The vast majority of churches are small in attendance. But there seem to be a few myths about the small church pastor.
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3 Pain Points of Small-Town Ministry—and How to Grow Through Them
One benefit of a small town is knowing many people and seeing them often. But that often means it’s harder to avoid ministry hurts.
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3 Advantages to Leading a Small Church
You might serve a smaller congregation than you envisioned. But there are advantages to leading a small church—for you, your congregation, and the community.
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A Surviving Church is a Dying Church
The church in the state of self-preservation will feel good about itself if it helps others in need, but the motive is far more self than it is ministry.
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Why the Rural Church Matters
A rural church plays a more important role than just offering a meeting place for the congregation. It brings stability to the whole community.
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Why Bigger Doesn’t Always Mean Better for Churches
Being small does not mean a church is broken. Some small churches are healthy. But if something is broken, you can’t fix it by making it bigger.
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