My church is not growing. People come, but they do not stay. We’ve analyzed all the majors and feel we are doing what we should, but they do not stay.
It’s hard to diagnose here without more information. I do
believe God wants the church to grow. We are to make disciples, and part of
discipleship is making more disciples. That, in and of itself is growth.
A few quick comments first:
God
is in charge of the numbers.
People can disagree with me (and do) when I say I believe
healthy churches are growing. Some grow in different ways. Some internally and
some by raising up people who go outside the church to make disciples.
Regardless of how growth occurs, all of us must agree God is ultimately in control.
The
Holy Spirit grows people and therefore the church.
We aren’t without responsibility in doing our part. We’ve
been given an assignment to be a body with many parts, but we don’t ultimately
grow people or churches.
Churches
go through seasons, just as individual believers do.
There are seasons we grow more than others and seasons we
are simply maturing to grow later.
There
are no cookie cutter answers.
Just as God makes people unique, churches are unique
because they are comprised of unique people.
With those clarifications, here are a few quick thoughts
to help you discern your particular situation:
1.
Do a survey of anyone who visited in the last year.
Ask them why they stayed or didn’t stay. Ask them for
ideas they have to improve a visitor's experience. Ask them how they found the
church. Be prepared for some hard answers, but you may discover things you
aren’t seeing.
2.
Do a church wide/or leadership wide half-day brainstorming session, depending
on the size of your church.
You want enough people to have a wide range of ideas, but
not so many that you never get anything accomplished. I’ve done this with 12
and I’ve done it with 100. That’s getting a little large, but you don’t want to
exclude people who are genuinely concerned and want to help the church.
I prefer people who have positive dispositions, but you
need a range of thought. You might even bring someone in to facilitate this
process. Many times there are answers in the room that come from collected
thinking. Ask, why aren’t people staying and what can we do?
You may need to do a second half-day, perhaps with a
smaller group, to summarize and make conclusions from the feedback of the
larger group. In my experience, you will produce some key thoughts from an
exercise like this which will spur momentum, in addition to creating renewed
energy among these key leaders. (But you’ll have to act on some of the
suggestions.)
3.
Pay a community member (or a professional consultant if you can afford it) to
“secret shop” your church and give you honest feedback.
You can often find someone to do this free of charge
simply to help the church, but there are professionals who know what to look
for in a church visit. Many times, we can’t see what’s missing on our own.The bottom line is that you’ll have to do something intentional to get the answers you don’t have.
There are good church consultants out there if you want to take that step. Let me know if you want some names and contact information. But, keep asking the questions you’re asking. Our mission as a church hasn’t changed, but the culture around us is changing rapidly. We must continue to grow as church leaders in order to continue to make new disciples.
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