Church Planting, Technology & Culture
6 Jan
For the sake of the gospel advancing, the elders at Kaleo wanted to examine how missional our Sunday services are and the people who attend. We sent out a request to people in our church to fill out a 20 question survey asking them about the preaching, hospitality, worship and many other elements of our sunday service. We want to (1) learn what people felt about the missional nature of our church and (2) see what fears and hindrances keep them from inviting others to Sundays. It is our desire that people would invite non-believers to our church to hear the Word of God preached.
Some observations (many of these came from comment areas for people to post):
1) Non-Christians, new Christians and those little to no church background loved the service style. People with the most 'churched' background were the most likely not to like our worship style. (To hear our style of worship, you can listen to the Bazelel mp3 samples at Semper Reformanda Records. We have had people steeped in a conservative/traditional background struggle with the worship style.)
2) Contrary to many people's fears, non-Christians understood the messages that were preached. We are really blessed to have a preacher who is able to preach to both mature Christians and address the non-Christian's objectives to the faith. This talent both acknowledges to non-Christians that we are aware of the prevailing secular worldviews and the arguments against the faith. (eg. "Now, if you are not a Christian, this claim that Jesus was God seems absurd…" This is the type of address that non-believers appreciate, we don't need to lie or dumb down our faith that we believe is the only true reality. But we don't leave it there, we address these objections each week.) Second, it emboldens Christians who hear an apologetic for the faith and often have these same doubts and questions. And as these Christians face questions from non-believers, they move from doubt to gospel courage.
3) Sunday service is the event Christians are most comfortable inviting people to. This is over, socials/bbq's, home groups, mercy ministries, etc. People remarked that they also knew the guests would hear the gospel each Sunday, so this is where they'd want someone to visit.
4) Desire, lack of time, lack of relationships and fear of rejection are the most common stumbling blocks to people living missionally.
RESULTS: If you'd like to see the rest of the results, I've attached a 23 page summary of our Church Missional Survey. Again, this does not include the pages of comments we got that were quite helpful.
HOW-TO: If you'd like to do a similiar survey, we used Wufoo to build our forms . Here is the online form & questions we used to conduct the Kaleo Mission Survey.
Future: As a church we are going to do additional surveys on connecting, developing & sending aspects of our ministry.

Drew is an elder/pastor at Kaleo Church and CEO of Monk Development. Kaleo is a church planting movement in San Diego. Drew spends much of his time thinking about church planting strategy, web missiology and being a husband and father of two (Gideon & Roman). More about Drew Goodmanson.
7 Responses for "Conducting a Church Missional Survey"
Some interesting responses. Was it just members/regular attendees that received the survey? I am wondering how many understood the word missional and how it was used in so many of the questions with out a definition on the survey. I actually find it kind of ironic and humorous that a survey asking how non Christians understood the message include a word like missional throughout. Even Christians cannot agree on what that word really means or easily define it. The survey is a great idea though and Wufoo looks to be a good way to conduct that. I am definately going to pass this idea on.
We defined the terms in the form to help explain it a bit (I have a link in the post, so you can see these definitions) but, the survey was for people who call Kaleo home. We explain missional at church often since it is so core to what we are about, so people at our church should be very clear on that term.
Drew, excellent survey and responses. Thanks for posting it. Couple of questions..
1) Does Wufoo produce the graphs or was that you?
2) What is your strategy for using the information that came out of the surveys? Will you hit one area in particular to improve or make small tweaks to many?
[...] Drew Goodmanson posts about his church’s (Kaleo San Diego) approach to surveying how “missional” their congregation is. Drew runs through the online process used and the results attained, and the outcome is some great data and insights into the people of Kaleo. [...]
Bruce,
Wufoo created the forms. Check it out, it’s pretty easy. We are using the data, but the most valuable info came from people’s comments. I’ll post some of the changes we’re making next week. (I’m on vacation on Kauai.)
Visitors, Beer and Sex–Oh My!…
Yet again the links have piled up around me faster than I can blog them, so it’s time to blow the dam and just let you have them. Here we go… The Visitor’s Card - The most potentially interesting of the new Outreach Magazine blogs, it’s written by…
These are interesting comments. We are doing similiar studies at http://www.mychurchsurvey.com, and are also providing churches a way to conduct similar surveys for members, visitors, employees, and volunteers. We have a number of Prebuilt Surveys Templates we use to help them get started.
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