Article Display
Email  |  My Account  |  Donate
Do you realize that if your weekend attendance totals about 90 people, you're an above average church (at least in the United States and when measuring by such numbers)?

If you're wondering what you need to do to grow, here are eight steps that can help you break an attendance barrier:

Decide You Really, Really Want To Grow
Believe it or not, the primary barrier to church growth is desire. Do you really want to grow? If the answer is yes, then you must commit to this goal and be willing to accept changes.

And the people in your congregation must also be willing to accept changes.

The Bible says, "Except a grain of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abides alone. But if it dies, it then bears fruit." In order for a church to grow, some things have to die. Those who had intimacy with the pastor have to learn to share him with new people. They have to be willing to let go of the control they have in certain decisions and in certain areas.

It takes incredible unselfishness. They must be willing to die to some traditions, to some feelings, to some relationships in order for the kingdom of God to be advanced. That takes a lot of maturity.

The Role Of The Pastor Must Change
Once you decide you want to grow, you'll need to analyze your role as pastor. You must be willing to change from minister to leader. If everything depends on you—if you have to personally minister to every person in your church—then the church cannot grow beyond your own energy level. And that is a barrier! You become a bottleneck, an obstacle to growth.

This is called the Shepherd-Rancher Conflict. As the pastor of a little church you know everybody, you do all the praying, all the baptizing, all the teaching, you know every family, every kid, every dog and cat and you shepherd everybody personally. But there's a limit to how many people you can personally shepherd.

As the church grows you must change roles from Shepherd to Rancher. The Rancher helps oversee the under-Shepherds. Practically everybody on my staff does more weddings and counseling than I do (in fact, I do very few now because I don't want to show favoritism among our 17,000 members).

You must be willing to let other people share the ministry. Ask yourself, "Would I be happy being a Rancher?" If you answer no, then I suggest you take on a goal that your church will sponsor new churches—so you're still growing, but in a different way.

Mobilize Members For Ministry
Be willing to give up some leadership and entrust ministry to the people in the pews. After the congregation has decided it wants to grow, and then start teaching the ministry of the laity and talking about the importance of every believer using their unique gift to minister to the body.

Let your people know, "If you don't do your part in ministry by sharing your unique gifts, then the rest of us get cheated. If I don't do my part in ministry, then you get cheated." Help your people understand this concept and mobilize them to begin ministering.

Begin Having Multiple Services
If you're not already doing so, I encourage you to seriously start planning for it. By offering people a choice of services, you're effectively putting another hook in the water.

Multiply Your Staff
In order to grow past that 200 barrier, you must begin moving to multiple staff. You must begin to specialize the staff under your leadership.

Plan Big Days
The best way I know to break through barriers is to break a few all at one time. Plan a big day—an event—and your numbers go up. Yes, they go back down afterwards, but not as far as they were before the event. Keep doing this and you grow. Big holidays are an obvious time to concentrate on events—Easter, Christmas. Plan outreaches to the community.

Have Multiple Cells
People will often complain about not being cared for when the real issue is that they're losing control. "There are so many people here I don't feel like anybody cares for me anymore" is a common complaint. Another is, "The pastor is too busy for me now." Caring is a legitimate issue, but you can respond through the multiplication of cells—groups of 8-12 people. Cells become tools for caring for the body.

Expand Your Facility
At Saddleback, we had over 10,000 members before we ever built our first building, so I'm not advocating rushing out to build a facility. In fact, many churches build too small, too fast. What I'm saying is this: you need to plan for growth and project out what your needs will be.

May God bless you and anoint you as you begin to implement these changes.

This article is used by permission from
Rick Warren's Ministry ToolBox by Rick Warren.
More information available at www.pastors.com.

Author Biography

Rick Warren
Web site: Pastors.com
 
Rick Warren is the founding pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, California. Beginning with just his wife, Kay, in 1980, the congregation now averages 22,000 attendees at its 5 weekend services.
Read more...

About Us

The online ministry of cfaith has been helping people discover faith, friends and freedom in the Word since 2000. Cfaith provides a unique and comprehensive collection of faith-building resources for the worldwide faith community.

At cfaith, you can strengthen your faith and deepen your understanding of the Word of God by digging into the vast collection of teaching articles, streaming audio and video messages, and daily devotionals. No other website offers such a unique and extensive collection of spiritual-growth resources aimed at helping you grow in your knowledge of the Word.

Read More...

 

 

Support Us

Why support cfaith?


(All contributions are 100% tax deductible)


SUPPORT CFAITH WITH ONE CLICK!

For every Internet search you make using
goodsearch, cfaith will receive one penny!

GS Logo 250x38

Contact Us

Business Hours:


Monday—Friday: 9 a.m.—5 p.m. CST
Saturday & Sunday: Closed

Phone:

(763) 488-7800 or (800) 748-8107

Mailing Address: 

CFAITH.com
9201 75th Avenue North
Brooklyn Park, MN 55428

 

Login Form

Please ignore the “Secret Key” field; it is not needed to log in to cfaith.

Login Change Article

Spring360x442
You need to enable user registration from User Manager/Options in the backend of Joomla before this module will activate.