5 Ways We’re Fooling Ourselves About Church Growth

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2. Funny Attendance Math:

There is a popular trend within many church leadership circles to count attendance in some funny ways to make us feel like our ministry is having a bigger impact than it actually is. Here are a few examples:

    • People are coming to church 30 percent less than they were 10 years ago, so our church is really 30 percent larger than the number of people who attend on any given weekend.
    • We look the other way when we know that our system is double counting volunteers, effectively boosting our numbers by 10-15 percent.
    • We change the way we count so things look better now than they did a previously. For instance, we never used to include the student ministry events in our attendance but now we put those numbers in to boost our overall attendance picture.

3. “Big Days” Attendance:

Three or four times a year most churches have unusually high attendance. Sometimes, we use the attendance numbers on these “big days” as the benchmark for our attendance. Boosting attendance on Christmas Eve or Easter is an effective part of church growth strategy, but it’s not a valid number for when you talk about how large your church is. The dynamics at play to get a lot of people to show up for a single special event are different than what it takes to build a long-term impact in a community.

4. Tallest of the Seven Dwarfs:

We often look at other churches in town and are happy that we’re bigger than “them.” Rather than understanding why people don’t attend any church in our town, we look down our noses at those churches that have the same struggles as ours. All this does is breed division among the churches in your community.

5. Plateaued Growth by Increasing Revenue:

This is the most dangerous of all these trends. Believe it or not, there are churches that are plateaued in attendance or even in decline but their revenue is growing. This is a super alarming trend because it will empower the church to shift from being a dynamic volunteer-driven organization to a staff-heavy enterprise. The money generated will negatively reinforce behaviors that will cause the church to have a diminished impact. This church can be referred to as a “zombie church” because it has lost its life but can go on for a long time appearing to be alive.

Paths forward to real Church Growth:

Start Reaching…not just keeping.

Start Listening to the Culture to find points of connection with the gospel.

Start Making Friends with “outsiders.”

Start Learning From Growing Churches and applying what you think you can.

Start Praying for Revival in our Country.

I’m on your side. I want to help your church grow. It’s at the core of what we do around here at unSeminary. Here are some resources to help you kick-start the growth of your church:

 

This article on real church growth originally appeared here and is used by permission.

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Rich Birchhttp://www.unseminary.com
Rich serves as Operations Pastor at Liquid Church in the Manhattan facing suburbs of New Jersey. He blogs at UnSeminary.com and is a sought after speaker and consultant on multisite, pastoral productivity and communications.

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