Church revitalization does not happen by accident. While every congregation’s context is unique, churches that experience renewed vitality often share a common set of characteristics. These attributes are not quick fixes or gimmicks—they reflect intentional leadership, clarity of mission, and a willingness to embrace change for the sake of the gospel.
Drawing from the work of Dr. Tom Cheyney, and my personal experience, the following eight attributes consistently show up in churches that are moving from stagnation to growth.
1. A Bias for Action
Healthy, growing churches encourage creativity and are willing to take risks. Leaders in revitalizing churches understand that inactivity is far more dangerous than failure. They foster an environment where experimentation is welcomed, learning is continuous, and mistakes are treated as part of the growth process.
Rather than waiting for perfect conditions, these churches move forward with faith, trusting that God works through obedience and initiative.
2. A Deep Understanding of the Target Community
Churches that experience renewal genuinely care about the people they are trying to reach. They invest time in understanding the needs, struggles, and hopes of their surrounding community.
Instead of keeping prospects at arm’s length, revitalized churches stay close to people, listening well and responding with compassion. Ministry flows from real relationships, not assumptions.
3. Freedom and Entrepreneurial Ministry
Successful revitalization environments reduce unnecessary bureaucracy and empower smaller ministry teams to innovate. Creativity flourishes when leaders remove excessive red tape and trust people to act on vision.
Entrepreneurial churches are flexible, adaptive, and open to new approaches—while remaining aligned with their mission and values.
4. Ministry Through Lay People
Revitalized churches do not rely on clergy alone to do the work of ministry. They actively equip and release lay leaders to serve according to their spiritual gifts.
High expectations are paired with generous encouragement. When people are trusted, trained, and affirmed, ministry multiplies and ownership increases across the congregation.
5. Value-Driven Ministries That Impact the Community
Growing churches offer ministries that clearly connect with what people are seeking. These programs are meaningful, well-designed, and aligned with real needs.
Rather than draining energy, value-driven ministries create momentum. They are contagious, life-giving, and compelling—both inside the church and beyond its walls.
6. Keeping the Main Thing the Main Thing
Revitalized churches maintain a disciplined focus. Leaders resist the temptation to launch every good idea and instead concentrate on what the church does best.
When the vision is clear, resources are stewarded wisely, volunteers are not stretched too thin, and ministry efforts reinforce—rather than compete with—one another.
7. Lean Staffing and Strong Volunteer Engagement
Healthy churches stay flexible by keeping organizational structures simple. Rather than overbuilding staff systems, they maximize volunteer involvement and empower people to serve meaningfully.
Lean structures allow churches to adapt quickly while remaining stable and mission-focused.
8. Creative Chaos Anchored in Core Values
Revitalization requires a certain level of tension. Churches must be willing to experiment and embrace “creative chaos” while staying anchored to their core beliefs and values.
Effective leaders understand this balance. Innovation moves the church forward, but faithfulness keeps it grounded.
Final Reflection
Church revitalization is not about personality, programs, or pressure—it is about cultivating the right culture over time. When these eight attributes are intentionally developed, churches position themselves to experience renewed vitality and faith-filled growth.
Renewal is possible. The question is not whether change will come, but whether leaders will guide it with wisdom, courage, and faith.

