Picture a church staff meeting.
Someone comes in and says, “I was talking to someone on Sunday morning, and they had a great idea for a new ministry. What if we start a ministry to _____?” That blank can be anything: a ministry for moms, men, people who won’t come on Sunday morning, young adults, or senior adults.
How do you know? Should you do every idea and opportunity presented to your church?
What if you should say no? Or wait?
How do you know?
Here are 6 questions to ask before starting a new ministry or program at your church.
What is missing? Before discussing the need for a monthly men’s breakfast, college ministry, or the opportunity presented on a Sunday morning, I’d encourage you to step back and ask, “What are we missing?”
Another way to think about this is, “What is the problem?”
Say the problem is that men are lonely and disconnected. This led someone to offer to start a monthly men’s breakfast. But is that the answer? It might be, it might not be.
Too often, a church jumps into an idea or opportunity without asking, “Is this something we are missing? Is this a gap in our strategy? Is this a “problem” or “need” to be solved?
Is this a need? Too often, we jump into opportunities that are not needed.
Does your church have several _____ people who would be served by this ministry? Is your church doing anything right now that might meet this need? Or is your church doing anything that would compete with this new initiative?
A lot of times in churches, things get started because the church down the road is doing something, someone’s last church did it, or because the pastor went to a conference recently and heard about this amazing new idea that is reaching hundreds at a church in a different part of the country.
And while all those things might be true, it doesn’t mean that it is a need for your church to meet today.
Is anyone near us filling this need? Here is a forgotten truth that churches must remember: Just because it is a need doesn’t mean you should meet it. Your church does not have to meet every need in your community, nor can it.
This doesn’t mean you reject something, but you do need to stop and ask if someone else is filling this need. Is there a way for you to partner with them, come alongside them to help, etc.?
My hunch for the future is that more churches must partner to meet different needs or serve different groups of people in their community.
Is this the only way to meet this need? Back to the men’s breakfast idea. Is a monthly men’s breakfast a way to connect men? Yes. Is it the only way? No.
Once you decide something is a need and that you can and should meet it, don’t jump into doing what has always been done or even what other churches are doing. Those are good ideas you might pull from, but start brainstorming how to do something.
I think every church needs to consider how to move more things away from being an official church ministry or even in a church building. Being a ministry or at the building might make sense, but a men’s breakfast at a local diner might make more sense than at the church.
Do we have the people, resources, and bandwidth to do this? Sadly, this question is rarely asked.
Just because something is a good idea, it might not be the right season. You may not have the financial resources or bandwidth to make it happen as a church and team.
That’s okay.
It might be a great idea, but the wrong season means it is time to wait.
Or, it is time to cut something else to make room for this new thing.
Every church has a limit to what they can and should do.
And finally, a question that I wish more churches would ask themselves.
Are we the church to do that?
Your church doesn’t have to do everything.
Your church isn’t meant to do everything.
God has given your church specific people with specific giftings to reach certain people and to make a certain impact in your region and the world.
As a church, you must ask, “Is this our calling to fulfill?”