


Over and over again, I would see churches pursue numerical and financial growth, without realizing that if people grew spiritually they could more easily help the church numerically and financially.
After just one year, our team has been able to see more than 2500 people start a discipleship journey through their local church. That's who we are. We're disciple-makers who want to help you and your team become better disciple-makers.



Develop A Stronger Team To Carry More Responsibility
Turn Visitors Into Members More Consistently
Onboard New Members And Get Them Active Fast
Maximize Your Time So You Can Focus On What's Next
Protect The Church By Building Systems That Stay When People Leave
Save Money And Increase Revenue By Developing Generous Givers In The Church



WE MAKE IT SIMPLE..

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WE HAVE THE SYSTEMS TO HELP YOU DO IT!

5 Shifts Every Believer Can Make
Let me start with this:
A healthy pastor + a healthy people = a healthy church.
Most churches are praying,
“Lord, send revival. Grow our church. Heal our city.”
But very few people are asking,
“Lord, how can I help lift the weight so my pastor can lead well?”
This isn’t about doing your pastor a favor.
This is about partnering with the assignment on your house.
In this article, I want to give you five practical, spiritual shifts you can make to support your pastor, strengthen your church, and help your ministry move from surviving to building.
One of the most powerful ways you can help your pastor is simple:
Become a spiritually mature, self-feeding disciple.
When you grow up in your faith, you automatically lighten the load on your leaders.
Think about kids in a home:
Little kids need help with everything.
As they grow, they start dressing themselves, cleaning up, and helping with chores.
It’s the same in the church.
If you’re constantly:
Easily offended
Spiritually up-and-down week to week
Needing someone to “pull you back” every few months
…you’re requiring time and energy that could be used to reach the lost and equip others.
This doesn’t mean you can’t have needs.
It just means you don’t want to live forever as a spiritual infant.
You read the Word consistently, not just on Sundays.
You pray through your emotions before reacting.
You forgive quickly because you understand people are human.
You don’t expect your pastor to fix what only your obedience can fix.
Mature believers don’t constantly create fires. They help put them out.
Growth Step:
Pick one area, emotional stability, forgiveness, or daily time in the Word—and commit to working on it intentionally this week.
Unity does not show up by accident.
It must be protected on purpose.
A lot of spiritual warfare is fought with very practical decisions.
Nothing kills a move of God in a church faster than:
Gossip
Grumbling
Side conversations
Quiet negativity in the pews
You cannot shout for revival on Sunday and sow division on Monday.
Shut down gossip instead of entertaining it.
“Have you talked to them about this yet?”
Refuse to be the “safe place” for everybody’s offense.
Speak with honor about your pastor and your church, even when you have questions.
Repeat the vision, not the complaints.
Imagine a team where everyone is running a different play.
That’s chaos.
Same in the church.
When people are all saying something different, it’s hard for anybody to know what to follow.
Healthy churches sound like one voice going in one direction.
That doesn’t mean nobody ever has concerns. It means:
I address concerns biblically
I refuse to be a part of confusion and division
Unity Step:
Decide right now:
“I will not participate in gossip, complaining, or ‘side talk’ about my pastor, my church, or my leaders.”
Money matters. Ministry costs.
But giving is bigger than dollars.
One of the greatest gifts you can give your church is your consistent presence and reliable effort.
In too many churches:
People attend sporadically
Serve only when convenient
Treat church like an optional add-on
That makes it almost impossible to build momentum.
Time - You actually show up when the church gathers.
Presence - You’re not just in the building, you’re engaged.
Effort - When you serve, you give your best—not your leftovers.
God has entrusted you with:
Time
Skills and gifts
Relationships
Resources
Those are not just for your job and family.
They’re also for His church.
You’re not a consumer of ministry. You’re a contributor to the mission.
Consistency Step:
Choose one commitment for the next 30 days:
Faithfully attend every Sunday service.
Serve twice a month in a ministry area.
Show up 15 minutes early to encourage and connect with others.
There’s a big difference between helping and owning.
Helpers say, “Tell me what to do.”
Owners say, “What needs to be done?”
When you move from obligation to ownership, everything shifts.
You see trash on the floor… You pick it up.
You spot a new person… You go greet them, you don’t leave them standing alone.
You notice supplies running low… You say,
“Hey, I noticed we’re almost out of ___. I can grab some or help us plan better.”
You’re not waiting on:
A title
A mic
Or a special recognition
You’re saying, “This is my church. I’m invested in this.”
As more people start thinking like that:
Your pastor doesn’t have to hold everything together alone.
Excellence doesn’t depend on one or two exhausted people.
The whole culture starts to lift.
Ownership Step:
This Sunday, ask yourself:
“What’s one thing I can take off my pastor’s plate this week?”
Then do it - quietly, faithfully, and well.
You can love your church but still be out of alignment.
Alignment is more than:
“I like the preaching.”
“I enjoy the music.”
“My kids like the youth group.”
Alignment means: I share the heart, not just the building.
You understand the why, not just the what.
You match the tone, faith, expectation, and honor.
You ask questions to understand, not to stir drama.
You carry the vision when your pastor isn’t in the room.
When people are aligned:
Leadership doesn’t feel like pulling a truck uphill alone.
Decisions don’t turn into battles.
Energy can go toward ministry, not constant “internal cleanup.”
That doesn’t mean you’ll agree on every detail.
It means you’re committed to the same mission, under the same spiritual covering, with the same heart.
Alignment Step:
If there’s something you don’t understand about your church’s direction, don’t assume the worst.
Ask your pastor or a trusted leader:
“Can you help me understand the heart behind this?”
Let’s make this practical. Here are five moves you can start right now:
Check your growth.
– Are you spiritually growing or just spiritually hanging around?
– Set a simple goal: daily Scripture + prayer, even 10–15 minutes.
Protect the unity.
– Refuse to entertain gossip or slander.
– If you have a concern, take it to the right person in the right spirit.
Be consistent.
– Don’t let church be “if nothing else is going on.”
– Choose a realistic serving and attending rhythm, and stick to it.
Look for ways to help.
– Ask, “Where can I serve?” rather than “What do I get?”
– Volunteer before you’re asked.
Lean into the vision.
– Find out what your pastor is believing God for.
– Pray into that, serve toward that, give toward that.
These are not flashy.
They’re not complicated.
But they are powerful, because they position you as a true partner in what God is doing in your church.
If you’re reading this and thinking:
“I want to live like this, and I want my leaders and church to grow in this too…”
I put together a free eBook to help you do exactly that.
You can use it to:
Equip your core team
Disciple new leaders
Align your church around healthy, biblical support for leadership and mission
Walk through it with your people and watch what happens when leaders and members start pulling in the same direction.
If you’re ready to go beyond inspiration and actually build systems that support this kind of culture in your church, here are two next steps:
Church Systems in a Box (CSB)
A practical framework to help you design and install the core systems your church needs for follow-up, volunteers, new members, and more. Church Systems in a box
ACCEL
Coaching and implementation support for pastors who don’t want to do this alone, who want guidance, accountability, and templates to move faster and with more clarity.
Accelerator Link
These are for pastors and churches who are saying:
“We’re done patching holes. It’s time to build this thing right.”
Supporting your pastor is not just about making one person’s life easier.
It’s about:
Protecting the health of your church
Making space for your pastor to lead from a place of strength, not survival
Creating a culture where disciples are made, leaders are raised, and people are reached
When you:
Grow yourself
Guard unity
Give consistently
Go the extra mile
And get in alignment
…you become a key pillar in what God is doing in your house.
Don’t underestimate what God can do through one mature, humble, aligned believer who decides:
“My pastor will not have to carry this alone. I’m in this, for real.”
That choice doesn’t just change your pastor’s life.
It changes your church.
And your church, healthy and strong, can change your city.