I keep coming back to a question pastors kept asking me. What actually counts as a connection? Not in a warm-feeling sense. In a precise sense. Because if you can't define what connection is, you can't measure whether someone has it, and if you can't measure it you can't shepherd toward it.
Key takeaways:
- A church connection is an embodied, recurring, mutually-known relationship with another member of the church body. Four components have to be there.
- Embodied — physically present together. Not online-only. You can't connect to a church through a screen.
- Recurring — a regular cadence. Roughly weekly for close connections. One-off interactions are not connection.
- Mutual — both people would name each other. Being in the same sanctuary with 200 people on Sunday is not connection.
- Known — the other person knows something true about your life right now. Not just your face.
Quick answer: what is a church connection?
A church connection is a recurring, in-person relationship where two members of the same church body know each other by name and by life. Four components have to be present: the relationship is embodied (physically, not just online), recurring (regular cadence, not one-off), mutual (both parties would name each other), and known (each person knows something true about the other's actual life right now). Without all four, it is something else — acquaintance, familiarity, social-media proximity — but not a connection in the sense the New Testament calls the church to.
Why pastors need a precise definition
I kept hearing pastors describe their members as "connected" when what they meant was "regularly attending." Or "on a small group roster." Or "friendly on Sunday." Those are real things. They are not connection. And the gap between those things and real connection is where members quietly drift out of the church.
If I am going to build software that shepherds a congregation toward connection, I need to know what I am measuring. A vague definition produces vague software. Vague software produces a dashboard that tells a pastor everything is fine while members who have never actually known anyone at the church are halfway out the door.
So I went looking for a working definition. Not a warm-feeling one. A usable one. The four components below are what I landed on, and I'll defend each one in turn.
Component 1: Embodied
The first and most important requirement is that the relationship exists in physical space. You are in the same room. You can see each other's face. You can hug your brother or sister, you can sit next to them when they are crying, you can hand them a coffee without a webcam in between.
The online objection comes up immediately, so let me answer it directly. Online church is real. Online community is real. I am not saying otherwise. But online is not embodied, and embodied is what the New Testament assumes when it describes the church. The one-another commands — bear one another's burdens, weep with those who weep, greet one another with a holy kiss — are not executable over Zoom. The body of Christ in Paul's letters is not a metaphor for a distributed network of screens. It is the actual gathered people in a physical room.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, in Life Together, puts it directly. "The physical presence of other Christians is a source of incomparable joy and strength to the believer." For Bonhoeffer, who wrote the book while watching the Nazi regime dismantle his church's physical gatherings, this was not a luxury. It was the substance of what Christian community is.
The pastoral implication is uncomfortable. A member who watches the sermon online every Sunday and never sets foot in the building is not connected to the church, no matter how many of your posts they like. They are a listener, which is not nothing, but it is not connection. Treating it as connection lets you stop doing the pastoral work of inviting them into physical presence.
Component 2: Recurring
The second requirement is that the relationship happens on a regular cadence. Roughly weekly for close connections. At least monthly for broader ones. One-off interactions — a Sunday handshake, a conference hallway chat, a visit two years ago — do not form connection. Repetition does.
This is not a productivity metric. It is an anthropological one. Humans form trust through repeated, reliable contact. A pastor cannot know a congregant they see once a quarter. A small-group member cannot bear a brother's burden if they see the brother three times a year. The regular cadence is not the connection itself, but it is the soil connection grows in.
Hebrews 10:25 — "not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another" — is often flattened into "keep coming to church." The verb behind "encourage" (parakalountes) is not a one-time event. It is a continuous action. It assumes that the meeting together is ongoing, so that the encouraging can be ongoing, because humans need the same encouragement again next week and the week after.
For a new member, I would measure this around small-group attendance, recurring serving with the same team, and regular in-person conversations with two or three specific people. Three months of that rhythm is a better indicator of connection than a year of Sunday-only attendance.
Component 3: Mutual
The third requirement is that both parties would name each other. If I would say I know Jessica but Jessica would not say she knows me, that is not mutual connection. That is my familiarity with Jessica. The distinction matters because connection is a two-way relationship. One-way awareness does nothing for the person who does not know they are being known.
This is the component most often violated by pastors themselves. A pastor preaches to 200 people on Sunday and feels connected to them because they know a lot about each person. But most of those 200 could not name the pastor's children, could not describe what the pastor is walking through this season, and would not feel comfortable calling when they are in crisis. That is not a pastoral connection. That is parasocial familiarity in the pastor-to-congregation direction only.
The mutuality test I use: if I asked both people to name three things that matter to the other person right now, would both be able to answer? If only one can, it is not connection. If neither can, it is not even acquaintance.
John 10 puts this bluntly. "The sheep hear his voice, and he calls his own sheep by name and leads them out." The shepherd-sheep relationship is named on both sides. The sheep know the shepherd's voice. The shepherd knows the sheep by name. Not one-way knowledge of a list.
Component 4: Known
The fourth requirement is that the other person knows something true about your life right now. Not something true about you in general. Something true about your life right now. What you are walking through this season. What you are praying about this week. What hurt you last month. What you need help with today.
This is the hardest component to manufacture and the one that turns an acquaintance into a connection. Two people can be embodied, recurring, and mutual — they see each other every Sunday and at every small group — and still not be connected, because they have never gone past surface-level exchange. "How are you?" "Good, how are you?" "Good." That is liturgy, not connection.
C.S. Lewis, in The Four Loves, describes friendship (philia) as what happens when two people discover "You too? I thought I was the only one." That moment is the moment of being known. It requires that one person has risked something specific, and the other person has received it and recognized it as specific. A relationship that has never contained that exchange, however long it has lasted, is not yet a friendship in Lewis's sense, and by extension not a connection in this one.
The pastoral test: could you call this person on a hard day and know they would have any idea what you were talking about? If yes, they know you. If no, you are still acquaintances.
What a church connection is NOT
Just as important as defining connection is defining what is not connection. Churches commonly mistake the following for connection, and the mistake produces dashboards that misread member health.
- Attending the same service. Sitting in the same sanctuary with 200 people is not connection. It is co-presence. Most of those 200 will never speak to each other.
- Being Facebook or Instagram friends with someone from church. That is social-media proximity. It can lead to connection. It is not connection.
- Being on the same serving team but never talking outside of logistics. Serving alongside someone creates the possibility of connection, not the fact of it. Teams where the conversation never moves past the task are serving together, not connected.
- Watching the same sermon online. This is shared content consumption. A pastor and a viewer in another state can have this. It is not connection.
- Having someone's phone number you haven't used in a year. That is a dormant contact, not a connection.
- Being in a small group roster without attending. Roster membership without repeated in-person contact is paperwork, not connection.
- "Knowing of" a staff member or pastor. A pastor can be "known of" by every member of a church of 5,000 and yet only be connected to perhaps twenty of them.
A connection is a recurring, in-person relationship where both people know each other by name and by life — not just by face. Everything above falls short on at least one of the four components.
The theology behind the definition
The incarnation demands embodiment
The Son of God did not redeem humanity from a distance. He entered a body, walked dusty roads, ate with the people he loved, touched the sick, wept at Lazarus's tomb. The form of the incarnation is the form of Christian community. Cut the body out of the picture and you have a different religion. The embodied component of connection is not preference. It is downstream of Christology.
Francis Chan has argued in Letters to the Church that the American church has drifted into a consumerist, individualistic model precisely because it has allowed Christian community to become a content stream rather than a bodied reality. That drift has cost.
The "one another" commands require all four components
The New Testament contains roughly fifty "one another" commands. Love one another. Bear with one another. Weep with those who weep. Confess your sins to one another. Forgive one another. Greet one another. Admonish one another.
Run each of these against the four components. Which of them can be executed without embodied presence? None. Which of them work without recurrence? None — you cannot bear someone's burdens in a single encounter. Which work without mutuality? None — forgiveness assumes both parties recognize what is being forgiven. Which work without being known? None — you cannot admonish someone whose life you do not know.
The one-another commands are the New Testament's ethic of connection. The four components are what those commands assume. This is not a framework I invented. It is a framework I extracted from looking at what the commands already require.
Lewis on friendship
In The Four Loves, Lewis distinguishes philia — friendship — from the other loves. Friendship is what happens when two people turn side by side and look at a third thing together. It is not romance (eros) or family (storge) or charity (agape). It is the shared pursuit of something both parties care about. It requires proximity. It requires repeated exposure. It requires mutual recognition of shared interest.
What Lewis calls friendship and what I am calling a church connection are not identical — the latter is narrower, scoped to members of the same church body — but the components overlap almost exactly. Lewis's friendship is embodied, recurring, mutual, and known. He is not writing about connection, he is writing about the anatomy of friendship, but the anatomy is the same.
John 10 and the shepherd who knows by name
Jesus's description of his relationship with his sheep in John 10 is the pastoral anchor for the fourth component. "He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out." Knowing by name is specific. It is not a dashboard that lists 300 sheep. It is the voice of the shepherd calling out for Mary, and Mary hearing it, and knowing whose voice that is.
1 Peter 5:2 extends the image to church elders. "Shepherd the flock of God that is among you, exercising oversight." The flock that is among you. Embodied. Present. Specific. Not an abstract network of believers. This specific pasture with these specific sheep.
How FlockConnect measures against this definition
I built FlockConnect to make this definition operational. Every member of the congregation gets a live connection score that draws on four kinds of data, corresponding to the four components:
- Embodied — attendance data, small-group participation, serving history, observed in-person relationships. Data that reflects physical presence in the same space with other members.
- Recurring — the cadence of the above. A member who attends service weekly and a small group weekly is in a different pattern than a member who attends once a month.
- Mutual — observed or reported relationships where both members are named. Not lists of people a pastor wishes were connected to someone. Actual recorded pairs.
- Known — this is the hardest to measure in software, and it is where FlockConnect leans on the pastoral-interaction log. When a care partner logs that they had a meaningful conversation with a member — not just attendance, but the content of life — that is evidence of being known.
The connection score is not a grade on the member. It is an estimate of where the member sits relative to the four-component definition. A member with a low score is one the pastor should check on, not judge. A member with a high score is one the pastor can reasonably conclude is connected in the way the New Testament calls the church to.
FlockConnect integrates natively with Planning Center through one-click OAuth. For churches on other ChMS platforms, CSV import works from any system. Pricing starts at $10/month for solo pastors with a 14-day free trial and no credit card.
Related reading:
- What is a ChRM? — the category FlockConnect pioneered
- The 7-Friend Threshold — the research on how many connections a member needs
- Why Church Members Really Leave — connection is the predictor, not the sermon
- The Pastor Math — why care has to be distributed past 80 members
About the author
Michael Tribett is the founder of FlockConnect, the first purpose-built Church Relationship Management (ChRM) platform. Based in Raleigh, North Carolina, he built FlockConnect after watching a close friend quietly drift out of their church with no one at the church close enough to notice. FlockConnect is a member of the Missional Labs Faith & AI Accelerator and an official Planning Center integration partner.
Frequently asked questions
What is a church connection?
A church connection is an embodied, recurring, mutually-known relationship with another member of the same church body. All four components have to be present: the relationship happens in physical space, recurs on a regular cadence, is recognized by both parties, and involves each person knowing something true about the other's current life. Without all four, it is something short of connection — acquaintance, co-presence, social-media proximity — but not connection in the sense the New Testament calls the church to.
Does an online relationship count as a church connection?
No. Online relationships can be meaningful and can be a step toward connection, but the embodied component is missing. You cannot connect to a church through a screen or to a small group you do not attend. Online church is real church in a qualified sense; online-only relationship is not connection in the sense this framework requires.
If I see someone every Sunday, are we connected?
Not necessarily. Co-presence with 200 people in a sanctuary is not connection. To count as connection, the relationship needs to be mutual (both parties would name each other) and known (each knows something true about the other's current life). A handshake and a "how are you" every Sunday satisfies neither.
If I am on a small-group roster, am I connected to the group?
Only if you actually attend. Roster membership without recurring in-person attendance is paperwork, not connection. Three months of consistent small-group attendance plus conversations that move past surface level produces connection. A name on a list does not.
If I serve on a team with someone, is that connection?
It depends on whether the conversation moves past logistics. Serving together creates the opportunity for connection through repeated embodied contact. If the only conversations are about the task ("you take the kids, I'll set up the chairs"), it is serving, not connection. If the conversation ever gets to "how is your week going, actually," it has a chance of becoming connection.
How do I measure connection in my church?
Ask the four-component questions for each member you want to evaluate: Are they embodied (physically present with other members on a regular basis)? Are their contacts with others recurring (not one-off)? Are the relationships mutual (both parties would name each other)? Do other members know something true about their current life? For software that does this automatically across a whole congregation, FlockConnect computes a live connection score for every member using the four components.
Can a pastor be connected to every member of their church?
No. Research on pastoral-care capacity puts the number of people a single pastor can know at real depth at roughly 5–20. A church past about 80 members has to distribute connection-forming responsibility across elders, small-group leaders, and care partners, or most members will not be connected to anyone on staff. See our pastor math post for the full argument.
How does FlockConnect measure connection?
FlockConnect computes a live connection score for every member using data that maps to the four components: embodied presence (attendance, group participation, serving), recurrence (cadence of the above), mutuality (recorded paired relationships, not aspirational lists), and knownness (pastoral-interaction log entries that reflect actual knowledge of a member's life). The score is an estimate the pastor uses to decide who needs attention this week, not a grade on the member.