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		<title>The Church Is Not the Building</title>
		<link>https://church-planting.net/the-church-is-not-the-building/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sean Cronin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Jan 2021 10:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Facility]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General Church Planting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Multisite]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[capacity]]></category>
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<p>Home &#62; Blog &#62; The Church Is Not the Building The Church Is Not the Building By John Muzyka Before you commit to lease or purchase a facility, it is imperative that you get CLARITY on who you are and what your ministry is called to do. Doing the groundwork [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://church-planting.net/the-church-is-not-the-building/">The Church Is Not the Building</a> appeared first on <a href="https://church-planting.net">Passion for Planting</a>.</p>
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<h4><a class="breadCrumbNc" href="https://newchurches.com">Home &gt;</a> <a class="breadCrumbNc" href="https://newchurches.com/blog">Blog &gt;</a> <span class="breadCrumbNcActive">The Church Is Not the Building</span></h4>
<h1>The Church Is Not the Building</h1>
<h4>By John Muzyka</h4>
<p><img decoding="async" class="attachment-post-thumbnail size-post-thumbnail wp-post-image" src="https://newchurches.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/denise-jans-Ki_BqNrHeW8-unsplash-scaled-e1610536602993.jpg" alt="" width="1000" height="563" /></p>
<p>Before you commit to lease or purchase a facility, it is imperative that you get CLARITY on who you are and what your ministry is called to do. Doing the groundwork to define your mission, vision, and values is an important first step before pursuing real estate. The next step is to understand your CAPACITY. Capacity is not only your financial capacity but also the market capacity. Market capacity defines what it costs to rent, lease, or purchase a facility in your target area. Learning to optimize the temporary facility and operate in a way that will allow you to set aside funds for a future space will position the church to secure a facility…if a facility is a part of your strategy.</p>
<p>When people join a church that meets in a temporary facility, they often look forward to the day their church will have a permanent building to call home. They see the set up and tear down “phase” as simply a phase and are often anxiously awaiting a building. This is not just limited to the people; the planter often feels that getting a facility shows that the church has arrived. As a “Church Real Estate Agent” I had this view to some extent. Everything I did drove the church to a facility or a building. However, I now have a new approach—coaching the planter to challenge what facility they think they need as it relates to their CLARITY and their CAPACITY. Below are stories of three churches and how they are reaching their target area without owning a facility.</p>
<h3>Church in the Center (CITC) in Houston, Texas</h3>
<p>This church is located in the medical district around MD Anderson. CITC has three different meetings in different spaces and have not had an exclusive space for anytime in their seven years of ministry. The spaces available in their area are limited and expensive. During the week they utilize free or rented spaces for Sunday Worship, Bible Studies, and other gatherings. CITC reaches doctors and medical students that live and work in the medical district. They also have a revolving door as many students are only in Houston for a season and then move on. This has resulted in a consistent, but not expansive budget. Moving out of the medical district to secure a building would take them out of the place they have been called. CITC is exploring the options and counting the cost of each part of their ministry to determine if they should stay mobile or if they should secure a seven day a week lease space.</p>
<h3>City Church in Plano, Texas</h3>
<p>This church is meeting in the Angelika Theater in Legacy Town Center. Legacy Town Center is a mixed use development at the center of one of the hottest real estate markets in Texas. Companies like Toyota and Liberty Mutual are joining Frito Lay and JC Penny as they call this area home to their corporate offices. City Church is five years old and has always been in a mobile location. In order to find a building or lease space, City Church would need to relocate to a different area. Pastor Ray Harmon shared with me that they have been called to the Legacy Town Center Area and he understands that relocating out of Legacy Town Center would not be in line with who they are called to reach. City Church is looking to see how they can leverage the theater space and other spaces around them to be the best stewards they can, so that they can be a generous church. Like CITC, City Church is in a high rent district and the spaces that they use look different than what they had pictured two or three years ago. By leveraging the Theater, engaging in Apartment Life ministry, and ministering to the people who live and work in and around Legacy Town Center, City Church can show the love of Christ to many people without buying or leasing a building of their own.</p>
<h3>Chase Oaks Church in Plano, Texas</h3>
<p>This church planted a Hispanic Campus on the east side of Plano. Chase Oaks is a multisite church but their Hispanic Campus basically functions as a church plant. The church meets in a local elementary school while doing seven-day-a-week ministry in the Chase Oaks Family Center just down the street. This ministry center allows Chase Oaks to offer ESL classes, bible studies, and other ministry programming during the week. We have seen the ministry center concept work in Texas, California, and Seattle in a multisite context. The community center can be a good option to provide church planters with a midweek space to offer youth programs for their families.</p>
<p>These examples show how the church can use spaces for their ministry without buying a church or building a church facility. If your church is considering a space outside your target area I would encourage you to strongly consider how that move will affect your ministry. I have seen a five-mile move contribute to a church plant losing core members and having to shut down. Exploring every temporary option available can help you leverage your existing space at an affordable cost to keep the focus on the ministry in front of you. In the meantime, saving cash to secure a space in the target area will prepare you to lease or purchase a space. In the examples above, real estate prices are expensive and opportunities are limited.</p>
<h3>Prior to making a real estate decision, challenge your leadership to answer the following questions:</h3>
<ol>
<li>Why do we need a building?</li>
<li>Have we maxed out the space we currently have?</li>
<li>Can we afford a facility in our target area?</li>
<li>Are we ready to increase the amount we spend on a facility?</li>
<li>How can our church best utilize space in our target area?</li>
</ol>
<p>If you do not know the answers to the above questions, then I would recommend you pause before signing a lease or purchasing a building. Count the cost, get clarity, and develop an understanding of your capacity. A building or lease space is a tool that can add value to your ministry, but a facility that does not align with your CLARITY or CAPACITY can cripple your ministry. A space that does not fit your budget or moves you away from your target area can cause you to miss opportunities to maximize your ministry. As you process your facility options, make sure your team understands why each option is the right space or the wrong space. Push your team to ensure you do not occupy a space for the wrong reasons. Remember the church is not a building; a building is a tool to be used by the church.</p>
</div>
<p>Source: <a href="https://newchurches.com/blogs/the-church-is-not-the-building/" target="_blank" rel="noopener" data-wplink-edit="true">The Church Is Not the Building</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://church-planting.net/the-church-is-not-the-building/">The Church Is Not the Building</a> appeared first on <a href="https://church-planting.net">Passion for Planting</a>.</p>
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		<title>DLP #004: 5 Ways to Expand Your Leadership Capacity</title>
		<link>https://church-planting.net/dlp-004-5-ways-to-expand-your-leadership-capacity/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sean Cronin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 May 2019 09:00:03 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General Church Planting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Leadership]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Planter Health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[belief]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[capacity]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[change]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[john maxwell]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://brandonacox.com/podcast-004-capacity/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<div><img width="841" height="840" src="https://church-planting.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/brandonacox_logo.png" class="attachment-full size-full wp-post-image" alt="www.brandonacox.com" id="featured-image" style="margin-bottom: 15px;" decoding="async" loading="lazy" /></div>
<p>DLP #004: 5 Ways to Expand Your Leadership Capacity .et_post_meta_wrapper by Brandon Cox: Every leader has a lid – the point to which we’ve grown so far. We choose to either live under the lid, or blow it off, create change, and take action to grow. When you do that [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://church-planting.net/dlp-004-5-ways-to-expand-your-leadership-capacity/">DLP #004: 5 Ways to Expand Your Leadership Capacity</a> appeared first on <a href="https://church-planting.net">Passion for Planting</a>.</p>
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<div class="et_post_meta_wrapper">
<h1 class="entry-title">DLP #004: 5 Ways to Expand Your Leadership Capacity</h1>
<p><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" src="https://brandonacox.com/wp-content/uploads/Lead-Higher-1080x675.jpeg" alt="DLP #004: 5 Ways to Expand Your Leadership Capacity" width="1080" height="675" /></p>
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<p>by Brandon Cox: Every leader has a lid – the point to which we’ve grown so far. We choose to either live under the lid, or blow it off, create change, and take action to grow. When you do that – when you grow – others around you will grow, too.</p>
<h2>Listen</h2>
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<h2>Watch</h2>
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<h2>Read</h2>
<p>John Maxwell often talks about the <a href="https://www.johnmaxwell.com/blog/the-law-of-the-lid/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><strong>Law of the Lid</strong></a>, which basically states that the level of an organization will never excel beyond the level of its primary leader. You will always struggle to lead other people beyond your own level of leadership proficiency.</p>
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<p>Leadership is all about growing other people, developing people, and lifting and raising people. Leadership means developing other people to their potential.</p>
<p>Leadership is not about <em>you</em> being the rockstar. Leadership is about you pouring into <em>others</em> and giving others a track to grow on.</p>
<p><strong>You are the lid for your organization, for yourself, and for the people that you lead.</strong></p>
<p>In other words, if I’m leading at a seven I will never be able to take people beyond a five or six. Jesus was a ten. <a href="https://amzn.to/2XFL5NO" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">He is the Master Leader</a>, but all of us are somewhere below that. We all find ourselves at different places and at different levels.</p>
<p>The question is, <strong>how do I lift the lid?</strong> How do I change my capacity? How do I grow in my ability to influence other people?</p>
<p>Over the last eight years, I’ve experienced this at <a href="https://gracehillschurch.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Grace Hills Church</a>. Every time we cross a new milestone, enter a new season, or something happens that’s significantly positive, I’m always faced with the question: <em><strong>Am I going to be able to lead us further?</strong></em> Am I going to be able to take us on from here to the next level to the next place, to the next goal? And you’ve probably faced that as well.</p>
<p>I think the answer to that question can be <em>yes</em>, <strong>IF</strong> we’re willing to <strong>expand our capacity.</strong></p>
<p>So, how do you expand your capacity? How do you lift the lid on your own leadership? And here’s the key…</p>
<h3>To lift the lid and expand your capacity you must embrace and create change in your life.</h3>
<p>That’s also true organizationally. If you want your organization, your church, your business, or your ministry to grow, you’re going to have to <em>change things</em> in order to expand the capacity.</p>
<p>Just as when you have to build a larger building, expand to more locations, when you need more infrastructure, move to new software, etc., we have to be able to make change happen around us, and <a href="https://brandonacox.com/growth-change-change-starts-leader/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><strong>change is almost always difficult</strong></a>. It’s almost always painful.</p>
<p>Growth is change, by nature. If you’re not willing to change, you’ll never grow because growth is change. Things that change over time, grow. Not all change is growth, but all growth is change.</p>
<p>If you want to lift your lid and expand your leadership capacity, you must change some things. You must become the catalyst to change in your own life. You have to instigate change.</p>
<p>And if you’re the leader at the top of an organization – the senior pastor, the senior leader, the CEO – you have to be the <em>first</em> to instigate change. You have to be the one to make the ripples to make change happen. That doesn’t mean you’ll be the only one, but you have to be willing to go first.</p>
<h4>Some things, you can’t change <em>at all</em></h4>
<p>We need to acknowledge that some change <strong>cannot</strong> be made <em>at all</em>. You might say today, “I could lead at a higher level if I had __________,” and you kind of fill in the blank with something that is not possible for you to create.</p>
<p><em>If I had a different leader over me… If I worked for a different business… If I had a ton of money… </em></p>
<p>You must come to peace with the things you cannot change and find a creative way around them. That’s the reason why some people wind up changing organizations. They go somewhere else to work, or start a new business, because they’ve hit a spot where they can’t change what’s above them or what’s around them.</p>
<h4>Some things, you can only change <em>slowly</em></h4>
<p>Then there is a category of things that you <em>can</em> change, but they have to be changed <em>slowly</em> over time. You can make incremental changes now, but there are certain things that can only change over long periods of time.</p>
<h4>Some things, you can change <em>TODAY</em></h4>
<p>Here are five ways to change yourself, to challenge yourself, to grow and expand your leadership capacity. And these make a difference long-term. These change the game for you and your organization and the people that you lead over the long haul.</p>
<h2>1. You can expand your knowledge</h2>
<p>I’ve never seen a leader excel to greatness, or lead an organization to greatness, or make a significant impact on the world who was completely self-absorbed. Every leader I know that’s ever been effective was a <em>learner</em> and a <em>listener</em>. They read things, they listen to things, they take things in.</p>
<p>There are many ways to learn that you can take advantage of today.</p>
<p>If you don’t expand your knowledge, you’re done. If you stop listening and stop reading and stop feeding your mind, you’re at your limit.</p>
<h2>2. Challenge your beliefs</h2>
<p>I’m not talking about changing what you believe theologically. I’m talking more about those <em><strong>limiting beliefs</strong></em> that hold us back.</p>
<p>Some of us struggle with a <em>scarcity</em> mindset, or we struggle with <em>fear</em>, or a lot of <em>self-defeating thoughts</em>. We believe and repeat and rehearse lies and limitations about ourselves.</p>
<p>Out of our beliefs, we act. And out of our actions come the habits that shape our lives and our destinies. Ask yourself, <em>What am I believing that is limiting me and holding me back?</em></p>
<p>Sometimes my limiting beliefs are the lid on my leadership and I need to punch through those and knock them down with some big truth in order to go on further.</p>
<h2>3. Expand your network</h2>
<p>Today, you can change the capacity of your leadership by meeting new people and networking with people that you don’t yet know, <em>from</em> whom you can learn and <em>to</em> whom you can contribute.</p>
<p>The more people I connect with, the better. Don’t just think about this in the old-fashioned terms of joining some organization and handing out your business card in an attempt to get business. I’m not talking about expanding your potential leads list in terms of networking for sales. I’m talking about <em><strong>networking for growth</strong></em>, and there’s a big difference.</p>
<p>I am a product of the people who’ve poured themselves into me. My capacity has been expanded by the people in my life that have led me, that have helped me, that have been friends to me, etc.</p>
<h2>4. Get a coach</h2>
<p>I believe so strongly in <a href="https://brandonacox.com/coaching">coaching</a>. In the last eight years – since we started Grace Hills Church – there hasn’t been a single major decision that I have not talked about with a coach.</p>
<p>Coaching is not the same as taking a course. It’s not the same as hiring someone to teach me stuff. I can learn <em>stuff</em> in other places.</p>
<p>What I need sometimes is someone who will <em>get involved</em> in my situation mentally and relationally, who will help me think through my dreams and visions, the challenges I’m facing, the strategies I need to overcome those challenges, and then will hold me accountable to take action on those strategies. That’s what a coach does. That’s what I do when I coach people.</p>
<p><a href="https://brandonacox.com/coaching"><em><strong>Learn more about my leadership coaching.</strong></em></a></p>
<p>You’ll always need to be coached. Every single person that I learn from, that is either a pastor who has done really well leading the church, or a CEO, or an entrepreneur or a business person who has done really well, almost without exception, they receive coaching. There are people that are CEOs of Fortune 500 companies that get coaching</p>
<p>Why would high-level leaders need coaching? Because coaching isn’t simply about learning new information. It’s about needing another voice, another perspective, someone else to speak into your life about the direction you’re going, the strategies you need, and the steps you need to take in order to get there.</p>
<h2>5. Take smart risks</h2>
<p>You will only grow as a leader in your capacity as you stretch yourself.</p>
<p>I’m using the phrase <em>smart risks</em> on purpose. I don’t believe you need to take dumb risks. I’m not challenging you to run out and flippantly quit your job and launch your dream and not have any education or plan or backup. I don’t think that’s a worthy kind of risk. Sometimes we feel brave and we take a risk, but we didn’t do our research and so the risk is way too much cost and very little guarantee of success.</p>
<p>What I mean by risk is that there is something I need to do <em>outside of my comfort zone</em>. It might cost me money, time, or convenience, but it’s going to cost me something. The risk is giving up something that’s valuable in exchange for something <em>more</em> valuable.</p>
<p>That doesn’t mean that everything’s going to be a guarantee. In fact, if it’s a guarantee, then it’s not a risk at all and therefore, it doesn’t stretch us.</p>
<p>You need a research and development laboratory in your mind, in which you try things that you haven’t tried yet that are outside your comfort zone. And success lies beyond them. The blessing, the abundance, the fullness lies beyond the risks you need to take.</p>
<p>When your capacity as a leader expands, your organization will probably grow. I can’t guarantee that it’s going to grow in sales, or in the number of people attending. Those are not things no one can guarantee. But I <em>can</em> guarantee that it’s going to become <em>healthier</em>, it’s going to be <em>stretched</em>, that the people around you that you lead, that you influence, <em>they</em> are going to grow and they are going to be stretched.</p>
<p>Keep pushing the limits. Read one more book. Take one more step. Design one more strategy. Reach out to one more person. Give something else away. Put a little more skin in the game. Take a little more risk, because every time you do, the people that you are responsible for grow as well.</p>
<p>I’m convinced that when leaders grow, our pursuits grow, our organizations grow, the people that we lead grow and we all get better.</p>
<hr />
<p>Want to dive deeper? <a href="https://www.digitalleadershiplab.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Join The Digital Leadership Lab</a>, where I share in-depth video courses about improving your leadership edge in a thoroughly digital climate.</p>
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<p>Source: <a href="https://brandonacox.com/podcast-004-capacity/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" data-wplink-edit="true">DLP #004: 5 Ways to Expand Your Leadership Capacity</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://church-planting.net/dlp-004-5-ways-to-expand-your-leadership-capacity/">DLP #004: 5 Ways to Expand Your Leadership Capacity</a> appeared first on <a href="https://church-planting.net">Passion for Planting</a>.</p>
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