Cowboy churches adapt to changing landscape

  |  Source: Texas Baptists

Pastor Wes Brown baptizes new believers at the Cowboy Church of Collin County.

image_pdfimage_print

PRINCETON—When Wes Brown planted a church on 16 acres of farmland in Collin County, there wasn’t much nearby but wide-open spaces.

Fifteen years later, houses are being built everywhere. The northern suburbs of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex are approaching the Cowboy Church of Collin County.

Members and guests enjoy a time of fellowship at the Cowboy Church of Collin County.

But the church, located a couple of miles south of Princeton, continues to thrive—proving, to Brown, what’s important isn’t so much the style but the message.

“People ask me, ‘What is a cowboy church?’” Brown said. “I just tell ‘em, ‘We’re a church that worships Jesus.’”

Cowboy Church of Collin County offers a laid-back Western heritage cultural vibe and an intentionally rural aesthetic. The church offers worship music with country and western flair, and many of the congregants come wearing hats, jeans and boots. Beyond Sunday services and other familiar church activities, the church offers opportunities to rope and ride.

For people who may not have been to church in many years, the Cowboy Church of Collin County offers a new beginning. Above all, the church offers Jesus.

 “The draw is lowering the barriers. It’s a more relaxed atmosphere. It’s a ‘come as you are’ deal,” said James “Mac” McLeod, western heritage consultant for Texas Baptists.

About 200 cowboy churches in Texas are affiliated with Texas Baptists, McLeod said. The cowboy church concept really took root and sprouted in the late 1990s, and the churches share a common mission: “Reaching people in the western culture with the gospel of Jesus Christ and providing a church home where they can grow.”

“Most cowboy churches are growing,” Brown said. “I think it’s the culture. Don’t get me wrong, there’s certainly a place for traditional church, absolutely. … But the cowboy church really extends its arms to those who’ve been detached from the church, for whatever reason.


Sign up for our weekly edition and get all our headlines in your inbox on Thursdays


“The cowboy church is almost a rebirth to them. It’s a new beginning, a new start for them—and people like that.”

‘Stay on mission’

McLeod sees a growing challenge in contexts like Collin County, with its rapid population growth and the corresponding shift from rural to suburban population. Like their urban and suburban cousins, some cowboy churches, he said, might soon need to consider revitalization to connect with their changing community.

“How are cowboy churches going to reach the communities they’re in, especially when the communities are becoming more suburban America?” McLeod asked. “You look at Collin County, and people are flooding in there like crazy—and they’re not cowboys. So, we have that same challenge of trying to stay on mission with why we started.”

Brown’s formula for growing Cowboy Church of Collin County always has revolved around being an active part of the community. He and other members of Cowboy Church are out in the community rather than waiting for people to come to them. They’re serving their communities, showing Christ’s love to others.

Brown believes as long as the church is connecting with people, it will continue to grow, regardless of how the community may change.

“It has to be personal,” Brown said. “You can’t just put a sign out there that says, ‘Y’all come’—which we do too! We say, ‘Come as you are, and invite people.’ But it has to be personal. You’re out meeting people, shaking hands, getting them to know you and trust you.”

Church members are involved in area civic events and organizations. Brown serves as chaplain for the Princeton police department. He regularly makes the rounds at feed stores and spends time in coffee shops.

“A pastor in today’s world and ministry, you have to get out of your box, out of your office,” Brown said. “You have to get out where the people are. I think that’s what Jesus did. He went to lunch with them. He was out among them. They saw him in town.

“For ministry to work today, you’ve got to be out among them.”


We seek to connect God’s story and God’s people around the world. To learn more about God’s story, click here.

Send comments and feedback to Eric Black, our editor. For comments to be published, please specify “letter to the editor.” Maximum length for publication is 300 words.

More from Baptist Standard