Why YOU Should Plant a Church

In the early days of our church planting adventure I spent some time seeking out other church planters, hoping for some wisdom and encouragement. Man, did I get a wake up call.

There seem to be two distinct schools of thought in the church planting community. The first is “This is hard. Are you sure you want to do this? You don’t look like you’ve got what it takes… I’m not so sure you should do this! Have you prayed about it?”

Gee… thanks.

The second school of thought starts off sounding much like the first, but then takes a dramatic turn: “This is hard. What do you need? How can I help you? Man, what an adventure! Let me pray for you.”

Do you hear the difference?

The sad truth is I heard a whole lot more of the first than I did of the second. To be honest, it was discouraging to hear such defeatist talk from those on the front lines of the revitalization and renewal of the church- church planters themselves.

*I KNOW I CAN DO ITIT’S YOU I’M NOT SO SURE ABOUT*

Let’s just put it out there. You have to be a certain type of personality to jump ship from the institution, the known, the safe and head off into the uncharted waters of church planting. It’s not for everyone… and for the A-type personalities who often make up the ranks of those who have jumped, those who are sailing those uncharted waters, when we see others getting ready to do the same, a common first impulse may be to wonder who they think they are… don’t they know that this church planting thing is for the few, the proud, the best of the best? And since we’re doing this different, emergent-type thing… we really don’t need more competition, do we?

Better to weed out the weak.

I actually had church planters tell me disdainfully that church planting was the “sexy” new thing and I better think twice before I just jumped on the bandwagon. I was “assessed” in a 45 minute conversation and found lacking.

It’s a good thing I didn’t listen to the discouraging talk of the A-type personalities I encountered… that I felt called to do this, that I realized that God loves it when people step out in faith and start new churches… and it’s a good thing I remembered that this is kingdom, not competition.

*WHY NOT?*

It makes sense to weed out the weak when you start with the basic assumption that no one should step out and plant a church unless specifically instructed to by God and unless they have “what it takes.” I like to approach it from a different viewpoint.

Why shouldn’t you plant a church?

Most people when asking themselves that question usually come up with three common reasons…fear, finances and failure.

Fear? Is it scary? Yes, of course it is. But for me, a turning point was realizing that I had never really done anything in my life that required actual faith. Yes, I had picked up and moved to Europe for two years. Did that require faith? I had a great salary waiting for me, a church community to integrate me, and the knowledge that if it didn’t work out, I could always just find something else to fall back on. Faith? Sort of, but not really.

I came to the point in considering church planting where I realized that I simply didn’t want to get to 70 and look back never having taken an actual step of faith… never having started something, never having begun a journey whose end I could not clearly see from the beginning. I didn’t want the regret of not having taken a shot at a dream of mine.

Finances? Sure- that was a consideration. When we decided to plant the church we had just bought a house and gotten pregnant. I knew that looking back this was either going to seem like a great step of faith or a complete lack of common sense. I suppose the jury is still out on that…

But we had to decide, my wife and I, that if taking this step cost us our house, set us back financially… that simply wasn’t too big a price to pay for God’s kingdom. If we did what we felt we needed to do, and there were financial costs, so be it. We’d rather see people come into relationship with God than have a house. We’d rather see those who have given up on church find community again than have a new car. We had to ask ourselves “What is the absolute worst thing that could happen if we do this?” And when we really started looking at it, it just didn’t seem like that big a deal.

Failure? In a conversation with a good friend on the day we decided to plant this church, he asked me a great question: How will you define failure? I realized through our talk that failure wasn’t if we did this and had to close the doors in a year because not many people showed up and we couldn’t pay the bills. Failure would be if we failed to love the people God did bring us, if we failed to love each other in community, if we failed to feed, clothe and otherwise care for anyone. That would be failure… not if we simply failed to achieve any type of long term momentum and institutional stability.

I realized that for me personally, failure would be if I didn’t even try.

If you do this might you fail? I guess it depends on how you define failure.
They say 80% of church plants fail. I don’t know about that… all I can say is that I think that many church plants that seem to be failures by the standard of “Did they make it?” were probably great adventures for many involved, probably introduced people to Christ and probably made a practical difference in the lives of some people who really needed those small, “failing” churches.

I think that the biggest failures in the church planting world aren’t the ones who function as a community for 1, 2 or 5 years and then disband to go do something else. I think the biggest failures in the church planting world are the churches that never even get started, for whatever reason- whether because of fear, because of lack of encouragement or simply because no one asked “Well, why shouldn’t we?”

*ENCOURAGING CHURCH PLANTING BY ENCOURAGING CHURCH PLANTERS*

All this has left me at a place where I really want to encourage those who are at the end of their rope, banging their head against the institutional wall, feeling like those they really love and want to see introduced to Christ are beyond the reach of modernistic, institutional churches.

You can do this.

It’s not rocket science.

Through my experience in church planting I have learned that there’s a hard way to do this and an easy way. The hard way involves plans and proposals, hundreds of thousands in seed money, denominational strings and a host of headaches. “Start with a bang!” they will tell you. “Mailers to every home in three zip codes!” they will advise you. A full band! Complete children’s ministry! Advertising!!!!

Don’t listen.

Start small. Raise some support, trust God for the rest and get a job at Starbucks if need be. Let your community be what it will be. Refuse to do for the people who come the ministry that they should do for themselves. Concentrate on laying a foundation of community and common core values and let your church grow organically without superimposing a grand “vision” on it.

When we were still in the dream phase of this thing people would ask me- “What will it look like?” I grew to love answering “I have no earthly idea.” All I could say was that if a bunch of cloggers and bluegrass musicians showed up, well… we’d be the clogging church. If a bunch of skate punks showed up, we’d be the skate church. I wasn’t out to niche target-market our community, and so felt great freedom to just sit back and watch what happened. I still feel that freedom…

Like I said, it’s not rocket science. You can do this thing. Just look at the guys Jesus started with…

*THE QUESTION*

No- not everyone should plant a church. Not everyone is called, gifted or able… but just the fact that you’re thinking about it says something. Just the fact that you want to tells me a lot. And if you actually step out and do it? Well… that says volumes about you, about your courage and about your faith in the God who is advancing His kingdom all around this world.

The question isn’t “Why should I plant a church”… it’s why shouldn’t you! Here’s what I know: God loves it when His people take a step of faith. He will go ahead of you, with you and behind you in this adventure. If you love those He brings you, you will be a success whether it lasts for a year, two years or the rest of your life.

So go ahead- take the leap. Plant a church! And let me know how I can help.

Bob Hyatt is husband to Amy, father to Jack and lead pastor to the evergreen community in Portland, OR (www.evergreenlife.org). He is also in the beginning stages of launching the nextChurch network (www.nextchurchnetwork.org), dedicated to encouraging church planting through encouraging church planters.

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Comments

This was a great article, Bob

This was a great article, Bob—I hope you publish it elsewhere (as it seems you might be planning).

After planting churches for fifteen years, I found myself “out of things” for several years while I was going back to school. I just couldn’t take the separation from church planting, so I started inviting independent church planters to get together—a small group of people who were thinking they might like to start a church some day, were planning to start one relatively soon, were already in the process, or had recently planted one. It was a very fruitful time that encouraged a couple of the “like to do someday” to take action and reach the “doing it now” stage. It was also very encouraging, I think, for those already doing it. They didn’t have a lot of other places to go where people would be so intensely interested in their good ideas, mistakes, and feelings. They’d enjoy your article.

If people want to define “failure” as “having to close the doors in a year because not many people show up and you can’t pay the bills,” then out of the twelve times I led or participated in a church planting team, we failed outright three times, and several of the others were not raging successes. I have to say that I’ve gotten a lot of valuable experience from our “failures” that have contributed to our “successes.”

I’d have to say that church planting has been, for me, the great adventure of my life.

Thanks!

Chris

P.S. I don’t know if you know Steve Brooke from Our Place in Hillsboro. I got to get acquainted with him a bit last year at a DCPI training event down in Oceanside.

thanks bob

I’m in the process of completing my theological training here in Europe and have the burden of planting a church. It’s a scary thing. Thanks for your encouragement.

Danny

just like you DannyD

just like you Danny Im doing theological studies and probably heading towards this big adventure. (also in Europe)

Must say that I recognize these two types of ‘advice’ and I feel very encouraged by your article Bob.

Björn

Good to read this stuff, Bob.

Good to read this stuff, Bob. Probably would have skipped the article until recently…

… then…

… six weeks ago a pastor prophecied that I was going to be a church planter… this was confirmed by another respected church leader (who added that he felt it was a ‘not yet’ calling)… then two weeks ago my ‘kinship’ group propecied that my future ministry would be ‘unacceptable’ to the rank-and-file Christian here in England. This all relates to prophecy I received from the Kansas City Prophets in November 2002.

As for me, I’m reading lots of stuff by the likes of James Thwaites… mainly ‘church outside the institution’ material.

Just wondered (anybody?) how I might be encouraged to press on with all of this, and how I might commmunicate with like-minded (not narrow-minded!) Christians, who understand what it’s like to wrestle with a ‘not yet’ calling which is beyond the ‘norm’ of the congregational model of church? Most Christians I talk to about it either don’t understand, or think I’m going off the rails!

DRG - church beyond the congregation?

DRG - thanks! I’d been wondering whether to post something on James Thwaites etc but your comment got there first and I felt I should respond to that first.

There is a summary on this site of a contribution by James Thwaites at the ‘Future of the people of God’ conference 2004, which is worth reading (with a positive, but critical eye).

Thwaites came to us a couple of years back in a kind of post ‘prayer for revival’ vacuum, (the vacuum being because the revival didn’t seem to be happening) and offered a radical view of church which involves the people of God being ‘church’ in the places where they live and work, and the conflict between this and the ‘gravitational pull’ of church congregations into themselves and away from the created world - which, the teaching goes, we were created to go out and ‘fill’, thus fleshing out Christ’s ‘fulness’ in the created world.

The books he has written (Church Beyond the Congregation;
Re-negotiating the Church Contract) develop these ideas.

So I wonder: are you going to plant a ‘traditional’ church congregation, or are you going to be church beyond the congregation? And what is it about your ministry which you feel will be unacceptable to rank & file Christians?

Bob Hyatt (whose early contributions to this site are really worth reading) challenges us to ‘go and plant churches’. What kind of ‘church’ do you want us to plant Bob? (And Chris, for that matter!)

In the UK, experimental types of church plant are not new: church in the work place, church in the pub, church in the leisure-centre, church in the supermarket, boiler houses, 24-7 prayer rooms, etc etc - but the issue is the same: an attempt to bridge the gap between church and the surrounding culture, and especially to create something which is more ‘liquid’, more ‘fluid’ than traditional church plants.

Pete Greig makes a very good point in the series on ‘Emerging Church’ by Mark Greene in Christianity & Renewal magazine: new forms of church are either ‘downwards’ (involving a change of culture on the part of the planters to reach a particular culture) or ‘upwards’ (from within the culture itself). The latter tend to be the more successful, or authentic, in his opinion. You can put Christians in the pub, but that doesn’t make them part of the culture they are trying to reach.

Here in Guildford UK, we have had a response to Thwaites (or his type of teaching) and especially also to the ‘transformations’ type vision (Sentinel Ministries - George Otis) for a couple of years, which we call City of the Bride (see the website). It is drawn from over 20 congregations (that sounds bigger than it actually is) and is encouraging people to take ‘church’ into their ‘spheres’ - eg business, arts, youth, civic government, education etc.) The issue is not whether this is really outreach from congregations, or ‘kingdom’ as opposed to church, but whether the centre of gravity can change from being ‘congregation centred’ to ‘sphere centred’. It is being driven by a businessman who runs an ecommerce business. It’s early days yet.

As for myself, I’m supportive, but I’ve got questions (I think that’s a permissible place to be). Some about Thwaites’s stuff - which I may put onto a post at some point.

All I know is that while some evangelical churches have never had it so good, as regards growth, success etc, there are long term issues about the relationship between church people and the world we inhabit/work in, and are meant to be reaching, which may be getting overlooked. Also long term issues about the growth and sense of mission/calling in the average church member (which available church structures can stunt/inhibit).

I say this as one of the leaders of a charismatic type congregation - which embodies some of the more traditional ‘congregational’ characteristics mentioned above, but which is also trying to encourage ‘church beyond the congregation’, and help people discover the vision God has placed within them, and help them to pursue that (rather than ‘the pastor’s vision’).

In the end, I think we will have an even more mixed church scene than ever, which is no bad thing, provided we are creating followers of Jesus (not rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic), and recognising the unity of the body of Christ. And we have to get on with the ministry and calling God has given us with 100% commitment and passion. But there are some big issues to be faced about ‘church’, as we have caused it to be, and as it has shaped our thinking and attitudes.

Does anyone else identify with any of this? And can you tell us more about your ‘unacceptable’ calling DRG? I doubt if I would find it unacceptable.

It depends on one's SHAPE

What kind of ‘church’ do you want us to plant Bob? (And Chris, for that matter!)
I’m all for the church planter planting the kind of church he feels compelled to plant. No one model is sufficient. I often cringe when I hear people denigrating the “old dead church” they grew up in (you know, the one where something was sparked in them to serve God in a shiny new way). As long as a church really is a church, then she’s Christ’s beloved bride, empowered by his spirit, and a force that hell’s gates must reckon with. What people call out-dated models of church are often just an earlier generation’s cutting-edge model, and while they may not be for “us,” they frequently spawned “us” in the first place and still have their appeal. We need churches for the remnants of those earlier generations, even if we also urgently need churches for different new cultures.

My own ministry philosophy is for a church planter (or team) to consider their “SHAPE” (per Rick Warren) in plotting their strategy:

  • S = Spiritual gifts
  • H = Heart (passion)
  • A = Abilities
  • P = Personality
  • E = Experience

    (If memory serves.)

    We need churches for old people whose friends and relatives are dead or dying and who can’t quite figure out how things are changing around them. We need churches for dysfunctional people who are doing well just to show up for life every day. We need churches for prodigal Christians who are afraid they’ve blown it with God. We need churches for secular people who never give God much thought at all. We need to nurture, challenge, and equip. Churches that are strong in one area inspire those that are weak, and are often inspired in their turn.

    So, I’m not real picky on what kinds of churches “we,” in general, should plant. When it comes to enlisting my own financial support or my personal involvement, I tend to consider SHAPE. Otherwise, I’m just glad a new church is being planted.

  • Re: Good to read this stuff, Bob.

    DRG, Hello, My name is Lucy and I too have a burden for true worship - being involved in church planting for a church that truly worships God in spirit and truth.  God has equipped me with songs to finance this work.  I am writing from Kenya, East Africa.  Will you come and plant God’s church here in Kenya?  I know the God who calls us is the one who will enable and equip us with all that is needed to accomplish His work.  Consider this prayerfully, pray to God for He alone will give you clear directions on which way to go.  I look forward to hear from you. I understand, because when I too tell people about my calling, they think I am crazy.

    God bless you.

    Sincerely, Lucy Bruna

     

    Why YOU Should Plant a Church

    Sorry to be the odd one out, but I disagree with a number of points in your article.

    First I agree that church leaders and mission agencies can be unneccesarily ruthless in estimating the abilities and gifts of a potential church planter. “Arm chair generals”, one of my theological professors called them.

    It’s not rocket science.” No, it’s not. But it is a definite discipline, and one that requires less theological knowledge (though important) than insight into humans and culture. The people we wish to reach in the name of Jesus deserve that we not take church planting too lightly. It is their lives we are dealing with, and we do need to bear that in mind. I for one have seen a number of church plants fail (including my one try at it), these mostly because folks jumped in full of enthusiasm and a genuine desire to help, but horribly unequipped to organize and lead a group into any kind of real development in following Jesus. This can and does leave scarred individuals behind, some of whom jettison the idea of christian community after a bad experience. I’d like to encourage folk who want to plant a church to go for it, but do it by doing your homework first. And most of that homework is not to be found in the texts we read in seminary or thereafter, but in the experience we gain by serving along side of others.

    It’s in the context of that serving that I think we gain insight into whether we have the “stuff” to be a church planter (certainly if we hope to be the point man/woman). By doing in relationship with others we can estimate whether we have the kind of faith and gifting that is needed to stick it out. We need to judge ourselves wisely, as Paul reminded us. Learning to do this well is an act of grace towards ourselves. It is also, I think, a necessity if we wish to be effective followers of Jesus.

    Finally, if your goal is to plant a church and it fails, you have failed. Period. You may have blessed and loved many people, perhaps some have found their way farther along the road with Jesus, but you have failed at planting a church. You may have grown and developed your skills, but the church plant failed. Please, let’s not rationalize these things into the realm of the willy-nilly emotional/spiritual experience. If you fail at church planting, it doesn’t mean that you can’t ever succeed, but you certainly need to take a hard and detailed look at why this particular church plant failed. Again, the people we are hoping to serve deserve no less from us. Failure grants also the chance to ask yourself again whether you do have the stuff to do the work, and if so, under which circumstances. Not all of us have the stuff, but I have found that in the name of well meaning encouragement and vision, good men and women have been spurred on to tasks that were not their calling nor place in the kingdom of Christ.

    yours,

    Russ Herald

    Hard, but true

    Thanks for the brutal honesty there. I am planting a house church(s) right now, and have to take honest hard looks at myself constantly. I believe God is in the business of reaching the lost, but He chooses to use me in that process.

    I also believe that are a couple of different roads to take in planting a church. There are indiginous individuals who gravitate towards each other and gain a vision together to begin a church. I don’t think the mental, psychological and spiritual stamina has to be as great with this group as it does with a “catylist” type of a planter. A catylist moves into a new area with few, if any contacts and goes about the work of starting a new fellowship. The catylist must (and I can’t stress this enough), be a pretty sound individual. That is where the denominational or mission organizational requirements, training and assessment are great tools.

    The stresses I face as a house church planter are different (and somewhat less) from those of a traditional planter. Either way God has given me a great opportunity to build a Biblical community in my city, and I feel a responsibility not only to God, but to the folks in that community. Thanks for the pointed comment Russ.

    Hard, but worth it

    I agree that there is more than one road to take in church planting. And the kind of stress one experiences does differ with the “kind” of church one is trying to plant.

    In my own case I was attempting to start a kind of modified cell church (a la Ralph Neighbour). We struggled with getting cell groups started, but mostly struggled with the fellow believers (including team members) who at first supported the vision, but in the end really wanted a “real” church. “Real” meaning of course, what they were used to from previous experiences. I for one am grateful I was spared the pressure of a high profile sunday service!

    I like your statement that “denominational or mission organizational requirements, training and assessment are great tools”. When we view these things as tools, I think that too can take some of the pressure off, and help us realize that used rightly, they can be an asset to us. Used as club, they can kill. This is, I think, what Bob was rightly trying to warn against.

    I wish you all the best as you work to let the light of Jesus shine in and through the community you live in.

    OUCH!

    Over the course of several days I had dreams of a church… I was the “Senior Pastor” but not always the “Preacher”… then I was talking to a family, explaining to them that we did not have Sunday School for their children… that “we” believed the role of teaching the children the Bible was that of the parents… they made the statement “so there is no place in your church for our children”? In that dream I woke up at that moment thinking… a church for adults only? I spent the waking hours of the day asking God what was meant by my dreams…

    Then as I was on my way home from work, I heard a radio talk show host stating that those who sexually abused children should be put to death, no questions asked… I became angry because my “Christian teachings” told me that there is redemption for everyone… even the “worst”…
    The radio host went on to launch a program to go to half-way houses and protest “these people” being in local communities…

    I then asked myself… where do “these people” go to church if they can not be where children gather?

    At that moment the dreams and the radio host collided like two trains!

    My thoughts followed… I don’t know where to begin… I have no formal education just plenty of life experiences…

    A day later I heard Joel Osteen on Larry King Live, which I NEVER watch… and as Joel and Larry spoke… it was like tunnel-vision only in this case it was tunnel-hearing… I heard that Joel did not finish his college degree……. that his father was a former Southern Baptist….. it was weird to say the least… I have struggled for some time, not with what Southern Baptist believe, but how they conduct church….

    Now I am stuck… by fear I am sure… and as I was suffering the net… I read your post…. it’s back on my knees now… seeking God and the meaning of all of these events!

    Deflating...in a good way

    Bob-

    My husband gave me this article of yours last spring and God used it to deflate the pressure of planting for me.

    I am speaking at a planter’s wives’ retreat and will put them on to your blog. 

    Your words were devinely inspired. Thank you. They encouraged me more than you will ever know.

    Re: Why YOU Should Plant a Church

    EVERYONE should be a part of church planting… it’s an amazing experience!

    Re: Why YOU Should Plant a Church

     I recently received this email from a friend whose ministry consultation work touches North America, Europe, Asia.

     ”Thought you might like an update on the Europe Church Planting Project I’ve been working on… the intent of the project is to help accelerate church planting amongst some of the emerging successful European models…the website is up at www.ecpn.org

    Sharon Simpson “finding ways the web can be a tool for ministry”Stir Communications Groupwww.stir.ca

    Re: Why YOU Should Plant a Church

    @Russ Herald:

    I’m sorry, but I couldn’t disagree with you more. Three years ago, the church I attend decided to become a multi-site church, with each of the sites having a different look and feel. For a number of reasons — some of which I understand and agree with, some of which I don’t — they decided to close the site at which I was a worship leader last month. In essence, this was one of the failed church plants you describe. Painful? Yep. Will it leave scars? Undoubtedly. Does that mean it shouldn’t have happened? Absolutely not!!!

    This church plant got me involved in ministry. It got my wife involved in ministry. It encouraged a mid-fifties lady to come back to church. It encouraged a group of fifteen year old kids who had never gone to church to see what Jesus had to offer them. It encouraged a late twenties/early thirties self-described “geek” to give church a second chance. If that plant did nothing else, it changed these six lives. And from out of the ashes of that “failure”, I am praying and considering planting a church myself.

    As Christians, we should not seek to avoid pain or avoid scars. It is by Jesus’ scars that our sins have been removed! Our way is not the quick, easy, painless way. Rather our way is often slow, difficult, and painful. But from pain we learn and grow. No, Bob Hyatt is right — the only “failure” is the failure to do what God called us to do. Planting a church is not to be taken lightly, and it is not to be done out of selfish motivations, but if it is what God truly has called us to do, then we *must* trust God to do with our work what He wills.

    Re: Why YOU Should Plant a Church (from mwallette)

     mwallette,

    I wholeheartedly agree that a church plant, even a failed one, can help very many people. I’m glad it’s spuring you on to consider it further.

    My statements had nothing to do with the avoidance of pain, or that pain itself is a reason to not be involved in a church plant. If you read them that way, then I’m afraid the communication got jumbled up somewhere. I meant, quite simply, two things:

    1) We do have a responsibility to our fellow human beings to do our best to do things well. While we never can guarantee everything, we should look very hard at what we are doing in a church plant (or other endeavor), and how that affects others. I for one do not want to be the cause of pain to someone else because I was careless about what I was doing (I am not implying that you are careless!) I was also not asserting that closing down a church must be painful or leave long term scars, but only than it can be, and sometimes certainly is. Learning from this "pain" is indeed something that I wholly agree with you on, but I think that part of the learning should be a self-assessment, certainly of those responsible for the church plant. 

    2) Failure at planting a church is just that, a failure. Name it. Own it. Call it what it is. Learn from it and see if you want to try again. Take the good that you can, certainly. But if at the end of the day you were trying to get a church off the ground and running and it doesn’t work, that’s failure at that task. Encouraging and blessing people was part of that total task, and maybe that part has gone well. But the organizational/structural reality is that if the plant closes, the church as a community entity is over. It’s not the end of the world, but it is something to look hard at (that’s also a slow road of learning: growth through failure).

    In my mind this it is in the matrix of gifting/calling/community that
    we begin to see what our role in a church plant can be. Sounds like that’s happened wonderfully for you: I’m very glad for it!  But I do not want to divorces calling from ability, but weigh calling with ability and experience, to help understand and prepare wisely.  Part of that is learning to judge the difference between calling and excitement (or even pressure/expectation), but that is a very different discussion indeed.

    Like I said, I’m glad that things crumbling once hasn’t deterred you, and I’m glad that it helped others. 

    Re: Why YOU Should Plant a Church

    I needed this article, like really bad. I have participated in one church plant that was fully funded. The BIG SPLASH type of church plant, and it is still successful. I have held most staff positions in established church, but never senior pastor. Just recently, I was on the phone with my pastor from when I was a teenager. He asked me WHY I am not a PASTOR. I did not have a good answer. Ever since then, I have been impressed to begin the process of planting a church. I’m 42, I don’t have my degree, but I have been in full time, part time and volunteer ministry for 20 years. But I have a lot of ideas about the church, what it SHOULD NOT BE, and what it SHOULD BE. Both categories are flawed. Pray for me. Brooksville, Florida.

    Re: Why YOU Should Plant a Church

    This might be nutty… I am on the verge of a plant.. of sorts.. and my home church, which has given its blessing and support to this venture is financially shattered.. and I have been talking to some people in the church planting deal and hit a lot of the same issues you mentioned. I havent been hit with the same analysis yet only because I havent given them that opportunity. I really felt like their idea was to simply co-opt the church group I was working with in order to make it a part of their vision… not to encourage to be grow into what it is meant to be. Anyhow… the point of all this is I am feeling the weight of the discouragements… all the roadblocks I see are there in front of me… and I could use a positive dialogue with someone who is on this journey but maybe just a few clicks ahead of me… so I am attaching my email address to this… if you can spare the time…

    Re: Why YOU Should Plant a Church

    Bob, what a wonderful article, I thoroughly enjoyed it! I love when you wrote “all I can say is that I think that many church plants that seem to be failures by the standard of “Did they make it?” were probably great adventures for many involved, probably introduced people to Christ and probably made a practical difference in the lives of some people who really needed those small, ‘failing’ churches.” I honestly think that God’s program of outreach is the church, and so often we miss that. We think it is about doing youth bowling night or some type of outreach program. I know from experience that people get passionate about what you are passionate about. When a new church enters a community and the people are striving to do whatever they can to keep it afloat, they tend to talk about it more often. A lot of times that talking is with non-Christians, who then get to get interested because they see the authentic struggle and they want to see what it is all about. Like you said also, stepping out and striving to do whatever you can to see it succeed is a huge learning experience for everyone involved. They get to be transformed by the process and see the Lord move in their life. Everyone involved gets to see their own faith revitalized, which leads to a more faithful witness and greater outreach. Again, great article!

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