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Build right from the start
A 12-step approach to construction
by Paul Spite | posted 3/01/1998
 1 of 3

The pews are packed, the foyer cramped, and
the parking lot a disaster. Clearly, the church has outgrown its facilities.
The congregation wants to build, but it's wary. It has heard too much about
what can go wrong with a building program. For any church about to start
a major construction project, here's some advice:
1. Know Why You're Building
A church building is only a tool that the real church uses to minister to
the needs of the body of Christ and the community. Toward that end, a
congregation should build or renovate only if that project will enhance its
worship, education, and fellowship.
Worship
. Worship is a key element of God's relationship with
his people. We draw strength as individuals from corporate worship. But a
church's design should follow the congregation's worship style rather than
allowing a building design to dictate what form of worship is possible.
Education
. Classrooms should be flexible enough to handle changing
class sizes and programs. A congregation also needs space for offices, restrooms,
circulation, and storage.
A Church's plan for
physical growth must
be combined with
a plan for outreach
and development
Fellowship
. Unless an entire church building is designed as
a multipurpose facility, a sizable room will be needed for fellowship. This
space usually involves an adjacent kitchen, pantry, and storage. Conference
rooms, libraries, vending machine areas, restrooms, and nurseries are also
part of fellowship space.
2. Know When to Build
Does a congregation really need to build now, or would it be better off waiting
till it raises more funds? According to When Not to Build,
by Ray Bowman and Eddy Hall, a congregation should weigh a decision to build
against three principles:
1. It should build only when it can do so without disturbing its focus from
ministering to people.
2. It needs more space only when it fully uses what it has.
3. It should build only when it can do so with the income God has provided
and without borrowing funds needed for other ministries.
3. Get Everyone's Support
A plan for physical growth must be combined with a plan for outreach and
development. A minister can't do that alone. Laypeople must have a vision
of growth of the kingdom of God and a willingness to work for it in personal
ministries.
4. Sort Through the Options
To expand a church building to accommodate growth, you might:
1. Renovate current facilities to handle minor problems, and reassign programs
to make better use of space.
2. Add onto current facilities.
3. Look for another church facility in the community into which to move.
This is usually more affordable than new construction.
4. Build a new facility in a location that will accommodate at least 25 years
of continued growth.
5. Cover the Cost
Building debt-free is best. Short of that, to fund your project:
-
Look for donated funds that have not yet been assigned to a ministry?
-
Ask for pledges to stimulate giving and increase awareness of need?
-
Look for low-interest loans or grants from your denomination or parent church
organization?
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