Offer Neighborhood-Based Connections

Christ’s Church of the Valley in Peoria, Ariz., offers small groups based on geography and neighborhood. Says Lead Neighborhood Pastor Bob Fesmire, “We believe people will stay at a church based on relationships regardless of the things happening in the life of the church.”

The church, which has a weekend attendance of 16,641, now has 8,000 people involved in 500 neighborhood groups. As soon as a house gets too full, the church launches another group out of that one. To maintain the groups and develop leadership, the church sends out neighborhood pastors who meet individually with neighborhood volunteer leaders throughout the church’s 80 neighborhoods.

ONLINE: CCVOnline.com. Adapted from an article that appeared in the July/August 2013 issue of Outreach magazine.

James P. Long
James P. Longhttp://JamesPLong.com

James P. Long was formerly the editor of Outreach magazine and the author of a number of books, including Why Is God Silent When We Need Him the Most?

Bethlehem Church: What You Celebrate, You Replicate

The power of storytelling is used throughout the year to proclaim God’s goodness to the congregation, and it seems to be affecting church growth positively.

The Danger of Attempting It Alone

It’s not just unwise to be without a church; it’s dangerous. And the reason it’s dangerous is because we aren’t strong enough to go at life with Christ on our own.

Helping Youth Thrive Spiritually

What if we trained our young people to look at their university training as a four-year mission trip? What if we helped them approach their jobs as if they were missionaries to their coworkers?