Revitalize My Church
EPISODE 47: SHOW NOTES Hosts: Bart Blair (Director of Church Revitalization, Assist Church Expansion) & Nathan Bryant (Executive Director, Assist) 4 KEY TAKEAWAYS * Your church facility is a ministry tool, not the main thing. Culture change drives revitalization, but your building can either support that work or quietly work against it. * Decluttering costs nothing but time and a few hard conversations. Old storage rooms, outdated equipment, and decades of donated furniture send the wrong signal to new families. * Curb appeal, signage, and restrooms shape a guest’s opinion before they ever sit down for the service. First impressions start in the parking lot. * Decor should reflect your church’s future, not its past. Outdated photos, doilies, and dated furniture can quietly tell newcomers this isn’t a place for them. If you are leading a small church through plateau, decline, or revitalization, you already know there is never enough time or money to fix everything at once. So when it comes to your building, where do you actually focus? In this episode, Bart Blair sits down with Nathan Bryant, Executive Director of Assist Church Expansion, to talk through how your facility either helps or hurts your revitalization efforts, and how to make smart, low cost improvements without overspending or stepping on toes. You will walk away with a practical lens for evaluating your own building. From the parking lot to the restrooms to your children’s ministry space, you will learn what first time guests notice, what it communicates to them, and what you can change this month without a building campaign. DOES MY CHURCH BUILDING ACTUALLY AFFECT CHURCH GROWTH AND REVITALIZATION? Yes, but not in the way most pastors assume. Bart and Nathan are both church planters who spent years in portable, rented spaces, so they bring a unique perspective on this. Your building is a ministry tool that God has given you to steward, not the main driver of revitalization. The real change has to happen in the culture and mission of your church. But your facility either removes barriers for newcomers or creates them, which means it absolutely plays a supporting role in whether people stick around long enough to experience that culture change in the first place. WHY DO SMALL CHURCHES OVEREMPHASIZE OR UNDEREMPHASIZE THEIR FACILITY? Most churches land in one of two ditches. Some pastors believe a new coat of paint or a renovated lobby will single handedly turn the church around, so they pour disproportionate energy and money into the building. Others swing the opposite direction and barely notice their facility at all, because they have grown comfortable in the space over many years. Nathan compares it to having friends over to your house. You do not notice the mess until you know guests are coming. The goal is a healthy middle: invest where it actually removes barriers for guests, and do not pretend a building project will fix a culture problem. HOW DO I DECLUTTER MY CHURCH WITHOUT OFFENDING LONGTIME MEMBERS? Decluttering is the single highest impact, lowest cost change you can make to your facility, but it requires patience and permission. Many churches have rooms full of decades old equipment, holiday decor, and furniture that nobody is using, simply because no one felt authorized to get rid of it. Nathan shares a real example of a church that cleared out a room full of decades old Christmas pageant costumes after getting buy in from longtime members, freeing up usable classroom and office space. PRACTICAL STEPS FOR DECLUTTERING YOUR CHURCH BUILDING * Get permission first. Many longtime members simply do not realize they have authority to let things go. Ask before you act. * Make it a team event. Host a workday and get people hands on in the process. Ownership in the change builds pride in the result. * Ask the ROI question. If a room full of plastic plants or old electronics is not earning its square footage, it may be time to repurpose the space. * Donate rather than discard. Costumes, furniture, and equipment can often go to a local school or community organization, which softens the transition for longtime members. WHAT DOES CURB APPEAL COMMUNICATE TO FIRST TIME CHURCH GUESTS? Research consistently shows that a first time guest starts forming an opinion about your church before the service even begins. If your building gets drive by traffic, your landscaping, signage, and exterior lighting are doing more talking than you realize. Nathan compares it to walking into a nice restaurant and getting a glimpse of a dirty kitchen. Even people who are not naturally detail oriented will pick up on a building that feels tired or uncared for, and it can quietly become a reason they do not come back. LOW COST WAYS TO IMPROVE CURB APPEAL * Recruit a member with a great yard to help manage your church landscaping * Add clear, simple signage for parking and building entrances * Replace burned out exterior light bulbs and keep walkways clear * Use temporary signage like sandwich boards or flags if permanent signage is not in the budget yet WHY DO CHURCH RESTROOMS MATTER SO MUCH TO YOUNG FAMILIES? If you are trying to reach young families, your restrooms may matter more than your sound system or your stage lighting. Bart and Nathan both point to restrooms as one of the most overlooked spaces in church facilities, and one of the most important to young moms in particular. A dated, dim, or poorly maintained restroom can undo the goodwill built by a great worship service. The fix does not have to be expensive. Fresh paint in light colors, updated fixtures, and proper ventilation go a long way toward making the space feel modern and cared for. HOW DO I UPDATE MY CHURCH DECOR WITHOUT LOSING MY CHURCH’S HISTORY? This is one of the more sensitive conversations in church revitalization. Decor should reflect where your church is headed, not just where it has been. That does not mean erasing your history. Nathan shares an example of a church that gave the older generation one room to decorate however they wanted, and another church that created a dedicated honor wall telling the story of the church from its founding to today. Both approaches let a congregation celebrate its past without letting that past dominate every room a new guest walks into. Practical first steps include digitizing old missionary or anniversary photos instead of leaving them in frames on the wall, replacing outdated furniture that may have been donated from a member’s home, and inviting two or three young couples from your target demographic to walk through the building and share their honest first impressions. WHAT SHOULD A WELCOMING CHILDREN’S MINISTRY SPACE LOOK LIKE, EVEN WITH NO KIDS CURRENTLY ATTENDING? Your children’s ministry space is one of the clearest signals you can send to young families, even before they have a single child enrolled. If your nursery equipment, toys, and furnishings look like they have not been touched in years, that message comes through loud and clear. One church featured in this episode prioritized a small donation toward updating one restroom and their children’s space, and saw the payoff almost immediately when new families visited and felt comfortable bringing their kids back. Clean, safe, simple, and modern beats elaborate every time. Add a visible signal on the outside of the building, like a playground, so families know at a glance that kids are welcome. “We’re going to clean the house, we’re going to set the table, we’re going to bake the cake, and then we’re going to open the door.” Nathan Bryant, Episode 47 REFLECTION QUESTIONS FOR YOUR LEADERSHIP TEAM 1. Walk your building like a first time guest. What is the very first thing you notice when you pull into the parking lot? 2. Which rooms in your building have become storage rather than usable ministry space? 3. When was the last time someone outside your congregation gave honest feedback on your restrooms or children’s ministry space? 4. Does your decor reflect who you are becoming, or only who you have been? If this episode gave you a fresh way to look at your facility, share it with another pastor who is thinking through the same questions. Subscribe to the Revitalize My Church podcast for new episodes every 1st and 15th of the month, and visit revitalizemy.church [http://revitalizemy.church] for more articles, eBooks, and free assessment tools to help your church move toward a new and healthy future. CONNECT WITH US Don't miss future episodes! Subscribe to the Revitalize My Church podcast wherever you listen (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, etc.) and leave a rating or review to help others discover the show. About the Revitalize My Church Podcast: Since summer 2024, we've been helping church leaders navigate change and reorient to healthy futures. Our goal isn't to make small churches big—it's to help churches revision, revitalize, or restart find solid footing and healthy systems.
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