Annual Calendar Planning Process
MAYFLOWER CHURCH
Annual Calendar Planning Process
HowStreamline MayflowerSystem Church plans its annual calendar04A — How We Build the rhythm, sequence, approval flow, and downstream communications and operations calendars.Year
Draft
Purpose
May 2026Governing Principle
The annual calendar exists to create space for a healthy rhythm of worship, discipleship, fellowship, and rest — not to fill every Sunday with programming.
We plan the whole year so that teaching, ministry, and special events serve the mission of knowing Christ and making Him known, and so that our leaders and families can prepare well.
A good annual calendar does three things: it protects the pastor's study and rest,rest; it honors the natural rhythm our congregation already lives by (school years, summers, holidays),; and it sequences teaching and special events so that each one is given the planning and promotion it deserves.
Purpose
This processchapter describes the building of the Events Calendar — the master calendar of worship, teaching, ministry rhythms, governance, and special events. Once that calendar is approved, church staff develop the Communications Calendar and the Operations Calendar to align with it. It is the implementation chapter of System 04 (Master Calendar Integration).
When We Plan
The annual calendar is built in August each year. A two-hour calendar-planning component is held as part of the Annual Leadership Summit (held in August on a Friday evening and Saturday until 2:00 PM)p.m.). The calendar produced at the Summit covers the twelve months beginning the following January. For example, in August of 2026, the church plans the twelve-month calendar that begins January 2027.
Who Is Involved
Responsibility for the annual calendar is shared across three groups, in this sequence:
The Planning Sequence
The calendar is built in layers. Each layer is added to the annual view before the next one is considered, so that higher-priority items cannot be displaced by lower-priority scheduling pressure.
1. Senior Pastor's Study and Rest Weeks
The first items on the calendar are the Senior Pastor's vacation weeks, study weeks, and conference travel. These are placed first so they are not sacrificed to a calendar that is already full. Guest preachers and alternate teachers are identified for each Sunday the Senior Pastor is away.
2. Local School Calendar
Next, the Kingston Public Schools calendar (and the calendars of sending towns where a significant number of our families live) is laid over the year. Three-day weekends, Spring Break, Winter Break, school end/end and start dates, and major school events are all noted. These are not dates we avoid teaching on — but they are dates we do not build major outreach or programming events around, because many of our families will be away.
3. Teaching Series
With pastoral absences and school breaks in view, the teaching series are planned for the full year. The goal is a twelve-month view of what will be preached, with room for responsive adjustments. Teaching series are mapped to the congregation's rhythm — a vision-setting series near the start of the ministry year, hospitable or outreach-oriented teaching during seasons when new people are most likely to attend, and sustained expositional work during stable months.
4. Worship Rhythm and Ordinances
The Lord's Supper and baptism Sundays are placed on the calendar next. Our regular cadence for the Lord's Supper, any scheduled baptism services, and significant worship services (Good Friday, Easter, Christmas Eve, Thanksgiving) are all confirmed at this stage.
5. Office Closure Weeks
The church office is usually closed the week following a major church holiday — typically the week after Christmas and the week after Easter. These closures are placed on the calendar now, before ministry and event scheduling, so they are not inadvertently booked over.
Staff are not required to be off during office-closure weeks. Individual staff members may continue to work (often from home, with a lighter load) or may take the week as vacation, at their discretion and in coordination with the Senior Pastor. The closure applies to the office as a point of contact for the congregation — no standing meetings, no open office hours, and no broad communications during those weeks unless pastorally necessary.
6. Congregational Governance
Quarterly Congregational Meetings are held on the last Sunday of the first month of each quarter — the last Sunday of January, April, July, and October. These dates are non-negotiable on the annual calendar. Annual members' meetings or other governance events are added at this stage.
7. Annual Leadership Summit and Back to Church Sunday
The next Annual Leadership Summit (August, Friday evening through Saturday) and Back to Church Sunday (the last Sunday of August) are placed on the calendar. These frame the start of the new ministry year and should not be scheduled against other major commitments.
8. Ministry Rhythms
Recurring ministry events are mapped onto the year: Bible Fellowship Groups, EQUIP Discipleship Training, Men of the Word, Brothers Bibles & Bacon, Ladies' Community Bible Study, Women's Ministry gatherings, the Senior Luncheon schedule, and any other standing ministry rhythms.
Summer posture. Mayflower uses summer as a season of rest. Bible Fellowship Groups, Bible studies, and EQUIP Discipleship Training do not normally continue through the summer months. Summer programming is intentionally light, with the exception of specific summer-season offerings (e.g., summer reading, a summer cookout) planned deliberately in that spirit.
9. Special Events
With the recurring rhythm set, special events are placed on the calendar. These are the "“big days"days” that require the most planning and promotion. A typical year includes Easter, Mother's Day and Father's Day observances, a summer kick-off event, Back to Church Sunday, an outreach or hospitality Sunday, and Christmas Eve. The guiding principle is not to overcrowd the year with special events — three or four major ones, given the planning they deserve, serve the church better than a full calendar of half-planned events.
Output and Publication
The approved annual calendar is exported as an ICS file and imported into the Planning Center Events Calendar. From there, Team Leaders, Group Leaders, Board members, and members of the congregation can subscribe to the calendar on their phones and computers. The calendar updates automatically as events are edited in Planning Center.
Communications and Operations Calendars
Once the annual Events Calendar is built and approved, church staff develop two downstream calendars that align to it:
Both calendars are derivative of the approved Events Calendar, not independent plans, though there will be items on these calendars that serve as reminders and markers for ministry milestones. Changes to the Events Calendar flow downstream to Communications and Operations; changes originating in Communications or Operations that affect the Events Calendar are referred back to the Senior Pastor for clarification or communication to the appropriate boards and teams.
Approval
The Servants Council reviews and approves the annual calendar at its August meeting. No major events or all-church initiatives should be added to the calendar after approval without Servants Council concurrence, other than pastoral care events and items that do not require broad communication.
Maintenance Cadence
The annual calendar is reviewed on a quarterly cadence:
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
How This Chapter Fits
- Implements System 04 (Master Calendar Integration). The umbrella overview lives in the companion chapter; this chapter is the operating procedure.
- Holds the meetings governed by System 06 (Meeting System). Elders, Deacons, Trustees, Board of Finance, Servants Council, Team Leaders, and Congregational Business Meetings all sit on the calendar produced here.
- Anchors System 11 (Annual Goals). The August Leadership Summit, where the calendar is built, is the same gathering at which the annual goals are refreshed.
- Routes through System 09 (Decision-Making Framework). Major events and all-church initiatives that arise after the calendar is approved are escalated to the Servants Council per the framework's escalation triggers.
"“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven."” — Ecclesiastes 3:1
Document Control
Version: 1.0 — May 2026 (initial draft, presented to Servants Council).
Drafted / Updated: Drafted April 20, 2026 (BookStack revision #3); reformatted for hard copy May 2026.
Owner: Senior Pastor, in coordination with the Servants Council.
Approval: Servants Council, August meeting (annual).
Review cadence: Annually, prior to the August Leadership Summit; and whenever any related bylaw is amended.
Next scheduled review: August 2026 Leadership Summit.
Sources
- Streamline: How to Create Healthy Church Systems — Michael Lukaszewski.
- Mayflower Church
ofConstitutionKingstonand|BylawsThe(MarchStreamline2026)Admin—Systemfor|the04Quarterly–Congregational Meeting cadence. - Master Calendar Integration
|(System 04, May 2026) — umbrella chapter. - Meeting System (System 06, April
20262026) — for the meetings that ride on this calendar.