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Should
We Relocate?
Joseph
R. Miller
a.
CommunitySurvey a 20-minute driving radius surrounding the church.
(We can interpret a PERCEPT church demographic study for you.) Is the
population increasing or decreasing? What is the percentage distribution
of preschool, school age, and adults? Is there an ethnicity that you
are not ministering to? Who are the prevalent adult groups you could
be ministering to? How many households without children? Are your targets
of ministry right for the community demographics?
b.
VicinityAre you in a residential community? Is the immediate vicinity
around the church stable, or is ethnic change and tension evident? Does
the
church facility show compatibility with the expectations of the community
standards of living? What is the community\`s blue/white collar ratio?
Is this
ratio true in the church? Are there senior adults who will be selling
out? Who
will be buying these houses? Might it be young, blue-collar families?
Is there
potential for ethnic ministry you are willing to target?
c. ConstituencyDoes the present church constituency live in the
community, or
are they commuting to the church? Commuters who use to live in the vicinity
indicate community change and little relational contact in the community.
Regional churches reach the local community as well as outlying areas.
A
commuting church seldom survives for an extended time.
d.
AccessibilityDoes the church site have adequate visibility, and
even more
important, adequate accessibility? Most new people are brought to church
nowadays through a relationship. Is there arterial road access encouraging
accessibility from a larger residential area in a reasonable driving
time? Are
limitations of visibility or accessibility being overcome by present
members
bringing new prospects?
e.
FacilityIs the site too small to provide adequate parking? Can
adjacent
properties be purchased and used for parking? Is the facility too dated
to
address community expectations? Does the facility have signs of life
(adequate
light, current landscaping and interior plants, appropriate colors)?
Can the
building be updated while addressing current site and building codes
(parking,
access for disabled, life safety standards)?
f.
MinistryIs the primary emphasis of the church ministry children
and youth,
while the community is predominantly adults? Are there relational strategies
in
place for evangelizing the adults? Are there small-group structures
for all age
groups, especially adults, that encourage personal discipleship and
relational
contexts for spiritual growth? Is the church in a maintenance mode (Hang
on
until the Rapture!) or ministry mode (Occupy until He comes!)?
g.
MonetaryThe cost of relocation into a new facility with the same
capacity
as the present location may cost twice as much as the market value of
the
present site. A rare exception might be commercial zoning potential
and
commercial market value for the present site. Does the church have cash
reserves? Count the cost; can the remaining congregation afford to relocate?
Make
an informed decision? Determine if the location is the real reason for
the
decline in attendance. Is the cause ministry, location, site, or facility?
Relocation does not guarantee success in ministry. I have known some
who were
forced to move, but never overcame a maintenance mode. I\`ve seen some
new
facilities that were virtually empty. On the other hand, others with
appropriate
local community ministry strategies are now thriving.
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