to $1.00 a year. Iacocca brought about a total restoration to the Chrysler Corporation. By 1983, Chrysler was able to pay back its loans. Before he retired, Chrysler had gained 16% of the market, double what it was in the first years he took over. The company has fought its way back and been restored to a growing, profitable industry.
Today, I’m the third leg in our 4 R’s sermon series, “Restore: Church, Get Right!”. This sermon has been a difficult one for me to put together. I don’t want to preach a doom and gloom sermon on the state and future of the Church. I believe very strongly in the Church. I love the Church deeply. I’ve committed my life to Christ’s Church. That being said, when I take an honest look at the Church, especially the Church in America, I’m troubled. We don’t look like, act like, or function like the Church I read about in my Bible. One of my favorite passages in Bible is in Acts 2:42-47 describing the early Church right after Jesus’ ascension into heaven and the Day of Pentecost. These verses describe the Church as being devoted to the teaching of God’s Word, to each other, and to prayer. It describes the great love that the Church had for one another and for those who weren’t Christians. It describes how they met everyday, joyfully and genuinely pouring out their hearts to God in praise and enjoying being with each other. And the Lord blessed them.
I want you to listen to the words of George Barna in his book, “The Second Coming of the Church”. Barna writes, “Despite the activity emanating from thousands of congregations, the Church
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