Sidestepping Pitfalls in Congregational Research Church surveys can help -- but only under certain conditions. James F. Engel
January 1, 1984
Scarcely a week goes by that I do not get at least one telephone call from a pastor who says, "We're going to do a congregational survey. Do you have any questionnaires you can send me?"
My standard response is to ask why the pastor wants to do the research. The replies vary:
Because I have heard you recommend it.
I have just come back from a church growth conference, and it sure sounds like a good idea.
Our attendance is way down at the Wednesday service. We need to find out how to get people to come.
We're having problems in the adult class. I need to identify the causes.
My answer to such requests often brings surprise. Invariably I say, "No, I don't have any questionnaires to send you."
My reason is simple: There is no such thing as a standard survey for churches. Some church consultants offer them, but look before you leap.
Once I was in a pastor's office, and he showed me two inches of computer print-out. "What do I do now?" he asked. He was snowed with research, because no one had bothered to find out the specific information he and his leadership needed. So I told him to use it to hold up his bookshelf-he was relieved to find it had at least some practical value.
Here's the key point: congregational research should never be undertaken without careful prior analysis. A survey is only one step in strategic planning, and it can't be taken by itself. Without prior analysis and action-oriented follow-up, surveys are useless.
With those two steps, however, congregational surveys have two distinct benefits:
1. They can take the pulse of the congregation so that activities and programs can be custom-designed to fit that particular local church.
2. They can determine whether or not programs have achieved their goals.
To have real ...
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