Posts Tagged ‘Attendance’

Happy Birthday, @NewSpring

Saturday, January 16th, 2010


Congratulations to church, on their 10th birthday, where is the lead pastor. He Twittered this today:

  • Hey @NewSpring…10 years ago today there were 115 people who gathered for our first worship service! We had NO IDEA that God would do…
  • …All that HE has done! And…the best is yet to come! Can’t wait until tomorrow!!!

Perry & Lucretia Noble

I passed the tweets on to my small group, and Pastor Ryan replied with this question – “What will we be shaking our heads at in disbelief at what God has done 10 years from now?!”

That got me thinking…

  1. The rapture?
  2. That there are now 1,043 people in our small group?
  3. …or perhaps…

  4. That our church (Praise Christian Fellowship, in Barkhamsted, CT) now has an average of 1,043 attendees, 85% of whom are striving to go deeper with the Lord, and who invited the other 15% so they can step into eternity also?
  5. That we’ve run out of chairs 5 times over because members keep inviting friends?
  6. That we have so many new believers that we have to rethink the way we disciple?
  7. That, as we look back at 2010, we’ll be amazed at how ignorant, naïve, weak and foolish we were – but we stepped up to the mark anyway, took the risk and lived for Jesus – and it led to the hardest, most exciting and most glorious life-changing decade of our lives, totally dedicated to and utterly vindicated by Christ?
  8. … or perhaps …

  9. We’ll be shaking our heads about how life seems to be getting fuller and fuller, and that we can’t wait to see what He has next in His plan.

The best is yet to come. Always! Can’t wait.

Send article as PDF to PDF Download
  • Share/Bookmark

Summer Sermons

Friday, July 17th, 2009


I was thinking the other day about how our church year starts with the school year. The summer drop-off is over, and we’ve used those lean months and put all our efforts during them into planning for a successful startup in the fall. There’s a definite drop-off during the summer, isn’t there?

We tend to think that ‘people are away on vacation’, and some of that is true, of course – schools are out, so parents take time to travel with the kids. In fact, when they go away for a week, they tend be away for the weekends at both ends of that week, so attendance is hit twice as hard. Trying to categorize attendance loosely. I came up with:

  1. People who do come to church during the summer,
  2. People who are vacationing in the area who come to church here,
  3. People who are away on vacation, and
  4. People who don’t bother coming to church during the summer. They’re in the area, but they see church as either
    • essentially a social organization,
    • a priority only when combined with nursery or Sunday School in order to get a break from the kids, or
    • less important than a morning at the beach, a round of golf or a lie-in.

So we move the service times earlier, both because of the heat and to let people get on with their fun activities for the rest of the day. And many times we don’t put the effort into the service that we would otherwise – the choir stops, or the coffee stops, or the pastor switches off with a lay speaker. And as a result, the sermons tend to be shorter, and there’s a tendency to make them simpler, on the grounds that there are people visiting, and church should be lighter. Further, our logic goes, we’ve lost so many over the summer, we don’t want to lose more by getting intense.

I would suggest, however, that the above indicates that – if anything – summer is the time to go deeper. To preach more meat and less milk, because the people attending are the mature Christians who crave insight, and long for solid – even difficult – teaching. This is the time of the year to speak of the sovereignty of God; of obedience in difficult circumstances; of persecution and its power; of the disciplines of Christianity; of the need for personal prayer and meditation; of the pain and power of personal sacrifice; of worship as an end rather than a means.

Could it just be that this annual drop in attendance is something to be used, not feared? Should we attack rather than retreat?

Send article as PDF to Create PDF
  • Share/Bookmark