This interview was originally featured on The Nurtured Church podcast from Pushpay. To listen to the full episode, click here.
If your church owns a building, you’ve probably been faced with this dilemma:
How can we fund new projects that reach new people with the gospel while also keeping our lights on?
The burden of paying off debt often inhibits churches from funding new disciple-making efforts. How can we ensure that your building is fueling your ministry, not the other way around?
We've all heard stories of thriving, growing churches, where all of a sudden the church culture shifts from reaching people to paying bills. Almost every time you hear a story like this you can trace it back to a decision that was made involving buildings and debt. There is a business that funds the ministry of the church, and the better we are at that business, the more ministry we get to fund.
With a smarter real estate model, we’re able to have buildings that pay for themselves more quickly and accelerate ministry.
What is working:
Sometimes churches spend a majority of time thinking about about what happens in the worship room, but the reality is that people make 20-30 decisions about you as a church before they ever get inside that room.
What isn't working:
A mistake we commonly see is letting opportunities define the strategy – flip that around to make sure your strategies define your opportunities. What do we need to operate as a church?
While a temporary facility may not be the “ideal” situation for a church, there is a huge opportunity to leverage the community and surrounding areas to grow the church during that time.
Start with a proactive financial strategy – plan for growth now. Understand what is needed for growth instead of waiting for the opportunity to come up. For a growing church, you will always have more needs than resources, and you have to plan for it.