• Contact Us
  • Classifieds
  • About
  • Home

Pathway

Baptist & Christian News

  • Missouri
    • MBC
    • Churches
    • Institutions & Agencies
    • Policy
    • Disaster Relief
  • National
    • SBC Annual Meeting
    • NAMB
    • SBC
    • Churches
    • Policy
    • Society & Culture
  • Global
    • Missions
    • Multicultural
  • Columnists
    • John Yeats
    • Don Hinkle
    • Pat Lamb
    • Rhonda Rhea
    • Rob Phillips
  • Ethics
    • Life
    • Liberty
    • Family
  • Faith
    • Apologetics
    • Religions
    • Evangelism
    • Missions
    • Bible Study & Devotion

More results...

Click to Enlarge

New churches draw new people

January 5, 2016 By Baptist Press

NASHVILLE (BP) – America is launching new Protestant churches faster than it loses old ones, attracting many people who previously didn’t attend anywhere, new LifeWay Research studies show.

More than 4,000 new churches opened their doors in 2014, outpacing the 3,700 that closed, according to estimates from the Nashville-based research organization based on input from 34 denominational statisticians.

Click to Enlarge

Click to Enlarge

And on average 42 percent of those worshipping at churches launched since 2008 previously never attended church or hadn’t attended in many years, LifeWay Research found in an analysis of 843 such churches from 17 denominations and church planting networks.

The church planting study indicates newly planted churches are more effective than existing ones at drawing people who aren’t connected with a church, said Ed Stetzer, LifeWay Research executive director.

“In winning new converts to Christ, church plants are light-years ahead of the average church because of their focus on reaching the unchurched,” Stetzer said.

Successful church launches have several factors in common, the 2015 National Church Planting Study shows:

Click to Enlarge

Click to Enlarge

  • Meeting in a public space. New churches meeting in schools have significantly higher worship attendance than other new churches. They report more new first-time commitments to Christ and are more likely to become financially self-sufficient.
  • Focusing on outreach. New churches offering sports leagues, social gatherings and children’s special events are significantly more likely than other startups to be congregations with a majority of people who previously did not attend church.
  • Supporting their leaders. Adequate compensation and health insurance for the church planter are linked to higher worship attendance and a greater likelihood of financial independence for the new church.
  • Starting more churches. New churches that invest in church planting and launch at least one additional new church in the first five years report higher worship attendance and more new commitments to Christ.

“Healthy new churches have an outward focus from day one, communicating every month that the goal is to be a multiplying church,” Stetzer said.

Though some pastors bristle at new churches coming into their community, they have more to learn – and less to fear – from the startup down the street, Stetzer said.

One lesson is the value of time-tested methods. While most church plants use the Internet for outreach, 77 percent say word of mouth and personal relationships are the most effective forms of publicity. Only 6 percent say social media is most effective. Nearly two-thirds of new churches say Bible study is their primary small group activity.

Comments

Trending

  • Third season of ‘The Chosen’ series: entertaining, but controversy grows
  • Missouri House votes to legalize sports gambling
  • Four examples of where the New World Translation gets it wrong
  • Missouri Senate passes ‘SAFE Act,’ aimed to nix gender transition procedures for minors
  • 10 key biblical doctrines denied by Jehovah’s Witnesses

Ethics

Missouri Senate passes ‘SAFE Act,’ aimed to nix gender transition procedures for minors

Benjamin Hawkins

The Missouri Senate passed two bills protecting children and students from harm caused by the LGBTQ+ agenda, March 23. Both bills are now on their way to the state’s House of Representatives for approval.

Proposal from United States health department would roll back conscience rights, ERLC says

Tom Strode

More Ethics Stories

Missouri

MBU’s Master of Social Work program fully accredited by Council on Social Work Education

Missouri Baptist University

The accreditation of MBU’s online master’s program in social work, by the nation’s sole accrediting body for social work programs, is retroactive to the program’s launch in 2020 and is granted through Feb. 2031.

Copyright © 2023 · The Pathway