Three Characteristics of Community Investment:
- Biblical most important
- Practical must be hands-on
- Relevant know your context and meet people where they are
1. Biblical
- Ephesians 4:11–12: You are being trained to lead others. Pour into others.
- Jeremiah 29:7: Be salt and light to your community. Slow down the destruction that sin causes in your community.
- Matthew 5:13–16
- Matthew 22:36–40
- Matthew 28:18–20
- Romans 12:18 : Pray for your leaders and live in peace with others.
- 1 Timothy 2:1–4
Leadership should reinforce the biblical foundation of City Investment in every aspect of the church’s ministry.
2. Practical
- Evaluate your resources: God is not limited by our resources, but be smart and know what you have available
- Materials: think outside the box
- Budget: don’t let it limit your dreaming
- People: Know your people. Success builds success. Give responsibilities appropriately.
- Skills, strengths, and weaknesses
Try to create a balance between struggle and success. This is where growth occurs.
Ask the partner, ‘what needs do you have?’
- Choose your partners (you are not able to meet every practical need
- Relief vs. development relief lifts an immediate burden; development is empowering for future change.
A balanced ministry will invest in the physical, emotional, and spiritual health of your community.
3. Relevant
- Know your city. Research demographics. Know the area around your church as well as the larger metro area.
- Know the culture. The culture in the church and the city are often very different.
- Know the community leaders. Work to build their trust. Take the time to build relationships to accomplish the goals together.
- Do not make assumptions. Don’t feed the misconceptions. Don’t assume you know what the problem is and that you have the answers.
- “Your perception of me may not be my reality.”
Be willing to make long-term investments! Learn to give ministry away to be more effective. Use your influence where you are to create a culture of serving out in the community. –Center Church by Tim Keller