Monday, June 1, 2026

Becoming an Acts 6 Church: A Vision for Trinity to Complain About This Coming Year ~ Acts 6:1-7

 

“In those days when the number of disciples was increasing, the Hellenistic Jews among them complained against the Hebraic Jews because their widows were being overlooked in the daily distribution of food.” — Acts 6:1

Anyone who’s been in church long enough knows this truth: eventually, someone complains. Usually we treat complaints like threats. Like grenades thrown into the life of the church. We brace ourselves. Defend ourselves. Explain ourselves. Fight. Flee. Shut it down. But Acts 6 gives us a surprisingly different picture. The early church doesn’t grow despite complaints. It grows through them. Complaints become the doorway to deeper ministry, wider participation, and greater faithfulness.

So here’s the challenge before Trinity this year: What if the future of our church depends not on silencing complaints—but on listening for the Spirit within them? What if some complaints are not distractions from ministry but invitations into it? And what if the church in Acts 6 became our model for real ministry? What might that look like?

Acts 6 Churches Complain About Real Need

In Acts 6, Greek-speaking widows are being neglected in the daily distribution of food. Not inconvenienced. Not overlooked accidentally. Neglected. And the church does something remarkable: they tell the truth about it. A minority group names a real injustice, and the apostles do not minimize it, spin it, or bury it. They listen.

Friends, I have seen us becoming that kind of Acts 6 church. I saw it when people in this congregation became weary of toxic politics poisoning relationships, distorting Christian witness, and discipling people more deeply than Jesus. A few brave people complained—and instead of ignoring it, they created space for honest conversation, prayer, and reconciliation.

I saw it when members of this church looked around Salem and complained that families living below the poverty line were drowning financially with nowhere to turn. And that complaint became a free tax-preparation ministry that served our neighbors with dignity and practical care.

I saw it when people noticed families losing SNAP benefits and struggling to put food on the table. They complained that people were being neglected—and that complaint became partnership, food distribution, and shared ministry with Queen of Peace Catholic Church.

Again and again, I’ve seen this truth: complaining does not disqualify us. Silence does. A Spirit-filled church is not a church without problems. It is a church courageous enough to face them honestly. Because if we cannot name our failures, our needs, we cannot make a difference.

Acts 6 Churches Critique Themselves From the Inside

Notice something important in Acts 6: the complaint comes from within the church. The people speaking up are not disgruntled detractors. They belong. They love the community enough to tell the truth about it. That is rare. Most institutions protect themselves, get defensive, become better at cancelling complainers than addressing them.

But the early church did something different. When they spoke about sin and failure, they did not point outward and say, “their sin.” They confessed: “our sin” (1 Cor. 15:3). Our neglect. Our blindness. Our responsibility.

So here is the question before us: Can Trinity become the kind of church where people are free to name what is broken without fear? Can we become the kind of church where complaints are not dismissed immediately, but discerned prayerfully? Can we become a people secure enough in grace that we no longer need to pretend?

Because that kind of honesty is evangelistic. It tells the world we are not performing righteousness but truly pursuing it – sometimes failingly, of course, but honestly and persistently.

Acts 6 Churches Empower the Complainers

And here is the most shocking part of the story. The apostles do not merely listen to the complaint. They hand ministry over to the people raising it. “You choose the leaders,” they say.

And who do they choose? The very group that spoke up. That is the turning point of Acts 6. Because complaining by itself is only criticism. But complaint joined with responsibility? That becomes ministry. Some of the most powerful ministry at Trinity this past year was led by people who first complained. They saw something broken. Something neglected. Something hurting. And instead of walking away, they stepped toward it.

So let me ask you directly: What do you want to complain about? Where do you see neglect? What breaks your heart? What frustrates you? Where do you find yourself thinking: “Someone should really do something about this”?

Acts 6 asks a dangerous question: What if that someone is you? Not because you are the loudest voice. Not because you have all the answers. But because the Spirit may be helping you see what all of us must. We do not need more volunteers. We need disciples willing to take responsibility for what God places in front of them. People who will complain. Pray. Discern. And act. That is ministry. That is how the church grows: not when a few exhausted people do everything, but when the whole body becomes responsible for the mission of Jesus together.

The Result: The Church Revives and the Pastor Converts

Acts 6 ends with a surprising detail: A large number of priests begin joining the movement (6:7). Religious professionals start becoming Christians. Why? Because they witnessed something beautiful: a community where ministry was not controlled by a few powerful people, but shared among the whole church. A church where the Spirit moved through ordinary people. A church where people did not merely attend—they took ownership. A church where people did not merely complain—they served.

And friends, I need to tell you something honestly: Your faithfulness has converted me. Your willingness to speak hard truths, start ministries, serve neighbors, and take responsibility has changed how I understand who we are and what we might do. This is the kind of church I don’t simply wish to lead but am proud to belong. Not a church without problems— but a church willing to face them. Not a church afraid of complaints— but a church listening for the Spirit through them. Not a church where a few people carry the ministry— but a church where every member is called into it.

So as we recommit ourselves this year—spiritually, relationally, financially—this is the question before us: Will we remain spectators? Or will we be an Act 6 church of Spirit-filled complainers? A church brave enough to complain, faithful enough to listen, and courageous enough to serve. So complain, if you must. But don’t stop there. Pray. Step in. Take responsibility. Because that’s where the Spirit moves. And that’s how the church becomes good news.

 

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