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Growing Healthy Churches

What is a church? And why are some church congregations growing while others find their numbers diminishing?

Some years ago the Dioceses of Durham, Wakefield and Rochester looked at why some churches were growing at a time when most were declining. They looked at those churches whose membership had grown by at least 16% in contrast to the general decline elsewhere.

The study found that there was no obvious general factor which indicated a “healthy church”. Whether they were big or small, rural or urban, evangelical or Anglo-Catholic made no difference. But what these growing churches had was an attitude which encouraged and supported the congregation to join them. After much research, they came up with the notion that growing churches are 'healthy' churches - and offered seven marks of a healthy church.

  1. Energised by faith - helped to grow in faith and to experience God’s love in worship and sacraments.
  2. Outward-looking - working with other faiths and secular groups, and concerned about justice and peace in people's daily lives.
  3. Seeking to find out what God wants - open to the Spirit’s leading rather than one's own preferences and church agenda.
  4. Facing the cost of change and growth - rather than resisting change, responding and daring to take on new ways and challenges.
  5. Building community - rather than functioning as a club, working as a team that expresses all seven marks of a healthy church.
  6. Making room for others - seeking to welcome and include newcomers, young people, enquirers and those from other backgrounds.
  7. Doing a few things and doing them well - prioritising one's work in public worship, pastoral care, stewardship and administration, being ‘good news’ as a church.

Growing Healthy Churches, part of Restoring Hope in our Church published by Springboard in 2003, is an initiative for local churches to use to help in mission planning. The project advocates various growth principles intended to produce relevant, strategic and successful churches. It also challenges all churches to look at what they are doing now and consider how they can better serve their communities.

An implementation group in the Ely Diocese hopes that many churches will take up this challenge for themselves. If your church is interested in looking at this process further, then contact Malcolm Raby, the Adviser for Mission & Evangelism. There are a number of ways in which the process can be developed, and we would look to find the best ways for your situation.


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