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Is Your Church Stuck or Just Small?

“If a church is healthy in every way but numerical growth, is it really stuck?”

No.

It turns out, my church wasn’t stuck at all. It was just small.

And if that’s the case—if a small church can be a healthy church—then maybe numerical growth isn’t the be-all, end-all sign of health we’ve made it out to be.

Maybe a healthy small church is an OK thing to be.

And, as I soon discovered, a healthy church that keeps working on health gets even healthier.

Have You Asked That Question?

What about your church?

Have you been spinning in the same never-ending cycle of frustration I was?

Have you been trying to unstick a church that might not be stuck?

Is it possible your church isn’t stuck? Just small?

If you’re not sure, I encourage you to learn from my mistakes and do what I should have done all along. Look at your church and ask the question I finally got around to asking.

If you took numerical growth off the table, would your church be considered unhealthy?

If it’s unhealthy, get to work on fixing that, regardless of growth.

If it’s healthy, quit beating yourself and your church up for not getting bigger. That may not be what God is calling you to be.

Yes, you read that right. God may not be calling your church to grow numerically. Despite what we’ve been told, individual congregational growth is not a biblical mandate.

If a church is healthy but not getting bigger, then it’s not stuck. It’s just small.

Is Your Church Healthy?

So, if we take numerical growth off the table, what are the signs of a healthy church?

Isn’t it strange that we even have to ask that question? Any church leader should know the signs of a healthy church, no matter what size it is. But we’ve been so inundated with a grow, grow, grow approach to church health, it may take a reboot of our heads, hearts and spirits to start looking at church health through a lens other than numerical growth.

I’ve taken a look at some non-numerical aspects of church health in previous posts. Here are a few of them:

If you want other ideas about how to assess church health, apart from numbers, here’s an idea. Do a Google search for “signs of a healthy church” or something like that. Then read some of the thousands of blog posts that come up. As you go through those lists (it’s always a list), ignore any points that have to do with numerical growth and pay close attention to everything else.

Is your church doing all or most of those non-numerical signs of health?

Then you have a healthy church.

You’re not stuck. You’re just small.

So what do you think? Have you ever considered that your small church might not be stuck, just small?  

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Karl is the author of four books and has been in pastoral ministry for almost 40 years. He is the teaching pastor of Cornerstone Christian Fellowship, a healthy small church in Orange County, California, where he has ministered for over 27 years with his wife, Shelley. Karl’s heart is to help pastors of small churches find the resources to lead well and to capitalize on the unique advantages that come with pastoring a small church. Karl produces resources for Helping Small Churches Thrive at KarlVaters.com, and has created S.P.A.R.K. Online (Small-Church Pastors Adapt & Recover Kit), which is updated regularly with new resources to help small churches deal with issues related to the COVID-19 crisis and aftermath.