As we covered in a previous post, a 20% growth rate in weekly attendance each year is a positive indicator that your church is likely to continue growing. When it comes to making space for your congregation and ministries, the two options are typically to expand an existing building or to build a new one. Each path forward comes with pros and cons that you’ll need to consider before you begin.
Is your average attendance consistently on “this side of uncomfortable,” while Christmas and Easter barely leave room for the Holy Spirit to move? Your congregation has grown… congratulations!
Does your church plan on starting a building project this year? Hallelujah! Your church is growing! Nothing quite matches the run and fun excitement of a church that is bursting with new members.
Has your congregation created a set of SMART goals for the new year?
Yes…SMART Goals. There are a million articles written every January about the transformative power of SMART goals. The illustrations are always the same and typically detail exercise gyms being overcrowded in January and nearly empty in February. As the story goes, the “January” people are armed only with “enthusiasm and desire,” but the February people are equipped with a SMART goal that endures even after the adrenaline fades. This familiar tale has a certain “truthiness” about it that makes it stick in our minds. Unfortunately, it utterly fails to mention that people will fail even with the best and well thought out goals in hand.
January 1st will be here before you know it. Hopefully, you’ve already established your operating plans for 2021. The new year always brings a sense of excitement and anticipation; this year even more so considering that 2020 has cast many congregations into “survival” mode. But after the ball-drops, calendar flips, and confetti falls, your congregation will find itself in the exact same position.
Prior to March of 2020, very few church members had lived through a pandemic. Although some congregations were better equipped than others to adjust to new normals, the effects of lockdowns and social distancing left most churches struggling to adapt. How could the church best continue its commission to “spread the gospel” amid calls to “slow the spread” of COVID-19?
Lockdowns and social distancing will eventually pass, and with a promised COVID-19 vaccine on the horizon, you should examine whether your current or planned facilities will be equipped to handle worship in the coming year. Two areas come immediately to the forefront of the discussions.
Once you’ve decided to begin a construction project, you’ll need to secure your financing. If you will be applying for a mortgage or construction loan, a little financial prep-work will streamline the process.
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