Ginghamsburg Church was founded by a
Methodist circuit rider, B.W. Day, in 1863 in the village of
Ginghamsburg, Ohio. As a small church, until the 1920s it was part of a four-church circuit for a part-time preacher. From the 1920s on, students from a Dayton-based
seminary served as part-time pastors for the congregation. Senior Pastor Michael Slaughter was appointed to Ginghamsburg in 1979 as the church's first full-time pastor. At the time, the church averaged approximately 90 people in attendance. After Slaughter's arrival, the mission of the church has been to "win the lost and set the oppressed free," By 2012, approximately 5,000 people attended Ginghamsburg's campuses each week. Slaughter became a leading figure in
missional church movement and a popular author and speaker, and has been named one of the most influential Christians in America. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Ginghamsburg gained national recognition as an innovator in small group ministry. It was also an early frontrunner of
cyberministry, or ministry via the Internet. The church's website and online ministry received early national attention from media outlets including
The Wall Street Journal,
Fox News, and
The Dallas Morning News. A non-profit organization was also formed by members of the Ginghamsburg cyberministry team to help other churches develop their websites and online ministries. In the late 1990s and early 2000s Ginghamsburg became known as a leader of the church "media reformation," which incorporated video, onscreen graphics, creative lighting, and other audio-visual elements into worship services to create a
multisensory worship experience. Kim Miller, who oversaw Ginghamsburg's worship design, became a popular speaker and author on multisensory worship, writing several books on the subject. Fort McKinley UMC became a part of Ginghamsburg Church from 2008 to 2025. Prior to July 2008, Fort McKinley was a separate United Methodist congregation, located in an economically challenged Dayton neighborhood. The church had dwindled to approximately 40 people in weekly attendance before voting to merge with Ginghamsburg. 80 volunteers from Ginghamsburg in Tipp City transplanted themselves at the newly minted Fort McKinley Campus and got to work. Neighborhood transformation took root by way of community partnerships, free food and a willingness to knock on doors. In March 2012 Ginghamsburg also started another urban campus called The Point, located in
Trotwood, Ohio;. Both campuses are now closed. ==Charity work==