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Nurture your community, grow your mission.

Features

Communities & Small Groups

Where the congregation grows closest.

Community happens in small groups. Faith360 lets you create and manage cells, home groups, Bible studies, and any other grouping your organisation uses, assign dedicated leaders, track who attends each meeting, and communicate directly with any group. Leaders get a focused view of their own group; administrators see all groups across the congregation.

  • Create and manage groups
  • Assign group leaders
  • Group membership
  • Meeting attendance
  • Group communications
  • Nested communities
  1. 1Create groups and assign leaders
  2. 2Manage group membership
  3. 3Take attendance at every meeting
  4. 4Communicate with the whole group
  5. 5Track group health over time
  6. 6Organise groups into communities
1

Create groups and assign leaders

Set up any kind of small group — cell group, home fellowship, Bible study, prayer circle — with a name, description, meeting schedule, and an assigned leader. The leader gets their own focused view of the group and can manage it independently, reducing the administrative load on central staff.

2

Manage group membership

Add members to groups individually or in bulk. Members can belong to more than one group, reflecting the reality of congregational life where someone attends a home group and a mid-week Bible study. The group page shows who is in, and the member record shows which groups they belong to.

3

Take attendance at every meeting

Before or after each meeting, the group leader records who was present. Attendance history builds up over time, giving leaders and pastors an honest picture of engagement — who is showing up regularly, who has gone quiet, and who needs a check-in.

4

Communicate with the whole group

Send a message to a group in one action, reaching every member without compiling a contact list by hand. Leaders can send reminders, updates, or pastoral encouragement directly from the group page.

5

Track group health over time

Attendance trends, membership changes, and meeting frequency give leaders and administrators an objective view of how a group is doing. A group that is growing and meeting consistently looks different from one that has quietly lost members — and the data surfaces both.

6

Organise groups into communities

Nest groups under broader communities or geographic zones if your structure needs it — zones with multiple cells, campuses with multiple groups. The hierarchy is optional but available, and reporting respects it so you can see engagement by zone or community without separate spreadsheets.

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