Passion is never the problem. Capacity is (Part 2).
Around the same time as that board training, sociologist Ryan Burge released more data on Mainline Protestant churches.
The short version is sobering: many congregations are financially propped up by baby boomers. As that generation ages and dies, decline is likely to be sharp—not gradual.
This isn’t cynicism. It’s demographics.
We confuse longevity with faithfulness
I say this as someone who believes deeply in the church. But I’ve also become convinced that something doesn’t need to live forever to be faithful.
I’ve helped launch multiple startups. I’ve led one that didn’t last.
In each case, passion was abundant. Calling was sincere. People prayed hard and worked long.
What we confused was passion with sustainability.
Faith with capacity.
Hope with a plan.
Mission validity does not automatically produce structural viability.
And spiritual language cannot compensate for the absence of time, money, or shared leadership.
What I would do differently
If I were leading a church heavily dependent on aging donors and volunteers, I would:
Build an endowment and have bold legacy-giving conversations — immediately.
Bring in building renters to offset fixed costs, charging realistic rates.
Have explicit conversations about the future—not vague hope-talk.
Draw clear lines about when we pull the plug.
That last one matters most.
In hospital chaplaincy, I see what happens when families don’t talk about limits. They carry unbearable weight because no one gives permission to say, enough.
Churches do the same thing.
They keep going—not because it’s wise, but because stopping feels like failure.
It isn’t.
Sometimes closing—or consolidating—is the most faithful move available.
Not because the mission didn’t matter.
But because it mattered enough to tell the truth.
Substack Seminary exists to help leaders navigate these endings faithfully—not reactively.
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If you are serving in a church sustained more by memory than momentum, this conversation is for you.
Substack Seminary exists to help pastors and church leaders think clearly about capacity, sustainability, and leadership in a post-growth church.
If you’re tired of being told that bigger is the only faithful option, and you want language and frameworks for leading well within real limits, this is the space for you.
Join us.





this is such a valuable conversation to be having.
It seems to me that the underlying mission of so many congregations is 'this community has to go on forever and never end.'
as you point out - our own lives have end points, and our church's lives have endpoints. It's not a failure to say 'we're done'.