Those are good ideas, ones that I think are worthy of exploration. But allow me to share a little bit as one who has been in this exact situation before.I pastored my first church in the small town of Dover, Florida. The church has been in existence for many decades, and he's going back to the early 1950s. Unfortunately overtime, The demographics of that community began to shift. By the time I arrived, there were only a few elderly English-speaking people in that community. That little town is a big farming community, in the commodity is strawberries. The vast majority of the people living there were Mexican, and they spoke no English. Before we ended up getting appointed elsewhere, and after having done all we could to try to bring this church back around, we are seriously begun thinking that maybe we should rent the building out to a Spanish-speaking church, take those proceeds from the rent, and begin a new work in an area that was really beginning to whom. However, it was not long after that that we were going to the Chicago area. If I had to do it again, I would do just that. That particular situation was different, but sometimes, you run into churches that have people that simply are not interested in change. You're not interested really and growth, unless that growth is more of what they like. In our case, people wanted growth, but they didn't want to make any kind of changes, they wanted a 1960s style church of God church, in 2012.There are so many differing factors The World As I See Itworldjeffreysees.blogspot.com/Revuriah's Facebookwww.facebook.com/people/Jeff-Richard/1226257444Jeffrey David Richard's Myspace Musicwww.myspace.com/547856946