
Joining your church does not automatically make someone feel like they belong.
People need more than their name on a membership roll. They need to feel welcomed, wanted, recognized, affirmed, and celebrated. They need to feel special.
When a church is small, you may be able to do this informally. But as your church grows, you’ll need to create intentional moments that say publicly: “You are now one of us.”
Celebrate New Beginnings Publicly
Baptism is an obvious example. When I was pastor at Saddleback, baptisms were always big celebrations—filled with laughter, applause, and shouts of joy. We took a photograph of each person just before baptism and later presented it in a beautiful leather-bound certificate. It became something people proudly displayed.
When Saddleback was much smaller, we rented a nearby country club every three months and hosted a new members banquet. Each new member shared a brief testimony. Older members paid for their meals. I rarely made it through one of those evenings without tears. Hearing stories of changed lives reminds your church why it exists.
For years, Kay and I hosted a monthly Pastor’s Chat in our home for new members and guests. It was simple hospitality—an opportunity to meet face-to-face and ask questions. Those evenings built hundreds of lasting relationships.
Hospitality grows a healthy church.
There are many simple ways to make members feel special:
Send birthday cards
Recognize first anniversaries of membership
Celebrate life events in your newsletter
Feature testimonies in services
Hold staff receptions
Return a “We prayed for you” note in response to prayer requests
The point is this: A warm handshake at the end of a service is not enough to help someone feel like they truly belong.
Create Opportunities for Real Relationships
Relationships are the glue that holds a church together.
Research shows that the more friends a person has in a congregation, the less likely they are to become inactive or leave. In one survey of 400 church dropouts, more than 75 percent said they left because they didn’t feel anyone cared whether they were there or not.
It’s a myth that people must know everyone in the church to feel connected. The average church member knows about 67 people, whether the church has 200 or 2,000 attending. A member doesn’t have to know everyone. But they do have to know someone.
While some friendships form naturally, the friendship factor in assimilation is too important to leave to chance. You can’t just hope people make friends. You must encourage it, plan for it, structure for it, and facilitate it.
Emphasize the Corporate Nature of the Christian Life
Pastor, continually emphasize that we belong together.
Preach it. Teach it. Talk about it one-on-one.
We need each other. We are a family. We are connected. We are one body.
When people feel special and supported, they stay. And when they stay, they grow.
Belonging doesn’t happen accidentally. It happens because leaders make it a priority. It happens because someone notices the newcomer. Because someone makes the call. Because someone plans the event. Because someone creates the space for friendships to form.
You can’t force fellowship, but you can cultivate it.
And when you do, you’ll build more than programs. You’ll build a church family where people don’t just attend; they belong.
This article is adapted from chapter 17 of The Purpose Driven Church.