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To stay or to leave: When to consider finding another church

Both joining a church and leaving a church are serious business. Even if it does become clear that leaving is best for us or our family, our attitude must be chastened and humble.
  • March 9, 2025
  • South Carolina The Courier
  • Church Life, Featured, First Person, Latest News
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To stay or to leave: When to consider finding another church

It is the conversation with church members every pastor dreads, but inevitably comes to every man who has shepherded a local flock: “Pastor, we need to meet with you and discuss our future at the church. We have been praying about transferring our membership to another church.” Naturally, you ask the inevitable question, “Why?”

The answers are as varied as the variety found in wayfaring members, ranging from “The church up the street has more to offer my youth/children” to “We just don’t find things exciting here anymore,” or most troubling, “We love you and your preaching, Pastor, we just don’t really like this church.”

There are certainly legitimate reasons to leave a church, and, sadly, it sometimes become necessary or even a duty to find a more biblically faithful body.

Sometimes churches become theologically or morally bankrupt, leaving a sound believer no choice. But it seems in our self-intoxicated, consumer-driven evangelical culture, what is often referred to as “church hopping” seems to have reached a virtual epidemic.

There are several reasons for this reality with biblical illiteracy, a loss of a robust ecclesiology, a distaste for authority, the disappearance of church discipline, and the decay of meaningful church membership ranking high among them.

When not to leave

When should you leave a church?

I think it is helpful to first think through a few reasons not to leave a church. Here are a few illegitimate reasons for leaving a church, all of which I have heard over the years:

Because our children want to go to another church. The most spiritually immature (presumably) members of the family should not single-handedly make the most important decision facing a family. This is perhaps the most common reason I have heard for people leaving a church, and I find it deeply troubling.

Because there aren’t many people here my age. The body of Christ is supposed to reflect the culture, which is made up of a diversity of ages and backgrounds. The church is not a social club, but the gathering of sinners saved by grace. The world should be at odds to explain the church. It should wonder, “What is it that brings together such a diverse collection of people in such a tight bond of love?”

Because I don’t like the music. The contemporary/traditional question is usually wrongheaded, in my opinion. Of greater importance is the question: What is the content of the songs being sung? Is the church singing good theology? Tune and text must fit one another, but I find that this debate usually falls out along generational lines.

Because the pastor’s sermons are too long. Preaching is the central act of Christian worship and should receive the lion’s share of the time.

Because there are many sinners in the church. As Luther put it, followers of Christ are simul iustis et peccator — simultaneously a saint and a sinner. The local church is a hospital for the sick, not an academy for grace graduates. Obviously, there is a serious sickness where open, wanton, unconfessed sin is tolerated, but that’s not what I have in mind here.

Because the pastor doesn’t do things the way we did back in 19__ (add your favorite year). Tradition can be helpful, but traditionalism is where churches go to die a thousand deaths.

Because they don’t have a good youth/children’s program here. Parents are the spiritual caretakers for the children. The church should merely reinforce the biblical truths taught in the home. No church program will adequately shepherd our children; that is the calling of parents, particularly fathers. Don’t farm that out.

Because the worship/preaching is boring. The aim of worship is God’s glory, not your amusement.

Because they have/don’t have Sunday School. I realize many adherents of family integration will disagree with me here, but I want to argue respectfully that the gospel and theological truth — not secondary convictions — are the proper unifying point for a local church.

Valid reasons for leaving

Those are invalid reasons for leaving a church, and there are dozens more besides. But there does come a time when seeking a new church home is a legitimate consideration. So, when should one leave a church? John MacArthur is helpful on this point. He advises (and provides biblical rationale) that you should consider leaving a church if:

  • Heresy on some fundamental truth is being taught from the pulpit (Gal. 1:7-9).
  • The leaders of the church tolerate seriously errant doctrine from any who are given teaching authority in the fellowship (Rom. 16:17).
  • The church is characterized by a wanton disregard for Scripture, such as a refusal to discipline members who are sinning blatantly (1 Cor. 5:1-7).
  • Unholy living is tolerated in the church (1 Cor. 5:9–11).
  • The church is seriously out of step with the biblical pattern for the church (2 Thess. 3:6, 14).
  • The church is marked by gross hypocrisy, giving lip service to biblical Christianity but refusing to acknowledge its true power (2 Tim. 3:5).

Be humble

When members or friends have discussed leaving a church with me through the years, I have typically advised them to stick around and be a gracious, reforming presence and avoid exacerbating the problems in their local body.

Both joining a church and leaving a church are serious business — business for which those involved will give an account before God. Even if it does become clear that leaving is best for us or our family, our attitude must be chastened and humble on the way out.


EDITOR’S NOTE — This story was written by Jeff Robinson and originally published by the Baptist Courier. 

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