004 What Kind of Community Are We Becoming?
Reflections on faithfulness within and beyond the church
Mark 6:30–44
The Return of the Apostles
Compassion for the Crowd
The Feeding of the Five Thousand
Rejected at Nazareth
The Twelve Are Sent Out
Herod Hears of Jesus
The Death of John the Baptist
The Return of the Apostles
Compassion for the Crowd
The Feeding of the Five Thousand
Jesus Walks on the Sea
Healings at Gennesaret
Notes
Notes
Vocabulary
Vocabulary
You Give Them Something to Eat
In Mark 6, the disciples are tired.
They have been teaching, traveling, healing, and ministering among the crowds. Jesus recognizes their exhaustion and invites them away to a quiet place to rest. Yet when they arrive, the crowds are already waiting.
The disciples see a problem developing immediately.
There are too many people.
The place is isolated.
The hour is late.
Resources are limited.
Their solution is understandable:
“Send them away.”
Let the people go somewhere else.
Let them find food elsewhere.
Let them care for themselves.
But Jesus responds with a different vision of community:
“You give them something to eat.”
The disciples immediately move into scarcity thinking. They calculate costs. They measure resources. They explain limitations. They focus on what they do not have.
Five loaves.
Two fish.
Not enough.
Yet Jesus does something remarkable. He does not simply feed a crowd. He organizes people into communities. Mark tells us they sit down together in groups upon the green grass. The crowd becomes smaller circles of shared presence. People stop being anonymous bodies and become gathered communities sharing a meal together.
The miracle is not merely about bread. It is about the formation of a people.
And in many ways, the church today faces a similar question:
What kind of community are we becoming together?
Naming the Pressure We Feel
Many pastors and churches are carrying a quiet pressure right now.
Some congregations feel pressure to grow. Others feel pressure simply to stabilize. Many churches are aging. Budgets are tighter than they once were. Attendance patterns have changed. Volunteers are tired. Pastors often feel caught between maintaining institutions, caring for people, responding to crises, and trying to imagine what faithful ministry now requires.
In many churches, there is also a deeper emotional pressure beneath the practical concerns. Congregations wonder whether they still matter. Pastors quietly wonder whether they are doing enough. Sessions feel responsible for preserving ministries built through decades of sacrifice and love.
Much like the disciples in Mark 6, churches often find themselves staring at the gap between the needs around them and the resources they possess.
There are too many needs.
Too few volunteers.
Too little money.
Too much uncertainty.
None of this anxiety is irrational. Much of it emerges from love. People care deeply about their churches because those communities have shaped lives, carried grief, celebrated baptisms, held funerals, taught children, fed neighbors, and proclaimed the gospel across generations.
Yet in seasons of anxiety, churches can begin asking narrower and narrower questions.
How do we increase attendance?
How do we maintain giving?
How do we keep programs running?
How do we survive?
These are understandable questions. But they are not always the deepest questions.
Perhaps a more important question for this season is this:
What kind of community are we becoming together?
Beyond Crowds and Survival
The future of the church depends less on attracting crowds and more on cultivating faithful communities within and beyond the church.
This does not mean numbers are irrelevant. Scripture often speaks of communities growing. New people entering the life of the church is something to celebrate. But attendance alone cannot tell us whether a congregation is becoming more faithful, more loving, more courageous, more rooted in Christ, or more engaged in the healing work of God within the world.
A crowded room is not necessarily a faithful community. And a smaller congregation is not necessarily a dying one.
This is one of the hidden tensions within Mark 6. The disciples are overwhelmed by the size of the crowd itself. The people become a management problem. The disciples instinctively move toward dispersal and scarcity.
Jesus moves in another direction.
He gathers people.
Organizes them.
Feeds them.
Invites participation.
Creates shared abundance.
Again and again, scripture presents faithful communities not as religious vendors or spiritual performance centers, but as people learning how to embody the life of God together.
Churches are not called merely to gather people. They are called to form people into a way of life shaped by the kingdom of God.
Communities Are Formed Through Relationships
This matters because churches can become trapped in cycles of activity without cultivating deeper relationships either within the congregation or beyond it.
It is possible to maintain programs while losing connection. It is possible to perform mission projects without truly knowing neighbors. It is possible to distribute resources while remaining relationally distant from the people we are trying to serve.
Many churches have experienced this tension. We organize a coat drive, collect canned goods, or sponsor a seasonal outreach project. These actions may help people in real ways, and they should not be dismissed. Compassion matters. Generosity matters. Immediate needs matter.
But faithful communities are formed through relationships, not simply transactions.
A church may give mittens to children every winter and still remain largely disconnected from the lives of the families receiving them. The action itself is not wrong. The deeper question is whether the church is becoming a community that knows, listens, accompanies, and shares life with neighbors over time.
Jesus doesn’t approached people as projects.
Even in Mark 6, Jesus does not simply throw bread into a crowd and disappear. He slows the moment down. People gather together. Food is shared in community. The crowd becomes something more relational, more visible, more human.
Communities shaped by the kingdom of God are relational before they are programmatic.
This is also why the church’s internal life and outward witness cannot be separated from one another for long.
Congregations cannot meaningfully proclaim reconciliation while nurturing hostility internally. Churches cannot preach compassion while remaining disconnected from the suffering around them. Nor can churches sustain outward mission if their internal relationships are marked by exhaustion, resentment, isolation, or distrust.
Communities of faith are formed both within and beyond the walls of the church.
Within the church, people learn practices of forgiveness, prayer, generosity, hospitality, courage, and mutual care. Beyond the church, those same practices become public discipleship. They take visible form within schools, neighborhoods, local organizations, civic life, and everyday relationships.
The church becomes a sign of God’s kingdom not merely when it gathers for worship, but when its shared life overflows into the healing, strengthening, and blessing of the surrounding community.
Small Churches Still Carry Important Gifts
This is one of the reasons many small and medium-sized churches may be more prepared for this season than they realize.
Large institutions often rely upon scale, specialization, and constant production. Smaller congregations frequently possess different gifts. They know people across generations. They understand local histories. They are woven into the rhythms of towns and neighborhoods. They often carry relational memory and local trust that cannot be manufactured quickly.
Many small churches underestimate the significance of these gifts because they compare themselves to models built for entirely different contexts.
But the kingdom of God has rarely depended upon scale. It has always depended upon faithfulness.
In Mark 6, Jesus does not begin with abundance. He begins with what is already present.
Five loaves.
Two fish.
A tired group of disciples.
A crowd gathered in uncertainty.
And somehow, through shared participation and trust, something life-giving begins to emerge.
A congregation of fifty people who deeply know one another, pray together, support struggling neighbors, collaborate with local schools, welcome isolated people, and remain steadily present within a community may embody the gospel more clearly than a much larger institution driven primarily by consumption and activity.
Faithful presence matters.
This does not mean small churches should avoid change or refuse imagination. Faithfulness is not nostalgia. Churches still need courage, experimentation, discernment, and adaptation. But those changes should emerge from deeper communal life rather than panic.
In many places, churches do not need to become larger versions of someone else’s ministry model. They need to become more deeply rooted versions of who God is calling them to be within their own communities.
Within and Beyond the Church
Communities of shalom are rarely built through urgency alone. They are cultivated slowly through presence, trust, shared practices, and mutual care.
Most of this work is ordinary.
It looks like churches partnering rather than competing. Pastors supporting one another rather than carrying ministry alone. Congregations listening before acting. Shared meals. Community conversations. Intergenerational friendships. Presence at local events. Praying with people during moments of grief and uncertainty. Learning the names of neighbors. Creating spaces where lonely people become known.
None of these actions will likely go viral. Many will never appear in denominational reports or social media campaigns. Yet this slow relational work may be among the most important ministries churches can offer in an anxious and fragmented age.
Healthy congregations do not simply ask:
“How can we get people into the church?”
They also ask:
“How can we become a blessing within the life of our community?”
How are we helping people flourish?
How are we healing relationships?
How are we strengthening neighborhoods?
How are we supporting schools, families, workers, elderly people, children, and struggling neighbors?
How are we participating in God’s restoration within the places where we have been planted?
These questions move churches beyond institutional survival and back toward public discipleship.
We Can Do This Together
And importantly, no congregation needs to do this alone.
One of the great temptations within ministry is believing that every church must independently solve every problem it faces. But the church has always been a communal body. Pastors need one another. Churches need one another. Presbyteries, partnerships, and local collaborations matter because faithful ministry has never been intended as an isolated project carried by heroic leaders.
We can do this together.
The church has moved through seasons of uncertainty before, and again and again God has brought new life through communities willing to remain faithful together.
Not perfectly. Not without setbacks. Not without grief, uncertainty, or experimentation. But together.
In Mark 6, the disciples initially see only scarcity and limitation. Jesus invites them into shared participation instead.
Bring what you have.
Gather people together.
Trust that God still works through ordinary offerings placed into faithful hands.
In many places, the future of the church may depend less on recovering old models of success and more on recovering the slow, relational, hopeful work of becoming faithful communities again.
Communities that know one another.
Communities that remain present.
Communities that participate in God’s healing work within the world.
Communities that trust that even small acts of faithfulness matter.
The church does not need to become everything at once. But perhaps in this season, each congregation can take one faithful step:
to deepen one relationship,
strengthen one partnership,
listen to one neighbor,
encourage one weary leader,
or begin one honest conversation about what faithful presence now requires.
And perhaps that step, taken together, is where renewal begins. In anxious times, faithful communities become signs that God is still feeding, healing, gathering, and renewing the world.
Discussion Questions
- In this season of ministry, where do you most feel pressure, scarcity, or exhaustion within your congregation?
- In Mark 6, the disciples immediately focus on what they do not have. Where do churches today tend to focus on scarcity rather than possibility or faithfulness?
- What do you think actually makes a church a faithful community, beyond attendance, programming, or institutional success?
- Jesus organizes the crowd into smaller communities gathered together on the grass before the meal is shared. What helps people move from being “attenders” toward becoming a genuine community?
- Where have you seen churches build meaningful relationships within their surrounding communities rather than simply providing services or programs?
- If your congregation disappeared tomorrow, what would your community miss most? What does that reveal about your church’s current presence within the community?
- What gifts or strengths do small and medium-sized churches often overlook or underestimate about themselves?
- What might become possible if pastors and churches in this region viewed one another less as isolated congregations and more as partners in shared ministry?
- What is one relational or community-centered practice your church could begin, deepen, or reimagine in the next few months?
- As you reflect on Mark 6, where do you sense Jesus saying to your congregation today: “You give them something to eat”?
Practices to Consider
In Mark 6, Jesus does not ask the disciples to solve every problem at once. He invites them to bring what they have, gather people together, and participate faithfully in the work before them.
Choose one practice to try for the next month:
- Learn one new story. Spend intentional time listening to someone within your church or community whose story, struggles, or experiences are not well known to you.
- Create smaller circles of connection. Experiment with one simple practice — shared meals, prayer gatherings, storytelling, or neighborhood conversations — that helps people move beyond attending worship and toward deeper relationships.
- Slow one anxious conversation. When pressure rises within leadership or congregational life, resist the urge to solve everything immediately. Make room for prayer, listening, reflection, and discernment.
- Notice hidden gifts within your congregation. Identify people whose wisdom, relationships, hospitality, practical skills, or quiet faithfulness are already helping sustain the life of the church and community.
- Listen to the community before organizing a response. Before beginning a new ministry initiative or outreach effort, spend time asking neighbors, teachers, local leaders, caregivers, or service organizations what needs, hopes, or challenges they are actually experiencing.
- Strengthen one relationship beyond the walls of the church. Reach out to a local school, nonprofit, small business, recovery group, neighborhood organization, or community leader and begin building a relationship before discussing programs or projects.
- Encourage one weary leader. Contact another pastor, elder, volunteer, teacher, caregiver, or community leader simply to listen, pray, encourage, or share support.
- Take one faithful step together. Rather than attempting to solve every challenge at once, identify one relational or community-centered action your congregation can begin alongside other leaders, churches, or community partners in this season.
Scripture on this page is from The Shared Word Translation (SWT), an ongoing translation project within ChurchCommons.org.