Church membership works best when you emphasize vision, values, teamwork, and life change. Growth still matters, but aim it at the growth of the person, not the growth of the church.
The Top Ten Most Common Low Attendance Days in Churches
Every church has them—the Sundays when attendance predictably drops. Drawing from feedback from over 400 church leaders, Josh and Sam break down the most common low-attendance days and why they occur.
Why NOT To Build A Bigger Sanctuary
I know the blessings and the very real challenges that come with having a church sanctuary that is full. I also understand the arguments for building something bigger. Hear me well…I realize there are times when building a bigger sanctuary is the best and wisest thing to do. But that is not necessarily the case for every church. In fact, building something bigger can sometimes backfire in ways you didn’t expect. This is why you, your leaders, and your congregation need to “count the cost” and carefully, prayerfully think through your theological, philosophical, and pastoral convictions as it relates to space.
The size and use of your sanctuary will greatly affect the culture of your church moving forward. Let me humbly offer a little different perspective on this topic, especially for those of you in churches that are outgrowing your space. Here are 5 reasons to potentially NOT build a bigger sanctuary...
At the Episcopal parish which I had helped to plant in the mid-1980s and where I ministered for 15 years, the proposal to build larger sanctuary or worship center exposed divisions in the congregation, which resulted in a church split and a loss of a third of the parish's member households. The parish entered a period of decline, exacerbated by the events of 2003 and the negative impact that those events had upon the Episcopal Church's public image in the diocese, and was reduced to mission status. It had been the fastest growing parish in the diocese.Grant applications for new Episcopal communities now open
New Episcopal communities interested in applying for a grant from The Episcopal Church are invited to register for an informational webinar on July 1. Because the grant process has undergone significant updates, those considering applying are encouraged to carefully read all the new application materials and attend the webinar, which will include time for questions and answers. Grant applications are due July 15.
This new granting approach grows from a 2025-2026 churchwide assessment that included a network of church-planting leaders and looked closely at what is working well in Episcopal dioceses and congregations, where gaps exist, and how best to empower local efforts through flexible, context-driven models of funding, coaching, and other forms of support.
'They have already suffered enough': Central African clergy respond to US deportation
Faith leaders say they would welcome migrants deported from the United States but question the decision to send vulnerable people without ties to a nation still healing from years of sectarian violence.
'Not a day off': For Juneteenth, some faith leaders promote political causes
‘As we acknowledge the contributions of the African American community to America, it’s appropriate for us to lead the way in unifying and making a call for unity,’ said evangelist Alveda King, niece of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
New York’s ‘Season of Freedom’ is among Episcopal commemorations planned for Juneteenth
The holiday Juneteenth, which celebrates Black freedom in commemoration of the end of American slavery, also will serve in the Diocese of New York as the start of a “Season of Freedom” to mark the United States’ 250th birthday.
Study: Climate change brings too much rain for Maine to absorb
A new study from Dartmouth College showed climate change is consolidating rainfall into heavier storms, leaving less water for the land to absorb.
Researchers said when a year’s worth of rainfall is packed into bigger storms, it can lead not only to more flooding but to more dry days between storms and even drought.
Perspectives: The Moral and Relational Crisis Beneath American Division
One of the deepest questions many activists, organizers, faith leaders and community leaders ask today is this: Why don’t people seem to care anymore?
After violence, cruelty, corruption or public dishonesty, many people feel exhausted and bewildered. It can seem as though empathy itself is disappearing. Some conclude that America is in a moral crisis.
Others argue that we are facing a relational crisis — a collapse of trust and connection between people and groups. The truth is that we are living through both. We are experiencing a moral-relational crisis.
We Don’t Hate and Then Harm—We Harm and Then Hate
Mistreat someone, and over time, your antipathy toward them will grow. Treat someone unfairly, and over time, you’ll feel a growing sense of contempt. The harm comes first. The hatred follows.
Confessing Sin, Then and Now
The words and phrases we use to confess our sin imply something significant about our understanding of sin.
The 1928 revision of the American Prayer Book makes a number of significant changes in the American Prayer Book, which Steven Wedgeworth does not acknowledges. This is also true of the 1662 revision of the English Prayer Book. The changes that revision made in the English Prayer Book are not inconsequential. It only became the so-called "gold standard" by default.10 Tips for Becoming an Excellent Bible Interpreter
Becoming a skilled interpreter of Scripture is not a complicated task. It is hard, but it isn’t complicated. God does not hide the riches of his Word from the simple; he hides them from the proud and ungodly. Right interpretation, then, is first a matter of personal character and piety, and then a matter of methodology.
Here are ten basic tips. There is much more to say, of course, but you must start here.
Why a neuroscientist worries outsourcing thinking to AI could weaken your brain's defenses against dementia
A neuroscientist worries some people are letting AI do too much of their thinking.Over time, she says, that could weaken cognitive reserve, a key defense against dementia."How you use AI, not how often, will determine its impact," Vivienne Ming told Business Insider.
Why I’ve started reading like a medieval monk
Importantly, the process of reading was, for the medievals, not some kind of fact-acquisition. Wisdom, for them, was not seen to be in a set of ideas. It was in our encounter with words, with friends, and with God. Knowledge acquired from reading was only “useful” insofar as it helped us to become more connected to God.
Neuroscientists discover previously unknown cognitive benefits of reading physical books
A new study published in the journal PLOS ONE provides evidence that reading comic books on physical paper helps the brain absorb and connect story details more easily than reading on a digital tablet. The findings suggest that physical books provide stable spatial and tactile cues that lower the brain’s workload when a reader tries to recall complex plot points later. This research offers fresh insights into how digital reading formats might subtly alter human reading comprehension and memory.
What we lose when we stop writing by hand
This week, we explore how the ways we teach handwriting in the classroom have changed over time, and the impact it’s having on education as a whole. Plus: What are we missing when we don’t write by hand? We find out all of that and more on the latest episode of Explain It to Me, Vox’s weekly call-in podcast.
Scientists Have Found A New Human Sense And It's A Bit Mystical
We are all familiar with our main senses, right?
Sight, sound, smell, taste, touch and a myriad more depending on which scientist you speak with. In fact, according to the Sensory Trust, we could have over 20 of them.
Now, researchers at the Queen Mary University of London have unearthed a new sense that is a little different to the main ones we’re familiar with.
6 Principles for Building a Youth Ministry
The hardest part of starting a student ministry is just that: finding the place to start. Most pastors haven’t led student ministry, and some may have never participated in it, having come to faith later in life. Even those who have led student ministry in the past face a drastically changed cultural climate.
What does it take to build a student ministry? Here are six principles to start the student ministry ball rolling.
8 Practical Tips for Getting Kids Into the Bible
Want to get kids into God’s Word? (Who doesn’t?) Here are 8 practical tips for getting kids into the Bible.










