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Starting a Second Service - Part 2 At Crossroads Community Church, here in Atlanta, Georgia, we have three worship services. Two are on Sunday morning (9:00AM and 10:15AM) and one is on Sunday evening (6:00PM). Each time a service was added it wasn't an easy task, but it was worth it to further maximize the number of people who can be reached before another large and expensive building must be built. Conversations are now beginning to surface about a fourth worship service. Should we do it? If we do, when? What are the impacts? If we don't start a fourth service, then what? What a challenge! Each time you add a service the complexities increase, but if you do it right, so does the potential to reach people. I want you to know that the results from starting a second service are worth the challenge and work involved. At Skyline Wesleyan Church where I served for a number of years in Southern California, we accepted this challenge all the way up to four services on two campuses. The second campus was a "church in a box." Each Sunday at 6:00AM everything needed to turn a Performing Arts Center, and later a local Elementary School, into a church came off a truck. When the service was over it all went back on the truck. It wasn't easy, but every time a new person came to Christ it made it worth it. No doubt your heart is also motivated by reaching as many people as possible for Christ. There are many different issues involved in growing a healthy church, but if the "box" isn't big enough, all the wise and strategic leadership in the world doesn't help you. If you are growing, eventually, you will need to build. In the mean time, the concept of multiple services will help you maximize the capacity of your current building. (This article is written to churches who offer one service and need to start a second service. There are many churches that are already offering multiple services, and are not ready to build or don't want to build, that are considering multi-site possibilities. That is a separate topic for another article. It is uncommon for a church offering only one service to consider multi-site options. It is wise to go to two services on your current campus before exploring multi-site possibilities.) Part 1 of this series on Starting a Second Service addresses the concept in general. In this article I want to offer you a check list or strategy to help guide your thinking and planning toward a second service. The following ten steps will keep you on track.
At this meeting cast the vision, and give the reason for a second service. Tell them why you want to start a second service and share your heart to see it happen. Let them ask questions, but do not let this meeting slide into details and problems of making a second service work. Stay with the vision and big picture. You want to gain their support by including them in the process before anyone else. If you hit resistance from your insiders, stop. Do not proceed ahead until you have their support. You may not get 100% buy-in but if you don't have 80% to 90% enthusiastic support, don't move forward until you do. If it takes you months of one on one meetings to win them over, then so be it.
If you have staff, involve both staff and volunteers. A team of 5-7 people should be sufficient. Six months after the second service has started, this team is disbanded.
Resist the temptation to go into problem solving and idea mode. Spend time asking the Father for insight, wisdom, favor, and results. Then take some time for reflection to listen to what God has to say to you.
This will be a long and involved meeting. You may want to set aside an evening with dinner or perhaps a half day retreat setting. You will come up with about twenty things to be dealt with - such as:
After you have identified the key issues, then begin to break them down into more detail with specifics that reflect your church. Brainstorm as many solutions as possible to all the issues. Toward the close of the meeting, assign individuals from the team as point leaders to handle each of the various issues. Each person from the team then gathers a small team to help them get the job done.
Think through and write out your strategy to communicate the change to the congregation. Make sure you know why you are adding the second service. It's important to know whether or not your congregation perceives a need for another service. Give at least six weeks advanced notice from the pulpit before the launch of the second service. If you are in a small church, don't get fooled by thinking you can do this faster. It's usually a slower process of by-in for smaller churches. The communication plan includes both verbal and written pieces and the timing of when they are released.
Remember, a minimum of six weeks from vision-casting morning to launch is necessary.
Let me encourage you by saying that if you do this right, you won't need to back out. Take your time to do it right, but don't lose momentum. My prayer is that God will bless your endeavor to reach more people for His sake. This article is used by permission from Dr. Dan Reiland's free monthly e-newsletter 'The Pastor's Coach' available at www.INJOY.com |
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