This Will Make Your Church Branding More Timeless

timeless brand thinking
Braden East

Strip everything away, give your church a generic name, and make the logo a cross. Go black and white with your color scheme.

Congrats - you have a timeless brand!

I’m being a little bit sarcastic, but there’s an element of truth here. Over-simplification is usually the fastest, easiest way to a truly “timeless” look.

However, it’s not the only way.

And for churches, it’s almost never the best way.

The history of the world is timeless by definition, but definitely not simple. God’s creative and recreative work is anything but minimalistic.

The way God works is simple but deep, focused but rich with meaning.

So too is the story being woven together in your ministry, whether it’s 200 years old or a brand new church plant.

What is God’s perspective of your church? If you want a timeless brand identity, this is the question you have to answer.

Once you start narrowing it down, your logo colors and fonts become clear and easy choices.

Rather than trying to become timeless by using Helvetica and no colors in your brand guidelines, you should be looking for ways to incorporate the truth of who God says you are as a congregation.

Does it take more work and intentionality?

Absolutely.

Is it hard?

Anything worth doing is.


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Why I Stopped Doing Logos (and Started Doing Something Better)
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In 2021, my wife and I moved back to our home town of Bartlesville, Oklahoma and joined the church we now call home - Hope Presbyterian Church. The church had hired a Ukrainian designer on Fiverr and got a fantastic logo design (it even won an award). But there was a problem… All they had was that logo. Their whole “brand” was limited to a gold color and a couple of webp’s. While the logo was aesthetically pleasing, it wasn’t enough to help their people “get” the mission. Each billboard, banner, and invitation card was inconsistent and time-consuming, even for the creative associate pastor. The more they tried to make their branding work in the real world, the more things got messy and out of alignment. Members with design experience were called on over and over again to come in and help “fix” designs, which always ended up being a band-aid for the real issue. What my home church went through is the result of a logo design without a true brand. They needed an easy-to-use branding toolkit with theological depth - one that would represent more than just the name of their church. A kingdom-first brand would have given their congregation ownership of the vision their leaders were casting, and would have attracted more visitors who resonated with the message they preached. And that’s why I stopped designing logos, and started developing kingdom-first brands instead.
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Your logo isn’t a brand, nor is the name of your church a brand. Your color palette, word mark, fonts, and church website aren’t your brand either. These things only serve to ASSOCIATE your church with the big idea that is your message. Make this association enough times with enough people, and NOW you have a brand. Think about it like this: Branding is the vehicle for your message. It’s the wrapper! The packaging won’t change the chemical make up of the burger, but it can still make the burger taste better, and turn a meal into an experience worth sharing. So, to answer the question how much branding does a church need, the answer is none. None? Right. If you don’t have that big idea clarified and nailed down, you can design the most beautiful identity system and logo in the world and not have a brand.
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