Your Church Isn't Ready for Easter Until You Answer These 7 Questions

Published Mar 23, 2026. 5 minute read

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Your Church Isn't Ready for Easter Until You Answer These 7 Questions
Tia Phillip

Tia Phillip

Easter service planning, Easter Sunday logistics, church Easter preparation, managing Easter crowds, Easter church attendance. Most churches plan the sermon. Few plan for double the parking needs.
Easter brings your biggest crowd of the year. Are you actually ready?

The Reality of Easter Sunday

Your normal Sunday: 250 people, 8 volunteers, standard parking.
Easter Sunday: 500 plus people, confused visitors, parking chaos, children's ministry overflow, not enough bulletins.

The sermon might be perfect. But if families can't find parking, kids wait 20 minutes for check-in, and visitors feel lost—they won't return.

7 Critical Questions Every Church Must Answer

Question 1: Where Will Everyone Park?

Easter attendance typically increases 80-150 percent. Your parking lot won't magically expand.

Solutions that work:

  • Shuttle from overflow parking (partner with nearby business)
  • Designate close spots for families with young kids and elderly
  • Recruit parking team to direct traffic
  • Communicate parking plan via email before Easter
  • Consider adding an earlier service to spread attendance

What doesn't work: Hoping it sorts itself out.

Use ChurchPad's event management to track expected attendance based on pre-registrations and adjust parking plans accordingly.

Question 2: How Will You Handle Children's Ministry Overflow?

Normal Sunday: 40 kids
Easter Sunday: 100 plus kids

Do you have:

  • Enough volunteers (2x your normal team)?
  • Sufficient supplies (crafts, snacks, curriculum)?
  • Additional classroom space?
  • Extra check-in kiosks to reduce lines?

ChurchPad's children's check-in system shows real-time capacity by room, letting you redirect families to available spaces before bottlenecks form.

Question 3: What Happens When You Run Out of Seats?

Options when main sanctuary fills:

Overflow room with livestream: Set up additional viewing area with chairs, screens, and audio.

Multiple services: Add 8am service to spread attendance (promote heavily 4 weeks before Easter).

Standing room: Designate areas where standing is acceptable.

Outdoor seating: Weather permitting, set up lawn chairs with speakers outside.

Whatever you choose, communicate it clearly on your website, social media, and pre-Easter emails.

Question 4: How Will Visitors Find Everything?

First-time guests don't know where:

  • Bathrooms are
  • Children's ministry is located
  • Coffee station is
  • Main entrance vs. side doors lead

Solutions:

  • Directional signage everywhere (print large, place strategically)
  • Volunteer greeters at every entrance
  • Welcome desk prominently located
  • Maps in bulletins
  • QR codes linking to digital church map

ChurchPad's custom church app includes interactive maps showing room locations, service times, and FAQs.

Question 5: What If Technology Fails?

Murphy's Law applies triple on Easter: sound systems fail, slides freeze, livestream drops.

Backup plans needed:

  • Test all tech Thursday and Saturday before Easter
  • Have backup laptops and cables on hand
  • Assign tech team member to monitor livestream
  • Print sermon notes in case slides fail
  • Have backup microphones ready

Nothing screams "unprepared" like 10 minutes of dead air while you troubleshoot.

Question 6: How Will You Collect Visitor Information?

Without contact info, you can't follow up.

Multiple collection points:

  • Digital connection cards (QR code on screens, links to ChurchPad form)
  • Physical cards in bulletins and at welcome desk
  • Children's check-in captures parent info
  • Post-service event registration

Goal: 80 percent or higher of visitors submit contact info.

ChurchPad consolidates all sources into one visitor database, preventing duplicate entries and ensuring no one falls through cracks.

Question 7: What's Your Plan for the Week After?

The Sunday after Easter typically sees attendance drop 40-60 percent as visitors don't return.

Counter this:

  • Brand it as "Friends and Family Sunday" not just "normal church"
  • Heavily promote during Easter service
  • Plan post-Easter connection event (lunch, Q&A)
  • Continue Easter sermon series theme into week 2

Don't treat Easter as one-and-done. Treat it as week 1 of a two-week event.

The Planning Timeline

8 Weeks Before Easter

  • Project attendance based on previous years
  • Recruit additional volunteers (children's ministry, parking, welcome desk)
  • Order extra supplies (bulletins, communion elements, kids' materials)
  • Schedule additional service if needed

6 Weeks Before

  • Finalize sermon series
  • Create promotional materials
  • Set up online pre-registration
  • Train volunteers on Easter protocols

4 Weeks Before

  • Begin promoting Easter heavily (social media, email, mailings)
  • Confirm parking and overflow plans
  • Test all technology
  • Review children's ministry capacity

2 Weeks Before

  • Send email to congregation with logistics (parking, service times, what to expect)
  • Final volunteer training
  • Print all materials
  • Confirm backup plans

1 Week Before

  • Run full tech rehearsal
  • Set up signage
  • Review volunteer schedules
  • Prep welcome desk materials

Saturday Before

  • Final tech check
  • Set up overflow seating
  • Place all signage
  • Brief all volunteers

Easter Sunday

  • Arrive early (leadership 2 hours before, volunteers 1 hour before)
  • Execute plan
  • Stay flexible—things will go wrong
  • Smile and stay calm

Common Planning Failures

Assuming "we'll figure it out": Easter is too important to wing.

Only planning the sermon: Logistics matter as much as content.

Undertrained volunteers: Last-minute recruits create chaos.

No communication plan: Visitors feel lost and frustrated.

Ignoring children's ministry: If kids have a bad experience, families don't return.

Measuring Success

After Easter, evaluate:

  • Did parking work smoothly?
  • Were check-in lines under 5 minutes?
  • Did we run out of seats or supplies?
  • What complaints did we hear?
  • Which systems failed?
  • What worked exceptionally well?

Use insights to plan better next year.

ChurchPad's post-event surveys let you collect feedback from visitors and volunteers while experiences are fresh.

Your Planning Checklist

Download or create checklist covering:

  • Parking plan and traffic flow
  • Volunteer recruitment and training schedule
  • Children's ministry capacity and supplies
  • Technology backup plans
  • Signage and wayfinding
  • Visitor info collection methods
  • Week-after promotion strategy

Check off items as you complete them. Nothing gets missed.

Easter is too important to leave to chance. Answer these 7 questions now, execute the plan well, and create an experience that makes visitors want to return.

Ready to Lead with Clarity and Confidence

ChurchPad exists to support church leaders who are serious about stewarding their ministry well.

From event planning and volunteer coordination to children's check-in and visitor tracking, ChurchPad equips churches with tools designed for seamless Easter execution.

Get started with ChurchPad today and experience a free 30-day trial. Plan, execute, and follow up on Easter without the chaos.

Start Your Free 30-Day Trial

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