12 Signs Your Church May Be in Trouble

I realize this post may be discouraging, but it’s necessary. If we don’t recognize warning signs of a struggling church, we sometimes wait too long to try to fix the problem. Be aware of these signs that your church might be in trouble:

  1. Decreasing attendance – This one’s not a surprise, I’m sure. It’s especially a sign if the church has a history of increase and is not currently facing a space issue.
  2. Decreasing giving – Folks speak with their pocketbook. Decreased attendance often leads to decreased dollars, too.
  3. Plateaued attendance with decreased giving – When attendance remains the same but giving goes down, it’s possible that frustrated people are simply withholding their funds while hoping for some kind of change.
  4. Long-term workers stepping down – Long-termers are often committed to the tasks at hand. If they begin stepping away from their assignments, something’s probably up.
  5. Fewer guests attending – This sign occurs when folks who used to invite their friends no longer do so. For some reason, they’ve decided that church is no longer worth inviting others to attend.
  6. Rumors of division – I don’t typically give much weight to rumors, but some rumors do reveal some truth. If you’re hearing about division, it’s possible that the sides are lining up against each other. 
  7. Decreasing additions – When fewer people are joining the church, asking “why” is the right step. It might be that the church has turned inward to deal with some kind of strife and has lost its outward focus.
  8. Difficulty recruiting workers – The congregation that refuses to use their gifts and talents is probably looking in the wrong direction – something is keeping them from serving. That “something” might be worries about where the church is headed.
  9. Nostalgic “talk” around the church – That’s what happens when a church talks more about yesterday (“I remember when . . .”) than about tomorrow. It’s difficult to move a church out of this stage.
  10. Unhappy staff members – A lot of stuff can create unhappiness in a staff, but any kind of discontent is a sign of something going on. 
  11. Judgment on sister churches – It’s easy to condemn the church down the street when your church is struggling; it briefly takes the attention off your congregation.
  12. Changing community, but a stagnant church – It happens all the time: the church community no longer reflects the church, and the church makes no changes to reach that community.

Which of these warning signs marks your church? What other signs would you add?

8 Comments

  • Dr. Lawless – great post today. Thanks!

  • Emilio Grande-Garcia says:

    Thank you for the post. It reminds me of a class we had with Dr. Bill Henard.
    We are blessed to have a church which is doing good and doesn’t have any of these. I believe the main reason is the importance we give to the number 12.
    I have seen dying churches who failed to react to changes in the demographics around them and kept targeting the remaining old church goers until the end.

  • gatewaybaorg says:

    Dr. Lawless, Love this post! How about when churches begin to focus on and structure for maintenance and survival, rather than health and risk-taking! I am acquainted with a church that would rather buy gravel for a parking lot and spend hours spreading it smooth or spend several hours refinishing the pulpit than to spend any amount of time impacting their community. Bless you and God help the declining church.

  • Matt Wright says:

    Unfortunately our church has about everyone of these signs! And it has been my church for 46 1/2 years and we don’t know what to do about it!
    We have had so many problems in our church for the last 25 years its not funny! We have had Pastors come and go and be run off several times and other staff run off. We have had a split in our Church in the last 5 years but now have a new Pastor (2 years now) and our attendance is still in decline!

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.