I sat with a group of church leaders burdened by a sobering reality. Their congregation had dwindled to fifteen active adults, and they were convinced the end was inevitable. “There’s no hope for survival,” they told me.
After listening carefully, I invited them to see their situation through a different lens.
Fifteen people is not a death sentence. In fact, it’s a fairly normal starting point for a church plant.
So I challenged them to consider a disruptive idea: What if you stopped measuring yourselves as a failing church and started seeing yourselves as a founding team? What if the healthiest decision wasn’t to prop up the old structure, but to lay it down and begin again?
That single shift exposed the real issue. The problem wasn’t size. It was trajectory.
Fifteen People: Good News or Bad News?
Only fifteen adults. Is that good or bad?
The answer depends entirely on your trajectory.
If you are a church planter just starting out, fifteen adults gathered with excitement, vision, and a heart for their community is a very good thing. But if you are an aging congregation of fifteen people scattered through an empty sanctuary, the emotional and spiritual reality feels very different.
Context matters.
The same number of people can represent birth or death—depending on trajectory.
From Death to Birth
Here’s the hard truth: simply calling an older church a “restart” does not change its trajectory.
For a restart to work, the church must be willing to:
- Pause the old expression of ministry
- Gather in a smaller, more appropriate space
- Reframe the remaining people as a core group
- Acknowledge that the former church has effectively died
Only then can the trajectory shift from death to birth.
But this is not easy.
The aging process must be reversed. The diseases that caused decline must be diagnosed and eradicated. A compelling, Christ-centered vision for a preferred future must be cast—and the remaining disciples must be willing to fully buy into it.
As Jesus reminded us, “What is impossible with man is possible with God.” (Luke 18:27)
Mission Drift and the Loss of First Love
New churches are typically outward-focused and missionally driven. Older churches, left unchecked, tend to turn inward.
There is no biblical mandate for a church to exist primarily to meet the preferences of its members. The church at Ephesus learned this the hard way. They had drifted from their first love and turned inward—and Jesus warned them plainly: change your trajectory or I will shut you down.
Restarting a church means returning to the basics of why the church exists in the first place.
“You have forsaken the love you had at first… Repent and do the things you did at first.” (Revelation 2:4–5)
A restart is not about preserving nostalgia—it’s about restoring mission.
Diagnosing and Treating Church Disease
New churches focus on:
- Gospel proclamation
- Disciple-making
- Leadership development
- Multiplication
Older churches are often weakened by diseases that cause the body to feed on itself. These diseases—left untreated—will infect a restart just as easily as they destroyed the original church.
At the root of most church disease is vision drift: when the focus shifts from Christ and His mission to the organization itself.
Before restarting, churches must be willing to confront these realities through repentance, clarity, and discipline.
Vision: One Church, One Direction
A healthy restart requires a fresh vision that is:
- Christ-centered
- Grounded in Scripture
- Aligned with God’s mission
- Clearly articulated by the lead pastor
There will be many ideas, preferences, and suggestions in a restart process—and they should be listened to. But ultimately, vision must be singular.
Diversity of people is healthy.
Diversity of vision is deadly.
More than one vision is di-vision.
The responsibility for casting vision belongs to the lead pastor. Creating buy-in is essential—especially when some are tempted to cling to the past. Honouring the past is appropriate, but the pastor must consistently remind the congregation: that church no longer exists.
A new day has dawned.
Submission, Unity, and Missional Focus
A restart church requires disciples who are willing to submit to leadership, set aside personal preferences, and embrace sacrifice for the sake of the mission.
There is no room for consumer Christianity in a missional church.
Unity flows from a shared focus on Christ and His mission. That unity eradicates disease and establishes a future-oriented trajectory marked by growth and multiplication.
Why Vision Beyond the Local Church Matters
A vision that reaches beyond the local congregation toward global mission is far more energizing than one focused solely on internal care.
I once worked with a church led by a pastor passionate about church planting and global evangelization. The church thrived. When that pastor left, the leadership turned inward to “take better care of the members.”
Within two years, attendance was cut in half.
People don’t give their lives to inward-focused institutions. Mature followers of Christ want to be part of something bigger than themselves. They want to reach their community. They want global impact. They want to be part of a church with a future.
Choosing Your Trajectory
Restarting a church is difficult—but it is not impossible.
With a renewed focus on the Word of God and the mission of Jesus, a compelling vision for a preferred future can inspire faithful disciples to let go of disease-ridden patterns from the past and embrace new life.
The question every declining church must answer is not “How many people do we have?” but rather:
What is our trajectory? Decline—or restart?

