In the story of the greatest cause in history, becoming and making disciples of Christ, many Christians are disengaged. They've had enough experience with church to be reluctant, but often a critical life event, relationship or message convinces them it's time to engage. This is the time to aim small groups. Worship attendance and serving are important but to lessen the chances of missing out on the target - authentic Christ-like discipleship - a church must set its sights on small groups.
I grew up on a ranch, so my entire childhood was spent around guns. I owned and used a BB gun, a 22 rifle, a 30-30 rifle and often used other family member's rifles. (In context, know that training and respect for guns was built into the culture I grew up in.) When shooting an open-sight rifle (i.e. a rifle without a scope), you always align the rear sight (closest to you) with the front sight (tip of the barrel) and the intended target. This is the key to hitting what you're shooting at.
Aiming small groups requires lining up the rear sight, connecting people, with the front sight sight, authentic relationships, and the target,Christ-like discipleship.
The smaller you make the Christ-like, discipleship target the more likely you are to see success. For instance if you connect people in groups and everyone chooses to honestly open up and you align both of these around spending daily time with the Lord. That's aiming small. What happens if you take any of these sight points away?
If you know the story of Churchteams, you know that we started with a clear eye on helping churches use technology to revolutionize small groups.
Over the next months, we are going to dig into these and other related small group features that were and are foundational to the tools we provide to help your church accomplish it's discipleship strategy and goals.