Vision
The 17-Word Vision That Grows a Small Church
100 Strong · July 7, 2026
Photo by Soff Garavano Puw on Unsplash
If your church could disappear tomorrow and your town would not notice, it is not because you lack heart. It is usually because no one, including you, could say in one breath what your church is uniquely here to do. That fuzziness is exhausting. You work hard, you love people, and yet the church seems to drift instead of move.
Here is the encouraging part. A small congregation with a sharp, shared vision punches far above its size. The research keeps saying the same thing: a clear, compelling mission is one of the strongest correlates of growth and vitality among U.S. churches. And casting that vision is not a side task you get to after the "real" ministry. It is the real ministry. The most important function of a leader is to set direction.
Let me walk you through how to do it without turning into a corporate strategist.
Start with your Kingdom Concept
Before you write a single word, discover what your church is uniquely positioned to do. One helpful way to find it is a simple equation: Problem times Passion times Potential. What need breaks your heart, what are your people genuinely alive about, and what could God actually do through this specific body in this specific place?
Another version of the same idea combines your collective potential, your local predicament (the real ache of your community), and your apostolic esprit (the courage God has put in you). Either way, you are hunting for the one thing that is true of your church and not every other church in town.
Give this real time. A guided Kingdom Concept exercise can take a couple of hours, and it is worth every minute.
Write it specific, and write it short
Here is the test that separates a vision from a slogan: could every church in your town say the same sentence? If yes, it is too generic, and a generic mission statement is the single most common failure. A vision should be more specific than a dream but more motivational than a goal.
Once it is specific, make it short. Aim for a statement of 12 to 17 words. Keep the whole thing under 100 words at most. You should be able to deliver it as a two-minute pitch without notes. If you cannot say it from memory, your people never will.
Draft it, then cut it. Then cut it again.
Name the "Who"
Vision gets fuzzy when it is aimed at everyone. So get concrete. Define three or four specific personas you are actually trying to reach, with real names and life-stage detail. Think "Jess, 35, single mum" rather than "young families." Suddenly your decisions have a face, and your people know exactly who they are inviting.
Revisit these personas every two to three years, because your community changes and so should your focus.
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Create my free accountBuild the frame and the plan
With the Kingdom Concept and vision in hand, build out the fuller Vision Frame: Mission, Values, Strategy, and Measures. That gives you both the heart and the handles.
Then translate it into a plan. A simple, proven sequence works well:
- Run a planning retreat.
- Do a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats).
- Turn insights into SMART goals.
- Write an action plan with measurable markers.
Give your goals numbers you can actually check, like "20 people attending the new initiative regularly after one year." Vague hopes cannot be evaluated. Clear targets can.
Limit yourself to 3 to 5 priorities
This is the discipline most of us resist. More than five priorities means you really have none. So cap it at three to five, and let that be the whole point: focus.
And here is a key one. Make at least one of those priorities about leadership development. It has the largest trickle-down effect of anything you will choose, because it multiplies everyone else. If you are pressing toward the 50, 75, or 100 milestones, this is what feeds the pipeline you need to break through.
Deliver it relentlessly, and mark your doorposts
A vision unspoken is a vision unowned. It only works if you repeat it constantly, from the platform and in conversation. A blunt way to test whether it has landed: count how many of your board or core team can recite the mission without any prompting. If they cannot, it is not real yet. Keep saying it.
And do not only point forward. Mark your "doorposts": the visible, emotional reminders of what God has already done. Display those wins right beside your future goals so your people see momentum, not just targets. That is how a small church carries confidence into its next season.
What to do next
Match your ambition to your size. For a church under 100, baby steps beat overreach every time. You do not need a fifty-page strategic document. You need one sharp sentence, a handful of real people to reach, three to five priorities, and the courage to say it over and over.
If you want help pinpointing where you are before you plan, the /assessment tool can show you the gap, and /milestones will show you the ceiling your plan needs to break.
Your challenge this week
Draft your vision in 12 to 17 words, then apply the test: could any church in your town say this? If yes, rewrite it until only your church could. Then read it out loud and time yourself. Two minutes or less.
