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August 10th, 2007

How to make a website for your church with a minimal amount of effort

These days you do not need to be an internet ‘whizz’ kid to make a website. In order to demonstrate how easy it is to make a website for a church (or any other purpose) I have made one for an imaginary church in about half an hour (perhaps an hour – but I dilly-dallied along the way) and it is here: http://churchwebsite.wordpress.com/

Here is how to make such a website in fairly easy steps:

  1. Sign up for an account at Wordpress.com
  2. Set up a blog for your church – perhaps using yourchuchname.wordpress.com
  3. Choose a theme such as the one I chose (’Cutline’) that has the ‘pages’ horizontally across the top.
  4. If you’re using the ‘Cutline’ theme you can upload your own photo for the header via the ‘presentation’ tab and then ‘custom image header’. I’ve just quickly added one here using an image I had on my computer – you can do a better job I’m sure. It allows you to crop it to size so any large photo can be used.
  5. My advice would be to use ‘Pages’ for content that will not change – ie contact details, service times, whatever. These will then appear in the list across the top.
  6. My advice would also be to use ‘Posts’ for content that you will be updating – ie news items, sermons, whatever. You can add these to different categories if you choose. If you don’t plan to keep on updating the site my advice would be not to add anything that will go out of date in the first place – there is nothing worse than a website listing last year’s Christmas services or somesuch.
  7. You can customise the sidebar using ‘presentation’ and then ‘widgets’. I’ve shown how you could add things like feeds (perhaps to the Vicar’s blog?) and an introductory paragraph using the ‘text’ widget. You could add photos using the ‘Flickr’ widget if you chose.
  8. If you like you can add a domain – yourchurchname.org.uk – via ‘options’ and then ‘domains’. For a UK domain this will cost you a tenner a year or less. But don’t worry about this – it isn’t really the important thing.

You can of course make many improvements to this by spending a little more time. There are I’m sure lots of other good ways to make a website, but for someone starting from scratch I think wordpress.com is a great option.

Hopefully this will help someone out there.

Other useful Church website resources:

16 Comments »



This is a single Cartoon Blog entry, posted by Dave on Friday, August 10th, 2007 at 11:59 pm.

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16 Responses to “How to make a website for your church with a minimal amount of effort”


  1. Mean Dean says:

    That’s 1926 to you sir!

    Kidding aside, thanks for the belly laugh, and the link-up!

  2. Miffy says:

    Sign me up for that Mothers Union trip!

  3. Sarx » Very Good. says:

    [...] The Most Awesome Dave Walker creates a post entitled How to make a website for your church with a minimal amount of effort. It it was very good. You can skip to the end and leave a comment. Pinging is currently not allowed. RSS 2.0 [...]

  4. Mean Dean says:

    Dave, you inspired me to post a really, really dweeby post today – be forwarned, not for those not fluent in ‘ancient geek’

    (yeah, that’ll learn’ya to make fun of me !-)

  5. rach says:

    thanks dave, inspired me to do a site with info about our forthcoming wedding!

  6. Penny says:

    If you do have a church website, could you make sure you have a (small, low bandwidth) picture in an obvious place. Last time I used the Net to find a particular church, I was fairly certain I knew the name and address of the church, but there was the niggling doubt that I might be looking at the website of a completely different church in the same town. A picture of the entrance/from the road (in this case they would be different views) would have been reassuring.

  7. How to get your own website « Matt and Polly’s blog website says:

    [...] 13 August, 2007 I’ve been thinking of writing a post about how to set-up your own WordPress.com website for a while (that is the software and hosting we use for this site) – it is so easy, free and whilst being simple also has some fairly advanced stuff too. It is also Opensource which makes it even better in my view. However, I no longer need to write a post about it as Dave Walker has – more specifically he explains how to set up a church website, but it’d work for a personal blog, family website or any website! Here is the guide and here is the example ‘church website’.  [...]

  8. Clare says:

    Fabulous. Though life would be much easier if all church websites clearly put the address/location of their church and the service times on the front page of their webistes rather than hiding them under a click or two.

    In fact the number of churches that don’t state where they are on their webistes – at least not anywhere obvious on their websites – is amazing. Though I guess in a small village the name of the church and village St Whatnott, Little Muchton-under-Lyme is all the address you need.

  9. Clare says:

    Webistes???? Is that French for website then? Oops, sorry.

  10. Dave says:

    Thanks for comments. I agree that a photo of the church, location information and service times should all be immediately obvious.

    In this instance I’m assuming the photo is in the header picture, but otherwise adding one to a ‘page’ should be easy enough – you can upload pictures into posts and pages. It would be possible to put one in the sidebar too – but not quite as easy as putting it into a page or post.

    I have added location details into the first sidebar text box and put a new text box for service times. As Clare says it is probably important enough to be on the front page as that is what most people will want to know.

    Mild annoyance about the text box widgets in this theme – they don’t put line breaks in.

  11. Nicola says:

    See also Church Marketing Sucks for all kinds of excellent web & related stuff for churches.

  12. links for 2007-08-14 « Social Life of Suburban Spaces says:

    [...] How to make a website for your church with a minimal amount of effort (tags: christian webdesign community)   [...]

  13. Timothy Fish says:

    Creating a website does not need to be complicated, but I am of the opinion that a church needs more for a website than just a blog. Including a blog on the church website can be a good thing, but a church needs other things as well. Blogs have become a very important part of the web, but they present from problems that I believe should be avoided with a church website.

    Blogs, by their nature, are constanly going out of date. If there is not someone to update the blog on a daily basis then it starts to look stale. If a person is looking for a church, the last thing he wants to find is a blog on which the last thing posted was from Christmas or Easter. He wants to know that the church behind the website is alive.

    Some blog sites do not allow some types of information to be posted. Photos and embedded video might be included, but a PDF file or an audio file may be difficult. When the church has control of a site on a server, the options are much less limited.

    There is some information that will seldom change on a church website. People who need this information will want to find this information without searching through several blog posts.

    Timothy Fish – author Church Website Design: A step by step approach

  14. Dave says:

    Timothy,

    The great thing about Wordpress is that it has pages (hierarchical) as well as blog posts (chronological). There is no difficulty in uploading any sort of file type either. I mention it as an ideal option for those who do not have the expertise to set a website up from scratch.

  15. mark says:

    You can also use fre website making tool such as Weebly or ClutterMe

    Mark from ClutterMe

  16. Mean Dean says:

    Photo of a church?! Why, so we can worship bricks-n-mortar?

    Seriously, if you’re worried about people knowing what the church will look like, put the pix on the directions page along with a google map, written directions, days and times of services in a way that it can be printed onto a single piece-o-paper or quickly absorbed via a mobile device

    Instead, on the front page, smiling faces of the potential fellowship one is missing by not getting their posterior in your pews