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4 Comments | Mar 18, 2011

Church Merger Survey

Are Church Mergers the Next Big Thing?
According to Leadership Network research, 2% of U.S. Protestant churches have been part of a merger in the last two years. Another 8% say they will probably merge in the next two years. Those two groups represent 30,000 churches. Similar trends among churches in Canada, Europe, Australia and other places where churches have been long established. This data is congruent with my own observations where I have experienced a surge of requests for merger consulting in the past year.

There are three reasons why church mergers are on the rise.
No doubt, the multisite strategy has contributed to this trend with one out of three multisite campuses being the result of a church merger, but it goes beyond just multisiting. The economic recession has forced a lot of churches to reassess their long-term viability. Under prosperous times many churches were propped up by artificial life-support which no longer exists for many of them. More significantly, other churches are seeing the synergistic benefits of joining with like-minded churches with a similar mission for greater Kingdom impact. These mergers are mission-driven rather than the old survival-driven mergers of the past. The math of the old merger paradigm was 1+1=1 at best, or 1+1=0 at worst. The new math for church mergers today is 1 +1 = 3+. Synergy!

I believe church mergers are a more significant development than the multisite movement and will even outgrow it.
Because of this developing church merger trend, I have teamed up with Warren Bird at Leadership Network to research this growing phenomenon. We suspect God is up to something, but we’ll capture and describe it best only with your help. If you are involved in a Protestant church in North America, then we want to know what you think. We have created a survey for churches that have merged or see merger in their future. Even if you don’t have a merger experience we would love to hear from you.

Would you assist us in this important research by taking a few minutes to complete this survey?
Please take a look at this survey and give us your thoughts at http://tiny.cc/churchmergersurvey. Everyone who participates can get a free report from what we learn and we’ll enter you in a contest to win one of five $20 gift cards.

If you are considering a merger, we can help. Contact us.

Is there a church merger in your past? Let us know, we would love to hear your story.

Related Links:
http://churchexecutive.com/archives/when-churches-merge
http://www.christianpost.com/news/2-healthy-churches-merge-for-bigger-impact-in-ariz-47837/
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/faith/50738133-142/heights-church-says-washington.html.csp
http://leadnet.org/blog/post/church_merger_phenomenon_continues_to_expand/

4 Comments

Erik DiVietro 1:31 pm - 2nd April:

Since you asked,

Our congregation recently just went through an 18-month long merger process. The congregation I was leading merged with a struggling congregation that owned their own facility but had a very troubled past.

We have seen significant growth in the merger process, have stabilized a lot of combustible situations and are looking toward the next step of our growth as a congregation. We found that by moving patiently and allowing a lot of people input while speaking directly about Jesus’ vision for our congregation helped immensely.

MultiSite Guy 1:40 am - 4th April:

Erik,
Your church merger story is a wonderful example of a struggling congregation joining a vibrant congregation and getting a “restart.” The synergy that was created also gave the lead church a boost. It appears that both congregations saw the grander vision of two congregations becoming better together than by remaining seperate.
Thanks for sharing the details of your merger experience on your blog.
Jim

Laura 2:54 am - 22nd January:

Eric,

I am apart of a congregation who split with another church back in 2000. We find ourselves in a similar situation as far as the dynamics of the two churches now. Since the split, God has restored many relationships between congregations and are considering a merge at this time. Would you mind sharing the structure of your merger process?

Thanks!
-Laura

MultiSite Guy 1:09 am - 23rd January:

Laura,
Congratulations on the healing and reconciliation that has been occurring between the two congregations. This lays a good foundation for a possible “re-union” merger.
I will send you some introductory material on the merger process.
Regardless, proceed with your reconciliation process.
Here for you,
Jim

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