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A groundbreaking guide for multiplying the impact of churchplants Based on a study that was commissioned by the LeadershipNetwork, this book reveals the best practices in church plantingand uncovers the common threads among them. A much-needed resource,this book will inform, guide, and even catalyze today's many churchplanting leaders. The authors clearly show leaders how to plantchurches that create a multiplication movement and offerinspiration for them to do so. The book addresses their questionsabout what to do next in their church planting strategies, in lightof research on what's actually working best. * Author Ed Stetzer heads up LifeWay Research * Provides reliable, credible information about what churchplanting strategies work best * A volume in the Leadership Network Series Offers a definitive guide for church planting and the burgeoningmovement it is part of.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2010
Cover
Praise for Viral Churches
Title
Copyright
LEADERSHIP NETWORK TITLES
ABOUT LEADERSHIP NETWORK
FOREWORD BY RICK WARREN
1 INTRODUCTION
National Awakening
Who Needs to Know
Our Approach
The Authors
2 CHURCH PLANTING
We Confess: We Began with Addition
We Suspect You’re Smarter Than We Were
Evangelism Model from the Book of Acts?
Today’s Commission: Go and Plant Churches of All People
Vision to Win the World—Through Church Planting
3 GROWTH BY MULTIPLICATION
How Do New Churches Best Extend the Kingdom of God?
Does Church Planting Mean Multiplication?
How Ralph Multiplies at Church
Why Do We Add, Rather Than Multiply?
How to Move Toward Multiplication
4 NEW PLAYERS
Why the Movement Ended
The Need for New Players
Christ the King Is Out of Control
5 KINGDOM COOPERATION
Cooperating Without Compromise
Types of Partnerships
How Networks Form
Pray, Dream, and Step Out–Please!
6 PREDICTORS OF SUCCESS
Approaches to Training
Assessment at the Front
A Wide Variety of Fanatics
7 THRIVING
Churches Can Truly Multiply Like Crazy
Factors Influencing Survivability
What Makes Plants Excel
From Surviving to Thriving
8 HOUSE CHURCHES
House-Type Churches Started Early
Neil Cole’s Emphasis on Multiplication
Lots of Participants, Lots of Variety
But Can They Multiply? Do They?
9 MULTISITE STRATEGY
Church Planting Versus Campus Launching
Big Vision, Denominations Welcome
Not Either-Or but Both-And
10 RAPID GROWTH
Big Is Bad If It’s Anti-Small
What Good Things Accompany Rapid Growth?
Bigness Doesn’t Guarantee Multiplication
11 FUNDING
Money from Denominational Sources
Fully Funded or Partially Funded?
Money from Church-Planting Networks
Money from Church Planting Churches
Additional Funding Sources
Money Shortages Aren’t the Real Problem
12 THE NEW SCORECARD
NorthWood’s Six Measurement Points
Changing the Way Other Churches Measure
Obstacles to North American Church Multiplication
Defining the New Scorecard
13 OBSTACLES TO MISSIONAL REPLICATION
More Good Models Than Ever
Other Hurdles Remain
What Holds Us Back
14 CONCLUSION
We Need to Take Another Approach
New Success Measures
Where Will You Go from Here?
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
APPENDIX: List of Churches and Networks Cited
NOTES
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR CHURCH MULTIPLICATION
THE AUTHORS
INDEX
Scripture Index
End User License Agreement
4 NEW PLAYERS
Table 4.1: Dramatic Historic Growth of Various Denominations (by Number of Churches)
5
Table 4.2: Baptists Far Outpaced the Original Congregationalists (by Number of Churches)
6
12 THE NEW SCORECARD
Table 12.1: Seating Capacity of U.S. Protestant Churches, If All Were Full
3
14 CONCLUSION
Table 14.1: Comparison of a Twenty-Person Church That Adds Versus a Church That Multiplies
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“God has given our church the vision to see one thousand churches planted in the next forty years. This book is the book that tells us how to do it. This book stoked the fires in my heart to see a massive, game-changing church planting movement in North America. I cannot recommend it enough!”
—J.D. Greear, lead pastor, the Summit Church, Durham, N.C., http://www.jdgreear.comwww.jdgreear.com
“Any denominational leader or church involved in or considering new church work will benefit from Viral Churches. Warren and Ed nailed it with this one! Too often research is a look in the rear view mirror. Viral Churches creates a solid bridge from the past to the future with actionable findings.”
—Todd Wilson, director, Exponential Network, www.exponentialnetwork.com
“Denominational leaders desiring to understand the blessings and challenges of multiplication strategies need look no further than Viral Churches. Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird have created a comprehensive primer. I’m using this book as an indispensable tool to help me make the most of what’s next!”
—Steve Pike, director, Assemblies of God Church Multiplication Network, www.cmn.ag.org
“Are we on the edge of a second great multiplication of Christian churches in North America? Viral Churches offers an assessment of what it will take and points to many hopeful signs. With research results and ministry observations Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird encourage the shift that will make such a movement reality, from a church-planting commitment to a church-multiplication DNA. This book is for every church in America: ‘It takes all types of training resources to recruit all types of planters so that the world can have all types of churches to reach all types of people!’”
—The Most Rev. Robert Duncan, Archbishop of the Anglican Church in North America
Ed Stetzer
Warren Bird
Copyright © 2010 by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird. All rights reserved.
Published by Jossey-Bass
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No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, 978-750-8400, fax 978-646-8600, or on the Web at www.copyright.com. Requests to the publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, 201-748-6011, fax 201-748-6008, or online at www.wiley.com/go/permissions.
Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture quotations are taken from the Holman
Christian Standard Bible®, Copyright © 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Holman Christian Standard Bible®, Holman CSB®, and HCSB® are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers.
Scripture quotations marked NLT are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright 1996, 2004. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations from THE MESSAGE. Copyright © by Eugene H. Peterson 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002. Used by permission of NavPress Publishing Group.
Scripture quotations marked (NIV) are taken from the Holy Bible, New International Version®, NIV®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc.™ Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide.
Readers should be aware that Internet Web sites offered as citations and/or sources for further information may have changed or disappeared between the time this was written and when it is read.
Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.
Jossey-Bass books and products are available through most bookstores. To contact Jossey-Bass directly call our Customer Care Department within the U.S. at 800-956-7739, outside the U.S. at 317-572-3986, or fax 317-572-4002.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Stetzer, Ed.
Viral churches : helping church planters become movement makers / Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird; foreword by Rick Warren — 1st ed.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 978-0-470-55045-8 (cloth)
1. Church development, New. I. Bird, Warren. II. Title.
BV652.24.S73 2010
254'.1097—dc22
2009048404
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Leading the Team-Based Church: How Pastors and Church Staffs Can Grow Together into a Powerful Fellowship of Leaders, George Cladis
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Church 3.0: Upgrades for the Future of the Church, Neil Cole
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Reverse Mentoring: How Young Leaders Can Transform the Church and Why We Should Let Them, Earl Creps
Building a Healthy Multi-Ethnic Church: Mandate, Commitments, and Practices of a Diverse Congregation, Mark DeYmaz
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Whole Church: Leading from Fragmentation to Engagement, Mel Lawrenz
Culture Shift: Transforming Your Church from the Inside Out, Robert Lewis and Wayne Cordeiro, with Warren Bird
Church Unique: How Missional Leaders Cast Vision, Capture Culture, and Create Movement, Will Mancini
A New Kind of Christian: A Tale of Two Friends on a Spiritual Journey, Brian D. McLaren
The Story We Find Ourselves In: Further Adventures of a New Kind of Christian, Brian D. McLaren
Missional Renaissance: Changing the Scorecard for the Church, Reggie McNeal
Practicing Greatness: 7 Disciplines of Extraordinary Spiritual Leaders, Reggie McNeal
The Present Future: Six Tough Questions for the Church, Reggie McNeal
A Work of Heart: Understanding How God Shapes Spiritual Leaders, Reggie McNeal
The Millennium Matrix: Reclaiming the Past, Reframing the Future of the Church, M. Rex Miller
Shaped by God’s Heart: The Passion and Practices of Missional Churches, Milfred Minatrea
The Missional Leader: Equipping Your Church to Reach a Changing World, Alan J. Roxburgh and Fred Romanuk
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Relational Intelligence: How Leaders Can Expand Their Influence Through a New Way of Being Smart, Steve Saccone
Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers, Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird
The Externally Focused Quest: Becoming the Best Church for the Community, Eric Swanson and Rick Rusaw
The Ascent of a Leader: How Ordinary Relationships Develop Extraordinary Character and Influence, Bill Thrall, Bruce McNicol, and Ken McElrath
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Leadership Network, an initiative of OneHundredX, exists to honor God and serve others by investing in innovative church leaders who impact the Kingdom immeasurably.
Since 1984, Leadership Network has brought together exceptional leaders, who are focused on similar ministry initiatives, to accelerate their impact. The ensuing collaboration—often across denominational lines—provides a strong base from which individual leaders can better analyze and refine their individual strategies. Creating an environment for collaborative discovery, dialogue, and sharing encourages leaders to extend their own innovations and ideas. Leadership Network further enhances this process through the development and distribution of highly targeted ministry tools and resources—including video, podcasts, concept papers, special research reports, e-publications, and books like this one.
With Leadership Network’s assistance, today’s Christian leaders are energized, equipped, inspired—and better able to multiply their own dynamic Kingdom-building initiatives.
In 1996 Leadership Network partnered with Jossey-Bass, a Wiley imprint, to develop a series of creative books that would provide thought leadership to innovators in church ministry. Leadership Network Publications present thoroughly researched and innovative concepts from leading thinkers, practitioners, and pioneering churches. The series collectively draws from a wide range of disciplines, with individual titles providing perspective on one or more of five primary areas:
Enabling effective leadership
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For additional information on the mission or activities of Leadership Network activities, please contact:
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The single most effective method for fulfilling the Great Commission that Jesus gave us is to plant new churches! Two thousand years of Christian history have proven that new churches grow faster, and reach more people, than established churches. The growth on any plant is always on the newest branches.
This is why this book by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird, my dear friends and longtime partners in ministry, is so vitally important. Viral Churches casts a clear and compelling vision that calls for every local congregation, regardless of size or age, to make church multiplication a fundamental component of their evangelism strategy.
There is simply no better way to reach, teach, train, and send disciples out into the world than through churches that are planted with the intention of planting others. And for churches, or denominations, that have plateaued or are declining, church planting is an indispensible ingredient for renewal and revitalization. It is the fastest way to infuse new life and new people into atrophied fellowships.
No single congregation can possibly reach every type of person in its community. It takes new churches to reach new generations and new groups of people. And, as I first stated in 1980 when I planted Saddleback, “It’s far easier to have babies than to raise the dead!”
It is also more fun.
My friends, Ed and Warren, make it clear that church multiplication is not some new-fangled strategy of the twenty-first century. It is our oldest strategy—a return to the way the first century church did evangelism, by starting new congregations everywhere the Good News was shared. This is why “Plant Churches” is the first letter of our network’s global P.E.A.C.E. strategy.
All pastors want their churches to grow up, not just grow larger. We want to see a mature, healthy church that balances all five of God’s purposes given to us in the Great Commandment and Great Commission: Worship (“Love God with all your heart”), Ministry (“Love your neighbor as yourself”), Evangelism (“Go and make disciples”), Edification (“Teach them to do everything I’ve commanded you”), and Fellowship (“Baptize them” into the Body of Christ).
But how do you know when a church is spiritually mature? When it begins to reproduce itself! Physical maturity (after puberty) is evidenced by the ability to have babies. In the same way, a church is not spiritually mature until it starts having spiritual babies—reproducing new churches.
There really is no excuse for not planting churches. Your church doesn’t have to be large, wealthy, or established to plant a church.
When I planted Saddleback Church, we made a commitment to plant at least one new church a year, so at the end of our first year, when our attendance was around 130, we planted our first daughter church. We’ve started as least one new church a year for the past thirty years, and have started as many as seventeen in a single year out of our church.
You’d be surprised at how effective new believers and fledgling members can be at church planting. I recently met with the original small group of people who helped me plant Saddleback thirty years ago.
Most of them were saved at Saddleback during the first year. I asked them “How many of you ever thought you could be a church planter when we began Saddleback?” Not one of them raised their hand. Then I asked, “How many of you would say today that starting Saddleback Church is the greatest thing you’ve ever done with your life?” Every single one of them raised their hand! The congregation we planted will outlast all of us.
As a pastor who has personally supervised the planting of hundreds of churches, and having trained tens of thousands of church planters across 162 countries over the past thirty years, I know what works and what doesn’t work when it comes to church multiplication. So believe me when I tell you that this book by my partners is pure gold.
I invite you to join us in the grand adventure!
P.E.A.C.E. CoalitionTwitter @RickWarren
Dr. Rick Warren
Saddleback Church
Leadership Network Numbers1
It’s no longer true that the total number of churches is declining
An important shift happened in recent years. After decades of net decline, more U.S. churches are being started each year (approximately 4,000) than are being closed each year (approximately 3,500).2
The greatest increase of new churches is on the “network” level
There is a growing involvement in churches planting churches and a moderately growing involvement in denominations planting churches, but the greatest motion is through networks planting churches, which are increasing at a rapid level.3
Do you see anything unusual in the following vision statement taken from a new church’s Web site?
Imagine Fellowship* plans to reach and grow thousands for Christ in San Antonio, Texas. Imagine Fellowship will also train a new generation of leaders who have the heart and drive to start churches over the entire United States. We will plant a church in every city that has 100,000 or more (there are roughly 262 cities). These churches will also train church planters so that every city has a church that is engaging the next generation for Christ.
God can do anything—you know, far more than you could ever imagine or guess or request in your wildest dreams! (Ephesians 3:20, The Message)
Ten years ago, you would have had to look far and wide to find a church with such vision. Today churches like Imagine Fellowship with a vision for multiplication are springing up everywhere; so many, in fact, that we were inspired to write this book. We believe that we are on the edge of seeing an exponential multiplication movement in the United States, and that these churches are leading the way.
What’s so different about Imagine Fellowship’s vision?
The church wants to plant other churches, but not just one or two or even five or ten. They’ve set their sights on
more than two hundred of them!
The church is up front about this vision from day one. Other churches tend to wait for some feeling of stability or preparedness before they consider planting other churches. Imagine Fellowship is different—they’re not waiting to become well established before thinking about multiplication. Instead they’re building it into their DNA. In fact, Imagine’s vision statement has more words in it about replication than on the initial ministry in San Antonio!
The “owner” of the vision is the local church. This isn’t just the pastor’s new missions campaign, and it’s not something being handed down from a denomination or adopted from a network. This call to multiplication is a churchwide thing, and today it’s local churches like this that are setting the pace for their denominations or associations.
Imagine went to work on this initiative immediately. It held its first meeting as a new church in November 2008 and within months began training its first church planter. It has taken on two more since that time.
The church has been influenced by its relationship with another church, one with a similar vision of reaching those who do not know Christ. In this case, Imagine Fellowship’s Pastor Kevin Joyce previously served on staff with what they call their “parent church”—Bay Area Fellowship in Corpus Christi, Texas. As the “About Us” section of their Web site says, “Pastor Kevin worked under Pastor Bil Cornelius for two years and is now going to bring a unique experience to San Antonio, Texas.”
Church planting is good. A vision for a church multiplication movement is better.
Many of you will not be content with a one-off church plant that serves only to replace a dying church. You share Imagine Fellowship’s vision for massive church multiplication. Viral Churches is our effort to fan that flame of your passion and give you some new insights as to how it can be accomplished.
Imagine Fellowship is not alone. We know this because of a huge research project commissioned by Leadership Network (where Warren directs the research division), conducted by Ed Stetzer and LifeWay Research (which Ed leads). The data collection and analysis took place in 2007 with relevant information updated in the fall of 2009 for this book. This was arguably the most comprehensive study ever done to review the methods, trends, and out-comes of church planting organizations across the United States. It involved a team of twenty-one people who contacted, surveyed, summarized, and evaluated leaders including
200-plus church planting churches
100-plus leaders from forty denominations
45 church planting networks
84 organic church leaders
12 nationally known experts
53 colleges and seminaries
54 doctoral dissertations
41 journal articles
100-plus church planting books and manuals
The original findings were condensed into four free “State of Church Planting USA” reports at Leadership Network’s Web site, www.leadnet.org/churchplantingresources. Report titles are
Church Planting Overview
Funding New Churches
Improving the Health and Survivability of New Churches
Who Starts New Churches
This book takes findings from the original project and reframes it to inform, guide, and even catalyze today’s many church planting leaders, especially those heading, forming, or considering a church planting network. Our hope is to inspire and help you develop a church multiplication movement—an exponential birth of new churches that engage lost people and that replicate themselves through even more new churches. A church multiplication movement is a rapid reproduction of churches planting churches, measured by a reproduction rate of 50 percent through the third generation of churches, with new churches having 50 percent new converts. To achieve such momentum, churches would need to plant, on average, a new church every two years with each church reaching at least half of its attendees from the unchurched community. We believe this rapid reproduction of churches needs to happen among hundreds of niche population groups—from SUV-driving young families in fast-growing suburbs to urban hipster environmentalists to unchurched rural country music lovers.
These days it seems that many people are talking about church planting movements, but we want to move beyond theory to actual doing. This book is to be a practical guide for orchestrating a movement. It will address the idea of what to do next in your church planting strategies, in light of research on what’s actually working best and within a context of kingdom-minded, Scripture-based theology.
We’re not just going to describe those church planting movements that we believe God has sparked in certain parts of the world. We’re prescribing them as the much-needed alternative to inward-focused or addition-based church planting. Though this book is research based, we also take an advocacy perspective. Viral Churches will contain enough stories for participants in church planting at every level to find inspiration and specific help. But most of all, it will speak to a new breed of people who want to populate this country (and beyond), saturating it with a viral movement of multiplying churches.
A virus doesn’t re-create itself from scratch. Instead, it infects existing cells to spread a disease. Viral marketing leverages existing social networks to spread ideas. In the same way, we believe that the kingdom of God can spread virally by “infecting” every tribe, group, club, neighborhood, community, and family. For that to happen, more people have to shift from church planting to church multiplication movements. If we were writing to an audience that loves math, we could have titled the book Multiply Everything: From Church Planting to Movement Making. Or perhaps New Math Church: You Can Move from Planting to Multiplying Churches. But it’s not just math; it’s relational as well, hence the term Viral.
According to the research, a church multiplication movement could happen, but it hasn’t yet. We want to show you what the pioneers are learning, cheer the amazing things God is doing through them, encourage you to become one of the pioneers, and show how you too can be part of a multiplication movement.
We think everyone ought to care about church planting and we’re a little surprised when they don’t. The church is called the Bride of Christ (among other great names), and who wouldn’t want the bride to flourish? However, too many Christians love Jesus but not his church and its mission. We’re naive enough to believe that you can’t love Jesus and neglect his wife.
Thus our primary audience is people who love the church and care especially about its multiplication, particularly leaders involved in church planting across the English-speaking world. If you consider yourself a church planter (or would like to), this book is for you. Whether your endeavor started intentionally or spontaneously, this book is for you. If you’re the head of an agency, coalition, parachurch organization, partnership or denomination, this book is for you. Whether you’re bi-vocational, fully funded, or unfunded, this book is for you. If you’re a seminary professor, Bible student, pastoral intern, volunteer, professional, or an innocent bystander, this book is for you.
Some of you are church planters who have seen multiple plants spring up through your leadership. Maybe you’re planting a church but have a desire for multiple plants to follow through your leadership. Some of you could lead networks and movements of new churches—you just don’t know it yet. Some of you will lead the next movements of new churches. When you see the big picture of what God is doing, we believe your vision will expand for how your church can be part of a replicating movement.
Some of you are just exploring the idea of multiplication. If you’ve figured out that multiplying is better than adding, and if you’re intrigued by what happens when you birth multiple churches, all of which in turn plant other churches, this book is for you.
You may be surprised to learn that you are not alone. Many people who are initiating networks have not yet met or heard of each other. We hope you will be encouraged to read the stories and strategies of others. Each chapter will introduce you to at least one network, coalition, or denomination that is placing a major emphasis on church planting, and the Appendix lists all the entities that have been described.
Although most examples are from North America, you do not have to live here to apply the ideas of this book. You might be a church planter or missionary in another country. Some countries beyond North America are way ahead of us, as we discuss later, but we can all learn from what God is doing among us.
Our prayer is that many more followers of Jesus in the next generation will become church planters. We recall the command of Jesus: “The harvest is abundant, but the workers are few. Therefore, pray to the Lord of the harvest to send out workers into His harvest” (Matthew 9:37–38).
Each chapter begins with a research finding called “Leadership Network Numbers,” mostly taken from our major research project. The chapter itself then focuses on a related practical idea that we believe is essential to the success of church multiplication networks. Together the chapters all suggest both a perspective and strategy for the day when “churches planting churches that in turn plant churches” becomes as common and normal as churches with multiple services or churches that send service teams after disasters such as the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami or Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Each chapter makes a different point:
Church planting is the new evangelism (
Chapter Two
)
Church planting may be mainstream, but church multiplication is not (
Chapter Three
)
Aggressive local churches and church planting networks are leading the way where denominations once did (
Chapter Four
)
Church planters are cooperating by learning together at unprecedented levels (
Chapter Five
)
The way church planters are recruited, assessed, and deployed offer strong predictors of their success (
Chapter Six
)
New church survivability has increased dramatically (
Chapter Seven
)
House churches evangelize and replicate effectively—sometimes! (
Chapter Eight
)
Multisite strategy is a growing trend among reproducing churches (
Chapter Nine
)
Some churches grow fast, but that’s not the same as reproduction (
Chapter Ten
)
In funding new churches, partnerships matter (
Chapter Eleven
)
Missional replication still faces several obstacles (
Chapter Twelve
)
A church multiplication movement requires a new scorecard (
Chapter Thirteen
)
Several serious challenges still lay ahead (
Chapter Fourteen
)
You can read the material in any order, so feel free to start with whatever chapter intrigues you most. There is, however, a sense of flow. Step by step, we advocate what has happened and what still must happen for a true church multiplication movement to be birthed.
Wherever you begin, our hope is that each chapter will give you new information (or confirmation of what you had already experienced). But we also want to lead you to a greater vision and dream of what God has begun to do, and might do even more powerfully as you connect the dots for your potential role.
Church planters are a cocky lot. They don’t want to read books on church planting from armchair experts who met a church planter once. So, to establish our legitimacy, we need to tell you about our church planting background.
Although we are both now involved in full-time church research, we are also pastors who have led church plants, studied church plants and coached church planters. Each of us has three or more academic degrees in theology plus a research-based doctorate (Warren is impressed that Ed has two earned doctorates!). We’ve both authored or coauthored a number of books. Web sites with more details about us, including contact information, are listed at the end of the book (see pages 12–15 and 233–235). You will also find out that neither of us is shy about sharing our thoughts on all things church, doctrine, and the Gospel.
Most of all, we’re both passionate that the United States is a receptive mission field and we believe that God could use this very generation to change both the face and the fruitfulness of today’s church—but only if certain changes happen.
To find out the good things that are happening, and what we hope is ahead in the world of church planting, please turn the page.
Ed Stetzer Nashville, TN
Warren Bird Suffern, NY
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All churches and church networks named in this book are listed in the Appendix, including their Web sites. Our reference to a diversity of churches and denominations doesn’t mean we endorse all of their beliefs and practices.
Leadership Network Numbers
Some Models Yield Higher Conversions Than Others
Our research indicates that the current best practices, in terms of producing more evangelistic conversions, are seeker approaches, purpose-driven approaches, and ethnic church planting.1
Churches Among Ethnic Groups Find Strong Responsiveness
The noticeable increase in ethnic church planting is most obvious among immigrants. The largest recent groups of newcomers to this country, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, are (in order) from Mexico, China, Philippines, India, El Salvador, Vietnam, Korea, and Cuba.2
We are writing this book because we are absolutely convinced that a huge influx of new churches is required in this country, an influx that will not happen unless present patterns change. We believe church planting is the best way to take the church to the people it needs to serve. We believe new churches are the best platform for followers of Jesus to live as salt, light, and doers of good deeds in our communities (Matthew 5: 13–16), to demonstrate love in practical ways (Matthew 22:34–40; John 13:35), and to intentionally make more disciples of Jesus Christ (Matthew 28:19–20).
We are encouraged by the recently increased interest in church planting. It’s unfortunate, though, that the trend focuses largely on addition rather than multiplication. We want to lay the foundation for an out-of-control replication of new churches, a movement of God that will literally change the landscape of North America.
It will not be neat. It will not be orderly. But when spontaneous movements authored by God occur, there is a tendency to shake up the status quo. We think it can’t happen soon enough!
If such a movement happens, many more people will find peace with God, purpose in life, and an eternal destiny in heaven. This is the sort of kingdom work that we as Christians need to be about.
If only we had known then what we know now. The vision we inherited was shortsightedly fixed on addition. For both of us, our initial assignment as a “pastor” was to start a new church in a community that needed Jesus. We did plant churches but they weren’t intentional about building multiplication into their DNA. In the grand scheme of things, all we did was to add some new churches. Each replicated a precious community of faith but few have replicated themselves, much less multiplied themselves.
Ed planted his first church even before going to seminary. He was twenty-one years old and started a church among the urban poor in Buffalo, New York. He had no seminary training or previous pastoral experience. The home mission board of his denomination turned him down as a church planter. Yet he was convinced that this was what God wanted him to do, so with his wife, Donna, he followed God’s leadership and went forward. It took them on a journey that was really difficult, spiritually dangerous, and financially irresponsible. But, above all of those things, it was absolutely worth the price they paid.
Though Buffalo was the fastest-shrinking city in America at the time, Ed and Donna witnessed God’s Spirit poured out into their new neighborhood. They learned that evangelism can be done anywhere there are people. Contrary to popular practice, not every church plant has to take place among upper-middle class white people in a rapidly growing suburb of a metropolitan city. In fact, while planting in downtown Buffalo, Ed learned that God desired to multiply the effect of his kingdom in a place many thought implausible. Working a full-time job (blowing insulation) Ed devoted his evenings and weekend to planting a church.
Ed and Donna moved into the neighborhood with nothing but the Gospel, a passion for people to hear it, and a willingness to abandon all previous methods to make it a reality. Soon enough, God began to multiply their efforts. Ed honestly doesn’t know if an established church could have connected with the kind of people they did. In fact, churches already in that urban center were largely ineffective at making those connections.
Looking through the eyes of the urban poor of Buffalo, they saw afresh that planting a church is often the most effective way to reach someone for Christ. Why? Because a church plant does not know it has any limit on what it can do for God’s kingdom. It is free from the baggage of past traditions, practices, and the “we’ve never done that before” mentality that plagues churches that have been around for awhile. From one church plant, exponential kingdom growth can occur—if the leader will point the people in that direction.