Ten Creative Ways to Use Your Church Building for Ministry All Week
Church buildings are often underused while communities around them have real needs. From hosting nonprofits and co-located churches to childcare, schools, recovery groups, and community programs, churches can use their facilities for meaningful ministry all week long.
Shared Space Is Not Failure. It Is Stewardship.
Church buildings are often underused while surrounding communities change and grow. Sharing space with other churches or ministries is not a sign of decline but faithful stewardship. When churches with distinct cultures partner in the same space, they expand mission, reach people they could not reach alone, and model unity in the body of Christ.
Nose Blind: Why Churches Need Fresh Eyes (and Fresh Noses)
Most churches are “nose blind” to the way their facilities smell and look. First impressions matter, so invite a trusted outsider to give honest feedback about odors, cobwebs, clutter, and neglected spaces. Stewardship means creating a space that feels cared for and welcoming.
10 Warning Signs Your Church Has Made the Building an Idol
Buildings are tools for ministry, not the mission itself. If fear, nostalgia, or control shape how space is used, your church may be serving the building—not Jesus. These 10 signs can help you spot the warning lights.
The Building Is Not the Mission
Churches do not need massive buildings to be faithful or effective. In today’s diverse communities, smaller congregations are leading the way by sharing space, partnering with other ministries, and using their buildings as tools—not trophies. Stewardship of space is a missional issue, and one culture cannot reach every culture. It is time to shift from asking “How do we fill this building?” to “How can this building serve the mission?”

