Friday, September 21, 2012

Church Planter Spotlight: Marcus Toussaint on Lessons Learned in Church Planting

Church Planter Spotlight: Marcus Toussaint on Lessons Learned in Church Planting

Lindy LowrySeptember 20, 2012
From Exponential Weekly

Twelve months ago, Church Planter Marcus Toussaint moved from the heart of the Bible Belt in Dallas to the mountains of Northern Arizona to help start Flagstaff Community Church with a few friends. He serves as External Focus Pastor of the growing Flagstaff community that has moved from Lead Pastor Mike Mahon’s living room to an unused car garage to now Flagstaff High School. Recently, he blogged 20 lessons he’s learned about planting in what he calls a ‘postmodern, post-everything frontier,” including “All that stuff about ‘calling’ is true” and “A church plant is a lame idol.”
All that stuff about “calling” is true. A lot of guys smarter than me say that church planting is for those who truly feel called to it. They’re actually right. The first few months, particularly if you’re a parachute drop, can feel lonely and difficult. There are times when the only thing keeping you going is the reality that “God has called me to this thing.” If you have never had a clear sense of calling about starting a church, seriously, save yourself and others the trouble and do anything else.
Choke the church plant pride quick. There is often a not-so-subtle hubris deep in us church-planters, being the new, idealistic kids on the block. Kill that pride before, during and after every visit to another church in town or after hearing about another church in town. There really are faithful churches and ministries in your city that have been praying for it long before you even thought of being God’s gift to Gospel-contextualization. Be humbled to be a small part of the answer to their prayers and long-suffering in a tough place.
Learn how to apply the Gospel to rejection and criticism. Starting a church from scratch involves throwing yourself out there and facing a lot of rejection. It’s like high school all over again. Sometimes, you will have to preach the Gospel to yourself like 20 times a day, remembering that because you are fully accepted in Christ means that any kind of rejection you receive just isn’t that big a deal. Also, pass all criticism through the filter of your critics’ demonstrated Christian maturity.
Debunk the “superhero pastor” mindset in your people from day one. It’s true that [most of] your people can only rise to the level of your leadership—so it’s a good thing Jesus is the head pastor! Just because you’re “called” doesn’t mean you’re called to be Superman. Living in an authentic community is actually a core value at our church. Be strong, but own your (numerous) mistakes and share your daily need for Jesus with people. They’ll find you refreshingly real in an artificial culture, and you’ll foster a church culture that truly emphasizes the “priesthood of all believers.”
Failure is an option. The tried-and-true, canned church planting processes killing it in the Midwest and the Bible Belt flat out just don’t seem to work anymore in postmodern American contexts (that is, if you want to reach non-Christians and not just disgruntled church people), so just about everything is an experiment. We just try a bunch of stuff and see if anything sticks. Frankly, we fail a lot. We’re sort of learning as we go; it’s the ultimate on-the-job training. For us, failure is failure to try.
What you’re excited about is what your people really learn. I actually stole this from a D.A. Carson quote in an article at the Gospel Coalition. Genuine excitement about anything is contagious. Churches and church plants come and go, but Jesus will be the jam forever. Be excited about Him. Be excited about the Gospel.
Team dynamics are trickier than you think. I remember having a conversation with a seminary professor about how “church planting teams don’t work.” He said it was because the inevitable conflict within teams most often causes the mission to unravel. At the time, I believed he just didn’t understand how to build a solid team that could manage conflict well. The reality is that you can dive headfirst into a sea of personality inventories like StrengthsFinder or Myers-Briggs, but conflict is going to happen, period. Personalities are going to clash. Healthy, godly teams have conflict. But don’t let your commitment to biblical conflict resolution be detrimental to the mission God has you on together.
Leverage stories continuously. In my opinion, stories of life change are the key metric for success in ministry. When you’re a parachute drop church plant attempting to build momentum at ground zero, you don’t have a lot of stories yet. So you have to use the ones you’ve got, namely everyone in your launch/core team’s story of grace and stories/media from your amazing sending church or organization. At each of our worship “gatherings,” we tell the story of grace of someone in our community. Create a culture where you never shut up about God and what He’s doing.
People will bail. It’s one of those things you’ve heard about and prepare your heart for, but it still hurts when it happens. Because church planting is extremely personal; when people leave, they’re not just breaking up with the church, they’re breaking up with you, your leadership, vision and its implementation. The temptation is to harden your heart and not allow yourself to truly trust people. Don’t give in! There really are amazing people out there! The incredibly personal nature of planting a church is actually the premise of this book by Brian Bloye.
God will send you some “Barnabi.” In the midst of frequent rejections and difficulties, you’ll get a few “sons of encouragement” who truly love Jesus, buy into the vision of “our church” (love hearing that!) and who are faithfully servant-hearted for the long haul. Let yourself be pumped about it and apply 2 Tim. 2:2 to them as soon as they’re recognized.
Objective, outside coaching is essential. We get great coaching from some Yodas in Phoenix and Dallas. In addition to learning new face-melting leadership axioms, we get encouragement and wisdom from some guys who don’t suffer from the situational tunnel vision that church planters in the trenches inevitably develop.
Attractional strategies largely don’t seem to work in post-Christian contexts. At least they haven’t really for us. Why? I think it’s because they are like cultural mosquitoes to our context—they’re annoying. Everyone expects them and is inoculated against Christian evangelistic outreach. If the definition of “crazy” is doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results, then most of us are crazy. Lots of Christian thinkers that have been saying “duh” to this for a long time.
All of us need to be explicitly taught “how to be missional.” It’s sexy to say you’re “missional.” But under the deluge of “missional” material out there, most of us Christians are better at going to Africa than across the street. People need not only to be continually invited to join what God is already doing in their communities, they also need clear, practical instructions on how. We have to recover the idea of “evangelism as a team sport,” and teach people that to be “missional” involves pursuing a big vision with small steps.
Some Christians may take your presence as an insult. Love them anyway. Prove them wrong. Before I even moved to Flagstaff, I met a Christian teacher who balked at the idea of another church in Flag. After all, “Flagstaff has sooo many churches already,” to which I arrogantly thought Yeah, too bad they’re not reaching anyone! The truth is some churches take the proliferation of new church plants in their community as an indictment on their ministry efforts instead of as a movement of God, and some church planters consider the very need for their plant as an indictment on other churches. That’s too bad. I like how one church planting friend in Flagstaff put it, “We’re here to complete, not compete.”
Commit to loving the hurting in your community and you’ll always have an audience (stolen from Jud Wilhite). It’s a good word. We live in a Christian leadership culture that still largely focuses on “influencing the influencers.” It’s explicitly one reason why church planters are flocking to the world’s city centers. That’s awesome, but I also believe that Jesus still chooses to use those of us who are foolish and weak in the world’s eyes to build His kingdom (1 Cor. 1:27). The county I live in has two times the national suicide rate and suffers from rampant alcoholism, yet has almost no Christ-centered recovery ministry! So we started one, and it has grown simply by word-of-mouth.
Define success for your church plant biblically. Whether consciously or unconsciously, what you count is what really counts in your church, and I’m convinced the church needs better metrics for success. If “making disciples” is truly the mission, then only counting butts in seats won’t cut it. What about the number of people in community groups as a percentage of your church body? Or the number of intentional relationships with non-Christians in the greater community? Just a couple of numerically oriented questions that might be more helpful (but maybe less immediately gratifying) than whether the crowd is growing. There are many more possibilities.
Ask non-Christians. To me, few things are sillier than a navel-gazing Christian culture sitting around guessing about how to “attract” non-Christians. Ask them. Get to know them, their hopes and dreams, what they think about spirituality, and why they may think Christianity sucks or is at least irrelevant.
Beware of babies in business suits. Often, churched people tend to position themselves as mature believers ready to lead. I would wait to make that call until you see it demonstrated in faithfulness. They may quote Keller and talk a big game, but when the rubber hits the road, they still want the church plant to become “First Vending Machine Fellowship Church.” You can tell a true servant by how he or she responds when they get treated like one.
The hardest person to lead in your church plant is you (stolen from Todd Wagner of Watermark). You are the biggest problem in your church plant. If you can tame the tiger within, everything else isn’t that big of a deal
A church plant is a lame idol. Seriously, even if the thing totally bombs, everyone bails, you run out of money and have to be tri-vocational, Jesus is still coming back and dropping His kingdom on this broken world. Success in the Christian life is faithful obedience to Jesus, not a list of stacked accomplishments. Some friends in Phoenix call church-planting “spanktification”; I connect with that. It’s tough, so are you consciously becoming more like Jesus? Do you love Him and people more as a result? If not, you’re missing it.
This post is the collection of a four-part series called “Lessons From My First Year of Church Planting” posted on Marcus Toussaint’s blog, Dark Sky City: Church Planting in Flagstaff, Arizona. Follow his adventures there and on Twitter @Marcustoussaint.

Lindy Lowry serves as Communications Director and Editor for Exponential.To submit articles for Exponential’s weekly enewsletter, Church Planter Weekly, contact her here.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

SENT Network is planting churches in cities

Recently I met with Mark McGeever, the lead for SENT Network out of Annapolis, MD. They have planted four churches since they started 3 years ago. Downtown Hope in Annapolis illustrates there vision for new churches. Downtown Hope, led by Pastor Joey Tomassoni, has a culture of focusing on encouraging believers to develop relationships and take initiative to reach out to people in their neighborhood and their circle of influence.

They have seen many far from Christ begin to search and many make decisions to trust Christ with their lives. They have developed small discipleship groups to develop these new believers in their faith and impart to them the same vision for being "missional" in their sphere of influence.

Mark and I met with Tally Wilgis of Captivate Church in the Towson area of Baltimore and Scott Ancarrow who just moved to the Federal Hill area of Baltimore to plant a church. Most new churches start in the suburbs. But the most difficult areas to reach are the older established communities of the city. With Accelerate we want to bring together pastors to pray and brainstorm how to best reach their communities.

Pray for Mark who is training new planting pastors.
Pray for Tally who is seeking to reach people far from Christ.
Pray for Scott as he and his wife gather a core to start a church.
Pray for Joey who is discipling new believers.
Pray for me and Accelerate as I seek to be an encouragement and catalyst to planting pastors.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Every month I highlight a new church plant and their ministry to reach people with the message of jesus Christ. One pastor friend is Sam Sadek of the Arabic Baptist Church in Manassas. Read this quote from his latest letter.

"A Muslim Moroccan lady came to know Christ after many months of questions and searching at a home Bible study over the last two years. She has been interested in Christianity for a long time, but had many struggles with Christian teaching, especially the doctrine of the Trinity. Since she was saved, she has been attending our worship service faithfully every Sunday, driving more than 50 miles one way despite the hardship and danger that her Muslim family could pose if they knew she was a follower of Christ. She has been growing in the Lord through the teaching of the word every Wednesday morning with a group of believers, some of whom are also former Muslims."

Pray for Sam and his church as they seek to reach Arabs for Christ. They also ask for prayer for the Christians in Egypt who suffer great persecution under the Muslim Brotherhood.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Five Evaluation Questions for Your Church Plant (or soul)

by Marty Schoenleber Jr
17Jul, 2012

Five Evaluation Questions for Your Church and You

  1. Does your church (and you) love pagans?
  2. Does your church know any pagans?
  3. Do the people in your church know how to meet pagans?
  4. Do the people of your church know how to talk to pagans?
  5. Do the people of your church know how to care for pagan?
Some will object to my use of the word “pagan” as a synonym for unbeliever in Christ, but why? It is a word that communicates more than any other that there is a kingdom of darkness and a kingdom of light. All those who are not a part of the kingdom of light are citizens of the kingdom of darkness. They may not know it, they may not look it, they may wear nice clothes and live in fine houses but they are just as far (and as close) to Christ as South Pacific Islander with a boar’s tusk through his nose.
Allow yourself to be impressed with this fact and impress this fact upon your core group for your church plant or your church. People all around us need the gospel. And they need us to love them enough to tell them about Jesus. Let this fact bend your knee to God for the boldness to proclaim the gospel unashamedly.
“The United States is now the third largest mission field in the world. Only India and China have more non-believers.” —Mission America Monthly


Learning to Care for Pagans

15Jul

Monday Discussion

Five foundational principles to transform your relationships with non-Christians.
  1. Cultivate the value of caring. Luke 10:25-37 —Many of us think that we care for others because we have no animosity toward others. But Jesus knows better. He knows that caring is only proved in the willingness to sacrifice for others. We are all familiar with the parable of the Good Samaritan but the pivotal interpretive clue for why Jesus told the parable is in verses 25-29, especially verse 29. Take a look. Real care is sacrificial and costly.
  2. Emphasize Obedience. Emphasize obedience in your own life and in the lives of those you equip. Basic, generous hospitality is not an issue of giftedness or talent, it is an issue of obedience. We are to consider others as more important than ourselves. Period. (Cf. Phil. 2:3)
  3. Be Real. Authenticity is a rare quality these days. Just be yourself. There is no need to be mushy or maudlin but there is a need to be genuinely concerned and caring. Neighbors respond with good favor when they are shown basic kindness. Retrieving a wind-tossed recycle bin, tomatoes from a garden, prayer offered for comfort when a loved one has died, shoveling a sidewalk or driveway, are all simple gestures but they open doors to greater things.
  4. Be Boldly and Humbly Confident. The two qualities are not mutually exclusive. We should be bold (and praying for boldness) all the time on the basis of the truth of the gospel. But we also should be saturated with humility. God saved us; we didn’t save ourselves. We have no claim to greatness. Humility is disarming. Care is disarming. Unashamed boldness coupled with humility is attractive.
  5. Know that You Will be Ripped Off. After having numerous homeless men stay in our home I can tell you that not every situation has a happy ending. Getting ripped off or taken advantage of will happen. It’s part of the price of living for Jesus. But you will be surprised too by the generosity and thankfulness of some of those you seek to care for and reach for the sake of Christ.
People need, your neighbors need the gospel. They need you to love them enough to risk their rejection. They need you to love them enough to discomfort yourself so that they might have the comfort of Christ forever.
Companion Post: How to Fall in Love with Pagans

Friday, July 13, 2012

The Value of a Sabbatical

by Shawn Lovejoy

Many of you know that my family and I were away on a Ministry Sabbatical. Why did we need a Sabbatical? The word Sabbath, of course, means rest. That's what we needed this month. I actually do believe that Senior Pastors need MORE of it, because of the tireless schedules and demands on us. Every year, as soon as school is out, my entire family pulls back a good bit for a few weeks. We use this time to rest, replenish, and re-energize for the Fall!

What did I do on Sabbatical?
  • I rested. Truly rested.
  • I played with my kids.
  • I hung out with my wife.
  • I read. A lot. I read three books while I was away and started two more.
  • I still did some work. It was just more of the Strategic and futuristic stuff. I worked ON IT, not IN IT. This kind of work inspires me, not drains me!
  • I actually exercised some!
What made it replenishing?
  • I didn't teach for three weeks in a row. I finally miss it!
  • I got away from home. When I'm at home, I can't relax like I want.
  • I went to places where I wouldn't feel like we needed to "run" all the time (aka Disney World is not a great Sabbatical destination).
  • I spent extended time with God each day. God and I had some great, unhurried, heart to heart'
What did I learn while on my Sabbatical?
  • Jesus can run His church without me. HE is bigger than ME!
  • We have a dream team of leaders on our Staff these days who can lead well in my stead!
  • God is louder in my life when I am away from the daily grind!
Anyone around me will tell you that I work hard and move fast. One of the keys to sustaining my pace the last twelve years has also been learning to rest hard now and again. How do you rest, replenish and re-energize for the next phase of the harvest God wants to bring into your life?



Shawn Lovejoy

Shawn Lovejoy is Lead Pastor of Mountain Lake Church; Directional Leader of churchplanters.com; and
author of
The Measure of Our Success: An Impassioned Plea To Pastors.

Friday, June 22, 2012

4 reasons why you'd better discover and deliver the one big idea as a communicator

Rick Duncan
Aside from receiving an anointing and filling from the Spirit of God, what is your biggest challenge in public speaking? Finding content? Overcoming nervousness? Maintaining interest? Staying passionate? Sharing illustrations?

These are all important factors. But not the most important.

When we are giving a presentation / message / talk it's important to establish and then relentlessly communicate one compelling big idea. All the other ideas we share should flow out of that one. When teaching a paragraph from the Bible, we have to study the passage so thoroughly that we discover what the one big idea was for the original audience. Then we are ready to teach the idea - the truth - to our people.

Why is this so important?

1. The big idea makes us relevant.

Once we discover the big idea we can communicate it in a compelling way that actually connects with our audience. We must seek to understand and care about the hurts, fears, and hopes of our listeners. Once that happens, them we can "marry" the big idea to the real needs of our people.

2. The big idea keeps us focused.

If we don't uncover and communicate the one big idea, then we will simply be stringing together a bunch of unrelated, rambling comments about the text. And we will doing a real injustice to the Spirit's inspiration through the author of the text. Scripture doesn't violate the principles of literary structure. Paragraphs in good literature have a subject and a complement - one big idea. There were not two or more big ideas in a paragraph for the original audience and there are not two or more big ideas in a paragraph now.

3. The big idea helps us study.

Once we know the big idea, we can find content, illustrations, applications, and supporting texts that truly support the one point we are seeking to make. Identifying the big idea will make it easier to eliminate the material we will inevitably find that won't help us make the point.

4. The big idea gives us passion.

Once we know the big idea and connect it to the needs (felt or unfelt) of the audience, our passion will grow. We will care. We will clearly see that what we are saying matters to the people in the room. Scattered, rambling communication lessens passion. Focused, pointed communication increases zeal.

We want to hit the hearts of people with a sniper-like rifle shot of truth, not the scattered buckshot approach of a running homily method of communicating.

Finding the big idea and connecting it to the people in relevant ways is sometimes easy but often tough for me. I need the prayers of God's people to communicate God's word in clear, practical, and relevant ways. Please pray for me and for anyone you know who seeks to communicate God's truth.

Question: Apart from gaining the anointing and filling of God's Spirit, what do you think is the most difficult task in communicating?

How Does Accelerate Measure Success?

I was asked the other day, "How do you measure success with Accelerate?"

To determine this we must look at our mission, who we serve, what they need and our vision

The Accelerate Mission is to:
    Attract, inspire and equip Kingdom-minded leaders and
    Connect them so they can
    Collaborate with their time, talent and treasure so we
    Accelerate the creation of healthy, reproducing faith communities resulting in
       transformed lives and transformed communities

We Serve: church planting pastors

Our Vision:
Healthy church planting pastors developing healthy reproducing churches resulting in
transformed lives and transformed communities

What Church  Planters Need:
Common Best Practices for Equipping Church Planters
1.  Assessment
2.  Church planting training
3.  Internship, residency, or church planting experience
4.  Sponsoring churches involved in helping the plant
5.  Administrative and strategic support
6.  Coaching/mentoring relationship
7.  Peer-to-peer relationships
8.  Ongoing training opportunities
9.  Exposure to available resources

Measuring success:
Our success will be through raising up the leaders and structures that make possible the equipping, encouragement and accountability new pastors and churches need. These are illustrated in the Common Best Practices for Equipping Church Planters. We provide some of these through coaching networks and some through creating collaborative efforts with other organizations.

We can measure:
1. Number of coaches raised up to lead coaching networks
2. Number of coaching networks
3. Planting pastors participating
4. Number of church planting churches and sponsoring churches
5. National network involvement in city
6. Survivability rate at 4 years of participants
7. Financial sustainability at 4 years of participating churches
8. Number of new churches that reproduce in 4 years

Anecdotal responses from pastors and leaders will illustrate life, church and community impact

Monday, June 18, 2012

How worship smashes the idol of lust

Rick Duncan
"And we all, with unveiled face, beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another. For this comes from the Lord who is the Spirit" (II Corinthians 3:18).

Recently, a friend trusted me enough to share with me his struggle to be free from lust. He hates the fact that he can't consistently overcome the temptation to linger long in looking at what he knows will bring momentary pleasure, but lasting shame. He knows it's hurting his marriage.

We talked about the normal approaches in the fight to overcome lustful thinking. Accountability? Check. Read Every Man's Battle? Check. Prayer? Check. Tell your spouse about your struggle to gain accountability and support? Check.

All these tools and techniques are good. They help my friend for awhile. Then he falls back into the sin that he wants desperately to overcome. His spiritually informed willpower to win isn't working.

I said, "What if your problem isn't really lust, but idolatry? Maybe what you really want is to be valued, prized, pursued, desired, and empowered. What if your fantasies run deeper than the simple rush from lust? What if what you really long for are things like being affirmed, respected, touched, received, and accepted? The lusting is rooted in the fantsy that some beautiful woman values you so much that she seeks intimacy with you. What if the problem isn't lust, but idolatry?"

An idol is something that we put in the place of God. It's something that we love, serve, and allow to dictate our behavior more than God. In the case of lust, it's not the picture that's the idol. It's the sense of vitality that comes from the fantasy accompanying the lust.

In the Old Testament, the saints of God were praised when they took down the high places of worship and smashed the idols. We have to do the same. We have to be idol smashers.

How? We repent and replace.

We receive the grace and mercy that comes from the gospel of Christ. We embrace the fact that Jesus already paid the price for our forgiveness when He died on the cross in our place for our sin. We refuse to live in shame. Past, present, and future lust has already been forgiven.

Then, we realize that that the most real, most powerful, most imporant Person, Jesus, truly values, prizes, pursues, desires, and empowers us. The King of kings and Lord of lords, Maker of heaven and earth, the Sovereign God, the Beautiful One actually affirms, respects, touches, receives, and accepts us.

We realize that we don't need the fantasy from a fake flickering image to feel vitalized. We are valued by God. Knowing that we have great worth to Christ makes lust become cheap and tawdry in our eyes. Why would we settle for a fantasy when we could have reality with God?

While reading books about freedom from lust might help, I suggested that my friend read books about Christ and the gospel. I suggested that he try The Freedom of Self-Forgetfulness by Tim Keller and Hunger for God by John Piper.

Ultimately, it's worship that sets us free from lust. It will be a lifelong battle to worship the way Jesus deserves and the way that sets us free. We will have advances and set backs. But as we prize Jesus more and more, we will be set free. We will be able to say, "Christ is my all in all" and "For me to live is Christ."

We can learn to meditate on how Jesus truly values, prizes, pursues, desires, empowers, affirms, respects, touches, receives, and accepts us. We can learn to love Him more for all that. We can turn our eyes upon Jesus and look full in His wonderful face. And the things of earth, even lust, will grow strangely dim in the light of His glory and grace.

Question: What are other idols in your life that you have seen worship smash?

Friday, June 8, 2012

The Church is Not the Hope of the World

from Shawn Lovejoy's blog


I believe I first heard Bill Hybels say it: "The church is the hope of the world." I have actually repeated it many times myself. However, in recent years, I've had a change of heart. I simply no longer believe it's true. I don't believe the church is the hope of the world. Yes, Jesus said, "I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it," but He also said, "On this rock I will build my church" (Matt. 16: 18 NIV, emphasis added). In other words, the church is not the hope of the world. Jesus is the hope of the world. He has simply chosen to extend hope through his people, the church. Without Jesus, the church has nothing to offer anyone. Jesus is the chief cornerstone of the church. Without the cornerstone in place, the house falls. For a church to be effective, Jesus must be at the center of it.


Jesus said, "I am the vine; you are the branches. Those who remain in me, and I in
them, will produce much fruit. For apart from me you can do nothing" (John 15: 5). Did you catch that? The church can do nothing apart from Jesus living through us. We might have crowds. We might have influence. We might make a lot of noise. We might have tons of religious activity going on. We might come together for services every few days. However, Jesus said that apart from him, no long-term spiritual fruit will be produced. Apart from Jesus, we've got nothing. That's what He said!


We don't really believe that though, do we? If we really believed that Jesus was the hope of the world, wouldn't our lives and ministries look much differently than they do? If we really believed that Jesus was the hope of the world, wouldn't we spend more time with Him?


Wouldn't the Gospels drive more of our lives and our teachings? Pastors, wouldn't we preach this Sunday with more urgency? Wouldn't more Christians be Going? Giving? Sharing their faith? Wouldn't we talk less about what's going on in our churches and more about what's going on in our relationships with Jesus?


The church is not the hope of the world. In fact, the church is not even the church unless Jesus is living in and through it! The church without Jesus is a cult. Period. Jesus is the hope of the world. Jesus is the only Good News! Would you be willing to go out and live like you believe that today?




Make sure you take a few minutes to check out Shawn's interview about his new book with Ed Stetzer on his blog.



Shawn Lovejoy


Shawn is the Lead Pastor of Mountain Lake Church; Directional Leader of churchplanters.com; and author of The Measure of Our Success: An Impassioned Plea To Pastors.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

How to pray for the people you love

Rick Duncan

I'm guessing you're like me when it comes to praying for others.

Sometimes, you feel led to pray for people but you just don't know how or what to pray.

I have found that it is helpful to pray the scriptures.

In Philippians 1:9-11, we learn how a great spiritual leader, Paul, prays for a church he planted. Why not try praying this prayer for someone in your circle of influence for the next week or so? Pray with expectancy. And watch what God does. Write down how God answers.

Here is the prayer put together from multiple versions. Simply pray one phrase as it's written and then, to keep this from becoming vain repetition, pray that phrase in your own words to God.

Here's a prayer we put together from several versions of the Bible. What if you prayed this for someone for the next 7 days?

***

Father in Heaven, I humbly come before You to pray for __________.

May his/her love flourish. May his/her love keep on growing more and more.

Give __________ an ability to love well with knowledge, understanding, discernment, and wisdom.

Help him/her make right choices, choose the best, and approve what is excellent.

I pray that __________ will grow in purity and blamelessness to be ready for the return of Christ.

Fill his/her life with good deeds – with the fruits of righteousness – that come through Jesus.

May __________ truly live a life that will bring much glory and praise to God.

In Jesus’ name, Amen.


***

(A prayer based on Philippians 1:9-11 using phrases from the English Standard Version, the Message, the New Living Version, God’s Word Translation, Contemporary English Version, and the New Century Version.)

Question: How do you find the words to pray for someone when the words are hard to find?

Monday, June 4, 2012

Thoughts on Worship and Worship Leaders

Over the past 3 years I've visited about 50 new churches around the Washington Baltimore area. These are observations I've had:
1. Across the board I've felt that the worship leaders and bands have done a good job with the music. They sound good which inspires the people. I have been encouraged.

2. I have felt that the A/V quality in most churches has been very good in spite of the challenges that many portable churches experience.

3. Most worship leaders have learned to lead the music well. Unfortunately they have not been trained to lead the people well. The result often means there is a good performance from the front and most of the people in the congregation just stand there and do not sing. At one church I had a hard time finding anyone singing.

4. When a worship leader does not express a personality from up front he/she does not draw the people into the worship or endear the people to the leader. In so many evangelical churches we have swung the pendulum so far that the worship leader does not connect with the people at all.

5. Most worship leaders are tenors or baritones. Most men are bass singers, especially on a Sunday morning when then are still draggy from sleeping in. The result is that most songs are sung in a higher key than I can sing. So I drop a register or keep skipping bank and forth between registers. Or I don't sing. One church was led by a lady who is a low alto. They had the opposite problem. The singing was so low that it created a hushed sound as apposed to a positive energetic sound. Then I visited a church with both. One song was sung in to high a key and the next song was sung in too low a key. LOL

You may think I am being too picky here. But paying attention to the key that a song is sung in does affect how well the people enter into the worship experience.

We have Accelerate coaching networks for senior leaders. Now several worship leaders are expressing an interest in starting a coaching network for them to connect with and encourage each other. I am praying and looking for an experienced worship leader to facilitate and coach a group.

If you are interested in an Accelerate coaching network for worship leaders let me know.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Mentoring a few for greater impact

Yesterday I met with a pastor of a new church that is reaching a particular language group. The church was started by a group who came from a mother church 30 miles away. Pastor (we will call him Joe) was asked to lead the group. He has had no training or experience in church planting.

Joe is now coming to one of our Accelerate Coaching Networks for pastors of new churches led by an experienced church planting pastor. We are also trying to hook him up with a national network for their local intensive training.

Joe is frustrated because most of the people are not "catching the vision or involved". I encouraged him to view the people as Jesus modeled. He spoke to the masses. He trained the twelve. And he spent focused time with Peter, James and John. In effect Jesus had three strategies. He gave each group what they needed to help move them to the next level. The majority of his time was not spent with the masses, but with the twelve and specifically with the three.

Who are the three in your church that you are spending time with? How can these people be mentored in their spiritual life and leadership? Did Jesus recruit them into a classroom to lecture them? No he took them with him and modeled life and ministry.

Try this: Line up times when you are meeting with people to: share your faith, follow-up a new believer, encourage a believer in his walk, disciple someone. Then call one of your three and ask them to go with you. They can come along to pray and "catch" ministry concepts and skills. Then you debrief and talk about it - what they saw, what they learned, what we could have done differently, etc. Gradually you have them take the lead in situations while you watch.

What you are doing is mentoring people in the Christian life and ministry and leadership. Instead of "recruiting" people into ministry you are "mentoring" people into ministry.

3 Steps
1. Pray for the right three
2. Pray for and take opportunities to minister to people
3. Invite one of your three to go with you

5 ways for leaders to get out of a funk

5 ways for leaders to get out of a funk

Rick Duncan

How often do you get into a funk?

Recently, I met with a young church planter who said he was in a funk. He has a wonderful family. He's gathering people, watching God change lives, and living out a dream. Yet, in spite of all the great things God is doing in his life, his introverted, melancholic, perfectionist tendencies are being leveraged by the enemy to steal his joy and peace. He's in a funk.

A funk is a dejected, disgusted, disinterested mood. When I am in a funk I am grumpy, disengaged, lethargic, and de-motivated. I am not fun to be around. I throw pity-parties. Not only does the to-do list not get done, it doesn't even get made!

I think funks are inevitable. They are part of fallen humanity. So, we shouldn't be surprised or guilt-ridden when we end up in a funk. But I know that at the root of my funk is my sin. Scripture tells us to rejoice in the Lord always (Philippians 4:4). When my heart is not rejoicing, it's a telltale sign that I have placed someone or something other than Jesus on the throne of my life. Funks flow from idolatry. When I stay in a funk, I am telling a watching world that Jesus is not enough for me. Extended funks are not OK.

Remember that God still loves you when you are in a funk (Ephesians 3:18-19). But also remember that He loves you too much to let you stay there.

In the Bible, we see leaders who got into a funk. One was David. Leadership for David was often hard. "And David was greatly distressed... But David strengthened himself in the LORD his God" (I Samuel 30:6, ESV). The KJV says that he "encouraged himself" in the Lord. Evidently, David was able to de-funk-ify his life.

I want learn more and more how to encourage myself in the Lord - how to de-funk-ify my life. My wife, my family and my friends want me to learn that, too.

So, how do we encourage ourselves and get out of a funk? It helps me to think about a plan of attack in five ways - physically, mentally, emotionally, relationally, and spiritually.

1. Move physically. Go for a walk, a run, or a bike ride. Get outside if you can. Do 10 minutes of push-ups, jumping jacks, and squats. Get to the gym. When you exercise, your brain will release endorphins that will elevate your mood. Or you might want to try something as simple as taking a shower or a bath. Or take a nap. Organize your desk and/or your office. Just change something physically.

2. Stretch mentally. Learn something new. How? Memorize a Bible verse. Learn an inspirational quote. Read a few pages in a book on theology, history, science, nature, technology, or leadership. Share a few things you learn with some friends via a note, a card, Twitter, or Facebook.

3. Grow emotionally. Put on some upbeat, happy music. Make a play list of upbeat music and play it loud. Music has a powerful way to connect us to the good times we're already experienced in the past. Even if you have no reason or don't feel like it, laugh! For 7 seconds. Your emotions will often follow your body’s lead. Smile at the people you see. And watch them smile back. Hang around people that love you or who can make you laugh. Avoid the VDPs in your life (the Very Draining People!). Instead, talk with an encouraging friend who knows how to listen and lift your spirits.

4. Serve relationally. Who (besides you!) is having a hard time? Stop feeling sorry for yourself and lift someone else's spirits. Write a note; send a card; make a call; go out with them for coffee; buy a gift card; or give a generous gift. Just do something to make someone else's day. Or volunteer to do some work with your church or your local charity. If you are married, write a love note to your spouse and mail it.

5. Soar spiritually. Read some inspiring sections or stories in the Bible that have a track record of lifting your heart. Make a list of 3-5 things (or more) you are grateful for and then thank God for them. Pour out your heart to God. Ask Him to help you get out of your funk. Remember, apart from Christ you can do nothing (John 15:5). Trying to de-funk-ify your life without Jesus is just empty/vain/futile self-help. Jesus can fill you with positive, uplifting thoughts. He can help you give thanks for what you have rather than what you don’t have. If you have Jesus, you have what money can't buy and death can't take away (Ephesians 1:3, II Peter 1:3). He can help you be joyful about what you get to do rather than what you have to do. He is the ultimate attitude-adjuster. Stay connected to Christ.

So, how do you de-funk-ify your life?

Sunday, May 20, 2012

9 Ways Leaders can Know if They are Filled with the Holy Spirit

How do leaders know when they are filled with the Spirit?
Rick Duncan

In Acts 1 and 2, there’s a special supernatural power for ministry (particularly in missions and evangelism) that is experienced. Leaders must long for that kind of evidence and pray for supernatural power in ministry.

But I believe that leaders could and should long for evidence of the Spirit’s filling that is much more mundane and routine. Fruitfulness and excellence in daily living is evidence of the Spirit’s fulness in your life. Your family will be much more impressed if you focus on the Spirit’s filling in your daily life than they will be if you focus on the Spirit’s filling in your ministry life. After all, your family is your primary ministry.

Pastor Joe Propri has been at our church to train some of our leaders. Here’s one thing Joe shared that’s been helpful to many of us.

Let’s say that a container – a jar – represents you and what’s in you. We pretty much can handle life well when things are going the way we want them to go. But life isn’t always like that. Life is a series of problems one after another. Things come at us. Things go wrong. There is stress. And pressure. The pressures might be financial. The stress might be a relational struggle with a child or a parent or a friend. The problems might be physical.

Now, the things that go “wrong” tip us over. And what’s in us comes out.

Let’s be honest here. What comes out when your child has a nasty attitude toward you? Or some ministry leader challenges your authority? Or a volunteer gets angry with a decision and confronts you? When things go wrong, what comes out? Often it’s anger. Anxiety. Bitterness. Addictions. Depression. Abuse. And more.

Strange, isn’t it, that those kinds of things come out of us when heaven’s Helper is living in us? Consider what the Bible says that He actually desires to produce within us. Here are the 9 characteristics that the Spirit seeks to produce in leaders’ lives - all day, every day.

The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control (Galatians 5:22, 23).

Are these the 9 things that are coming out of you? Whether or not we bear the fruit of the Spirit doesn’t depend on what is going on outside. “But you don’t know my kids, my spouse, my trouble.” Listen, things will go wrong… for everyone! What I must accept and remember is this: My peace and joy have nothing to do with what’s going on outside me! My peace and joy have everything thing to do with who’s filling me!

The Holy Spirit is in me. Pressure and stress and trouble come. I’m tipped over. What comes out when I’m filled with the Spirit? The fruit of the Spirit! Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control come out! We simply have to begin taking responsibility for reactions and responses to the stresses of life.
We need supernatural power to live this Christian life. Try to live this Christian life in your own strength and you’ll fail – miserably. You’ll be miserable and so will everyone else around you. Every day, several times a day, ask for the filling of the Spirit in order to walk by and live according to that filling. Over the years, we’ve many times taught CVCers to develop a habit of praying three things:


Father, search me. (That's seeing our sin.)

Jesus, wash me. (That's forsaking our sin.)

Spirit, fill me. (That's seeking freedom from sin.)


Will you pray those prayers today? The people who are following you need you to be filled with the Spirit. They need to see the 9 proofs that you are filled with the Spirit. All day. Every day.

And by the way, when you focus on being filled in the routine of life, you will be surprised at when and how often the special supernatural power for ministry (particularly in missions and evangelism) will show up.

Yes, God really does change lives!

For multi-site churches, one of the struggles I see campus pastors having is how to connect emotionally with the people at the service. Somehow giving announcements alone does not endure the people to a pastor.

For new church plants and for any church we share what the Bible says but often don't show how these truths have actually affected someones life. And life change is our goal, correct?

I want to suggest adding an element in the service I'll call a "Changed Life Interview" or "God stories". This is a time when the pastor interviews a person in the congregation who has seen God change their life. It could be how they came to Christ, how God intervened in a circumstance, how God answered prayer, how they had the opportunity to share their faith, how they did the godly thing at work and God protected, etc.

A 3-4 minute interview like this helps people:
1. See that God is at work today.
2. Trust God to do it in their life also.
3. Makes us all real, especially as people learn to share from their weakness, not their strength.
4. Connects the pastor with people and changed lives.

Large churches sometimes do this on video so they can edit it and keep it on focus. But a smaller church needs to show itself personal and intimate. This can be very effective. The pastor should coach the interviewee, if possible do a practice interview. When I've done this I get to know the person's story, tell them what questions I am going to ask and coach them on what to talk about.

An interview format keeps the pastor "in control of the time and stops rambling". This is a way to interview missionaries also and youth coming back from a retreat where God worked or people who did a service project in the community where a God impact happened, etc.

The result will be people excited about how God changes lives and will encourage steps of faith by others.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Thoughts on Incrementalism and Growth Engines

During McLean Bible Church’s period of fast growth in the 90's, we saw both incrementalism and growth engines as essential to growth.
Jim Collins said that the difference between the top companies and the second rated companies is that the top companies did it a little better. John Maxwell encouraged incremental improvements and we continually looked for ways to do it better.

But to achieve the great growth we went past "incrementalism" and "doublementalism" (thinking bigger) to growth engines. We saw over time 7 growth engines - new ministries initiatives that opened new doors of ministry impact and propelled us to the next level. In reality we didn't understand them as growth engines till we were at number 5. As John Maxwell said, "It's amazing what you can accomplish when you have momentum on your side."

Actually we never set growth goals. We never discussed numbers in staff meetings. We just kept the vision before the people, focused ministry around reaching and assimilating new people, hired entrepreneurs, empowered people to accomplish their dream, and created an atmosphere that allowed it to flourish. And as the saying goes, "Leaving the results up to God."


Thursday, May 3, 2012

Ambassadors can make a difference at your church

Often when I visit churches I stand around and see if anyone reaches out to me. I can learn a lot about their friendliness to guests. Rarely do I have someone talk to me. Which is sad. Yes, I do brush my teeth. But Sunday was different. I visited Community Church north of Baltimore. A man named Rick Szalecki saw me and came over to say Hi. We talked awhile and then he invited me to sit with him.

I've often encouraged churches to develop a team that one church calls Ambassadors. Ambassadors are floating greeters. They are highly relational people that walk around and look for people who need someone to talk to them. They may often be the only personal contact a new person has at the church and be the difference in whether they choose to come back. They can also multiply their efforts by then introducing the new person to another member who they know would make the new person comfortable.

Job Description: Watch, Meet, Assist, Introduce

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

District Church is raising up interns for city impact

Aaron and Amy Graham started District Church 2 years ago. Read about their vision for impacting the city.

It was two years ago that we began meeting and praying in our home as we were in the process of starting the church. We wrote down the vision we believed God gave to us, “To be a multiplying network of neighborhood churches that exists for Christ and the renewal of our city.”

We believed that God called us to this city for a purpose. To build roots and seek the peace of the city in a way that lifts up the name of Christ. We knew that we wanted it to start in Columbia Heights but not end here. We knew that cities don’t change at once but rather one neighborhood at a time.

We began to dream: what if we were able to plant a church and start an urban ministry in every neighborhood throughout the city? We could have the strength of a large church but the flexibility and community of a small church. As we began to pursue this and ask ourselves what would it take to begin to make steps toward this huge vision, it all came down to one thing; leadership. Everything rises and falls on the quality of leadership.

We began casting a vision for a Leadership Residency program that would help train people who are called to plant a church or start an urban ministry. It would not an internship, which is only meant to gain experience in a field, but rather like a medical residency. We thought if the medical profession requires 3+ years of a residency to work on bodies than we should at least require a year residency to train people to work on souls!

Justin Fung was our first leadership resident and he was ordained in November, and is now serving as Associate Pastor here! Blythe Scott is our second leadership resident and is focused on the urban ministry component!



Leadership Residents are asked to raise their own support. It’s a way to test one’s calling; much like ours has been tested over the years! But we as the church have wanted to do our part as well. Since housing is the most expensive part of everyone’s budget in this city (it was over 50% of our budget when we moved here), we began to dream about being able to provide housing for leadership residents.

So we began praying that God would literally give us a house. This was a bold prayer to pray at the beginning as a house church of 20 people in the midst of a high priced housing market during an economic downturn, but we prayed. Deep down I was thinking that this would be 5-10 years down the road.

Well, I'm excited to share that God has provided! We have a house!

An anonymous donor loaned us the money to purchase the house and retain it for at least the next five years!

It will be used for some meetings and hospitality space for some church gatherings, but the main goal is to make sure we are providing a good pipeline of leaders for the vision God is birthing in our community to make disciples and truly be a church for the city.

The house is at 741 Fairmont St NW, just a block south of where we live, and very close to many others in the church.

It gets me fired up to share this because I am reminded that our God is on the move! Our leadership community and several small groups have been praying for this. It is such an affirmation from God about the calling we have as a church.

This city is full of people with good ideas. Lots of people that move here have good intentions to make a difference in our city and world. But we are not just looking for good ideas, we are looking for people who are called and have a burden.

By purchasing this house we are saying to ourselves as a church that we value leadership at our very core. That making disciples who make disciples is the very essence of our mission.

I can’t wait to have you visit the house, but more importantly experience what God is doing here.

If you have some candidates for our leadership residency who are called to ministry in the city, send them our way!

With love,




P.S. If you missed our broader prayer update from yesterday, you can view that here.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Portico Church has a vision for reproduction

Today (4/15/2012) I visited Portico Church in Arlington, VA. I had my taxes done so life is good. Portico started in 2010 as a daughter church of Portico Church in Charlottesville, VA. Mark Campbell is the pastor.
The vision of Portico Church is to plant 20 churches in the Washington area in 20 years. Their first plant will start in 2013 led by Justin Pearson. Justin spent years leading the small group ministry of Frontline and now is interning at Portico. Justin has a distinct advantage over many church planters.

1. He has a sponsoring church in the area that has a vision for planting and sending their own people to do the planting.

2. He has had assessment, training and coaching through a national network. In his case it is Acts 29 Network. The national networks have some of the best training and coaching for church planters.

3. He's had great modeling in leadership through Portico and Frontline.

Lyle Schaller was a prolific writer of books about church growth in the 70's. At age 83 I heard him speak at a conference where he said, "after 30 years of writing and coaching churches I've concluded that the main reason churches grow is because of the vision and passion of the senior pastor."

The vision of pastor Mark Campbell is an example of what God wants to build into a leader. Pray for Mark and Justin as they seek to reach people for Christ and build vibrant Christian communities.

3 ways youngs leaders must leverage their growing influence

Rick Duncan

As a young influencer, King David, ancient Israel's leader, experienced much success. In the first days of his rule as a 30 something year old, David led Israel to victories over their long-standing enemies, Edom, Moab, the Ammonites, the Philistines, and the Amalekites. "The enemies brought tribute to David and served him... And the LORD gave victory to David wherever he went" (2 Samuel 8:12b, 14b). The victories gave David more resources than he had ever had. The man who was once a teenage shepherd tending his daddy's sheep was now blessed with influence beyond his wildest dreams. Wealth was now at his disposal. What would he choose to do with all these resources? Young leaders must never forget that leadership success is a test. God wants to know what the young leader will do with his or her growing influence. Never forget that influence is a trust and influence is a test. From David's life, we can learn 3 ways a young leader should use newly acquired resources and influence.
 
1. Provide for the worship of God. Neighboring kings brought tribute to David. "Joram brought with him articles of silver, of gold, and of bronze.These also King David dedicated to the LORD, together with the silver and gold that he dedicated from all the nations he subdued" (2 Samuel 8:11). Godly young leaders must lead the organization to invest in Kingdom of God issues. How can you lead your organization to dedicate resources to build the kingdom of God?
 
2. Pursue justice for your people. "David reigned over all Israel. And David administered justice and equity to all his people" (2 Samuel 8:15). Poor previous leadership and enemy invasions had meant that the people suffered injustice. David didn't think about himself first. He set into place policies and practices that brought equity to his people. How can you lead your organization to institute policies and practices to take care of the marginalized?
 
3. Pick a person or a project and personally invest heavily there. David didn't forget his friendship with Jonathan, Saul's son. He found someone in need from Jonathan's family to bless. "And the king said, 'Is there not still someone of the house of Saul, that I may show the kindness of God to him?' Ziba said to the king, 'There is still a son of Jonathan; he is crippled in his feet'" (2 Samuel 9:3). David brought this crippled son into his own house and family and provided for him the rest of his days. This story of David's kindness in particular solidified the people in their admiration and trust of his leadership. How will you personally show a particular kindness that will inspire and encourage your people? Young leaders must remember their success must be leveraged for others. You've been blessed to be a blessing. How will you bless others? Start today!

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The State of Church Planting in the Washington DC / Baltimore Corridor - January 2011





2005-2010
Completed by Ron Johnson
Executive Director: Accelerate
January 28, 2011


2


Why this Research?

A group of like-minded church planting leaders and ministries in the Washington – Baltimore metro
area is seeking to collaboratively support church planting. The group seeks to champion the cause of
church planting while minimizing organizational structures and overhead. These leaders are seeking
to continue the work God is already doing through each of them while also looking for ways to work
collaboratively to enhance the effectiveness of church planting in the geographic area.
The group is coming together as the Accelerate Alliance. The Accelerate mission is to:

Attract, inspire and equip Kingdom-minded leaders and

Connect them so they can


Collaborate with their time, talent and treasure to


Accelerate the creation of healthy, reproducing faith communities resulting in transformed lives
and transformed communities

The first step in discerning the approach and strategy of Accelerate was to research and discover
what God is already doing in church planting in the Washington DC / Baltimore metropolitan areas. A
primary goal of the initial research was to discover how best to accelerate church planting in the area.
The vision for Accelerate was conceived and birthed by New Life Christian Church who has funded
the initial work on Accelerate via Ron Johnson’s (the Director) time. Accelerate is a pilot initiative
closely aligned with New Life and with Exponential (a non-profit national ministry that exists to
champion church planting and who runs the Exponential Conference).
Healthy church plants start with spiritually, physically, and emotionally healthy church planters. We
anticipate that the best path to accelerating planting in our area is through serving church planters.
These findings will help guide us to determine how we best fulfill our mission and therefore advance
the Kingdom.

Survey / Research Approach

Research was conducted to identify as many of the new churches planted in the last 5 years in the
Washington DC / Baltimore metro area as possible. Denominational and network leaders were called,
searches on the internet were conducted, school systems were asked for names of churches meeting
in schools, and church planters were asked what other church planters they knew. 81 phone
interviews were conducted with church planters, pastors of church planting churches and
denominational leaders. There were 25 appointments with church planters. 15 church services were
also attended to get a feel for the ministries of the new churches.
As part of the research questions were asked to discern the tensions and needs of church planters.
A team of church planting influencers from denominations, networks, church planting churches, and
church planters met to review what was being learned and offer input toward meeting the needs of
church planters.

3

Executive Summary

Church planting churches, national and local networks, and denominations have planted at least 274
churches in the last five years in the Washington Baltimore metropolitan area. 92 of these churches
(34%) are in non-English languages.

1. Church planting churches

15 church planting churches have been identified (churches that have helped plant three or
more churches in the last five years)

Church planting churches provide the most training, support and ongoing coaching for
 church planters

Planters who have attended an internship / residency program at a church planting
churches are often better equipped to plant

2. National and local networks


12 national and local networks have been identified



Networks are strong in assessment and training. However until they establish local hub


church training centers and coaches, their coaching will be sporadic



Network started churches are still a small number as the national networks have not yet


established churches as hubs in the Washington DC / Baltimore corridor


3. Denominations/associations



Most denominations are providing opportunities for assessment, training and coaching


although it varies greatly in amount



Denominations would benefit from having church planting churches that would develop


internship/residency programs and partnering with national networks


4. Church planters



The tensions and needs expressed by church planters can be seen as external (what we


do) and internal (who we are). The external needs most expressed were the need for team

support from sponsoring churches, funding, training, and learning effective ways to reach

the community



The internal needs most expressed were the need for relationships with peers for


encouragement, support and accountability; and coaching relationships with an

experienced church planter who they can learn from, bounce ideas off of and from whom

they can experience a sense of permission giving

5.

Common Best Practices for Equipping Church Planters - There are at least nine common best


practices for equipping church planters:



Assessment



Church planting training



Internship, residency, or church planting experience



Sponsoring churches involved in helping the plant



Administrative and strategic support



Coaching/mentoring relationship


4



Peer-to-peer relationships



Ongoing training opportunities



Exposure to available resources


6. Coaching/mentoring relationships and peer-to-peer relationships are key weaknesses.



In most denominational or network situations a planter is to find a coach or one will be


assigned. Most coaching is sporadic and coaches are often not trained. Attention to

chemistry, availability, experience, and flexibility of coaches is important



Peer-to-peer relationships are often left to the planter to initiate. Most planters have a


number of other planter friends but meeting is usually sporadic and often lacks direction.

Planters often desire relationships across denominational boundaries


Acknowledgements


This was an exhaustive search involving nearly

½ year of a person’s effort. However some limitations


were recognized:



It is difficult finding and connecting with many churches under five years old. For example,


over half of the churches meeting in schools in one county did not have an EIN number with

the government, a web site, a yellow pages listing, or a white pages listing



It is difficult identifying non-English language / nationality churches because of the language


barrier and they often do not use traditional advertising. Some of the non-English / nationality

churches are use to maintaining a low profile in their own countries, so they take the same

posture in the US



Many new churches remain under the care and financial oversight of a sponsoring church so


records of them are more difficult to find



New independent churches with bi-vocational pastors are often hard to identify



The scope of the survey does not identify smaller faith communities like house churches that


are not meeting in public places or can’t be found publically



These numbers represent surviving churches and don’t reflect others that did not make it to


five years


5


New Church Plants Identified


Church planting has continued to expand over the last five years.



274 churches were identified that have started in the last 5 years



It is estimated that as many as 70 churches or a quarter of the total of the new churches have


not been identified. These churches are usually independent, non-English speaking, small

denominations, or house churches, etc…


The Following Questions Relate to the 274 Identified Churches.


Who are Planting Churches?


Denominations/associations lead the way over all other efforts combined in the planting of churches.

222 churches were planted by denominations/associations 81%

31 by national and local networks 11%

54 by church planting churches (have planted 3 or more churches) 20%

47 are independent plants 17%

The total adds up to over 274 and over 100% because of co-sponsoring between church planting

churches, networks, and denominations.


6


What Denominations/Associations are Planting Churches?


22 denominations/associations were identified for planting churches. Southern Baptists are starting

49% of the new churches.

133 by Southern Baptist 49%

17 by Assemblies of God 6%

14 by Church of God Cleveland 5%

10 by Church of the Nazarene 4%

9 by Christian Church 3%

6 by Foursquare 2%

6 by Anglican 2%

27 by other denominations/associations 10%

52 not by denominations 19%


7


What Networks are Planting Churches?


National networks are just getting established in the area. Although few in number, the pastors

generally have more training, are better funded, and experience a higher survivability rate.

8 by Baltimore/Washington Christian Church network **

5 by Ecclesia *

3 by Stadia

3 by Orchard

2 by Acts 29

2 by ARC *

2 by Liberty

2 by New Thing

2 by Redeemer City to City *

2 by SENT **

1 by Kairos

1 by Virginia Evangelizing Fellowship

0 by Calvary

0 by Launch

0 by Mosaic *

0 by Vision 360

* National Network with a local representative

**Local Network


8


Who are the Church Planting Churches

(churches planting 3 or more


churches in our metro areas in the last 5 years)

?


Although other churches were church planting churches 10, 15, or 20 years ago, most of these

became church planting churches in the last 5 years. These church planting churches have been

identified.

5 Capital Baptist Church, Annandale, VA

5 Mountain Christian, Jappa, MD** ***

5 New Life Christian, Chantilly, VA** ***

4 National Community Church, DC*

4 New Life Wesleyan Church, Waldorf, MD

4 Northwest Baptist Church, Reisterstown, MD

3 Capitol Hill Baptist Church, DC***

3 Church of the Resurrection, DC***

3 Grace Fellowship Church, Timonium, MD**

3 McLean Bible Church, VA*

3 Frontline of McLean Bible Church, VA*

3 by The Gathering of McLean Bible Church, VA*

3 Pathways Church, Bel Air, MD

3 The Falls Church, Falls Church, VA***

3 Word of Life Int. Church, Ashburn, MD

*Churches who are planting exclusively through multi-site locations.

**Churches planting through multi-site locations and new churches

***Churches with internship/residency programs for new church planting pastors


“For God did Not Give Us a Spirit of Timidity, But a Spirit of

Power, of Love and of Self-Discipline.” 2 Timothy 1:7


9


How many Churches were Planted in Non-English

Languages?


It is often noted that this region has more national groups of 25,000 or more represented than any

other region of the country. Reaching people here in their first language often results in their relatives

and friends being reached for Christ in their country of origin.

The growing diversity of population presents a challenge for church planting to target populations who

are separated by language and/or culture. It also presents an opportunity to bring richness of diversity

and cultures into the church.

92 non-English language churches 34%


Who are Planting Churches in Non-English Languages?


Denominations have taken the lead on resourcing groups wanting to begin churches in their first

language.

92 by denominations

0 by national networks

0 by church planting churches

? are independent

National network churches are all English speaking and predominately Caucasian. They are all

suburban except Redeemer City to City. Church planting churches are all English speaking and

predominately Caucasian. All are suburban except National Community Church and Church of the

Resurrection.


10


What Denominations are Planting Non-English Language

Churches?


Denominations are increasing their efforts to reach other language populations. Southern Baptists

have put the most effort in resourcing churches beginning in non-English languages.

Most pastors of non-English church plants are bi-vocational.

72 by Southern Baptists

6 by Church of the Nazarene

4 by Church of God Cleveland

4 by Christian and Missionary Alliance

3 by Assemblies of God

2 by Presbyterian Church of America

1 by Evangelical Free Church


“We hear Them Declaring the Wonders of God in Our Own Languages!”

Acts 2:11


11


How many of the New Churches are Multi-Site Locations?


A growing number of churches are operating from more than one location. We are defining multi-site

as churches that plan to keep all of their locations as one church. New multi-site locations have a lot

of the same advantages from connection to a mother church that traditional daughter church plants

have.



29 multi-site locations started 10%


Who are Starting Multi-Site Church Locations?


Multi-site church locations are being started by denominational and independent churches.



15 by denominational/associational churches



14 by independent churches


What Churches have Started Multi-Site Locations in the Last

Five Years?


The new multi-site church locations represent approximately 25% of the total attendance of church

plants in the last 5 years.

This report does not address the discussion of whether new church plants or new multi-site plants are

the most effective in evangelism.

4 by National Community Church, DC

3 by McLean Bible Church, VA

3 by Frontline of McLean Bible Church, VA

3 by The Gathering of McLean Bible Church, VA

2 by Grace Fellowship Church, Timonium, MD

2 by Columbia Baptist Church, Falls Church, VA

2 by New Life Christian Church, Chantilly, VA

1 by Bel Air UMC, Bel Air, MD

1 by Bethel World Outreach Ministries Int., Silver Spring, MD

1 by Central Christian, White Marsh, Baltimore, MD

1 by Church of the Redeemer, Gaithersburg, MD

1 by Galilee Baptist Church, Suitland, MD

1 by Hope Christian Church, Beltsville, MD

1 by Leonardtown Baptist Church, MD

1 by Lord of Life Lutheran, Fairfax, VA

1 by Mountain Christian Church, Joppa, MD

1 by North Arundel Church, Glen Burnie, MD


12


What are the Types of New Churches?


Most churches are started with a core group supported by a denomination. Churches sponsoring

daughter churches is a smaller but growing number. These percentages are estimates based on

observation. Daughter churches and new multi-site church locations have a higher survivability.



More than 55% are churches started from a core with or without a pastor



Less than 20% are daughter churches of existing churches



Less than 10% are churches started by a pastor alone



Less than 10% are new multi-site church locations



Less than 1% are restarts in older church buildings


Funding Models Observed


Many denominations are moving toward smaller funding of a church plant and expecting the planter to

be bi-vocational and/or raise the additional funding themselves. A study completed by the Baptist

Convention of Maryland Delaware indicated an overall 73% survivability after five years. However

there was only a 5% variation in survivability after five years in comparing churches that received no

funding from the denomination vs. churches that received up to $135,000 over three years. It was

noted that the greater funded churches had greater “thriveability” as they launched with larger

numbers.



Totally funded by a combination of support from denominations, local churches, sponsoring


churches or friends of planters



Partially funded by a combination of support from denominations, local churches, sponsoring


churches or friends of planters with the planter being bi-vocational


13


Observations of Demographic Populations that are Growing

the Most?


The diversity of the population continues to grow as people move here from all over the country and

the world. Although different populations are often concentrated in areas, the population of the

Washington DC / Baltimore corridor is one of the most integrated of cities in the country. The “church”

often lags behind the culture in its response to demographic shifts.

These points are made by observation and talking to other church/denominational leaders. The 2010

census data detail is not yet published and the 2000 census would not reflect a lot of this change.

These demographic populations are growing the most.



Outer suburbs – although the economy slowdown greatly slowed down this trend



Hispanic population both in inner cities and older suburbs



Suburban African America population in Maryland



One denominational leader pointed to a growing African population in the city replacing the


African Americans moving to the suburbs (this does not show up in a census study)



First generation immigrants in older suburbs and inner city whose first language is not English



1.5 and 2nd generation children of immigrants everywhere who straddle culture but who


experience life primarily in English



Urban centers with many high rise apartments especially near subway stops that are filled with


young adults who are predominantly Caucasian, but also Asian and African American



Although the inner city poor population is not growing, it is becoming increasingly isolated from


the church as thriving inner-city African American churches move to the suburbs to follow their

constituents who are becoming middle class


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External (doing) Tensions and Needs Expressed by Church

Planters


Church planters wish they would have more volunteer involvement of sponsoring churches and not

just money. However funding remains a challenge to church planters. This is especially true in urban

and inner city church planting where costs are higher and responses to the gospel are generally

slower.

Training varies between church planters but generally planters feel like there is always more to learn

especially in areas of leadership development. Finding creative and effective ways to reach specific

communities is a challenge to church planters.



Team support/involvement from sponsoring churches*



Funding*



Training*



Effectiveness to reach the community*



Building the right team



Thinking collaboratively



Learn best practices



How to prioritize
Ministering to the culture
Leadership development
Maximizing technology
 *Most predominant responses


Internal (being) Tensions and Needs Expressed by Church
Planters

Most church planters have friends who are planting churches but do not have a regular organized
meeting for support and encouragement.
Church planting churches provide the most coaching/mentoring. Denominations offer varying degrees
of coaching. Network started churches are often the only ones in the area so coaching is sometimes
sporadic and usually by phone.

Relationships with peers*
Mentor/Coach*
Prayer support
How to balance life
Encouragement
Soul care and spiritual development
Isolation
Disappointment
Bi-vocational challenges
Rest


15


*Most predominant responses

“It Was He Who Gave some … to Prepare God’s People for
Works of Service, So that the Body of Christ May be Built Up…”
Ephesians 4:11, 12


Conclusions/Observations


Church Planters

A growing number of church planters are sensing God’s call to plant churches

Over 34% of the new churches are in a non-English language

Over 50% of church planters are bi-vocational

Most church planters have gone through a form of assessment and training

Most church planters previously were part of a team and now that they are beginning a church
often feel isolated

Planters value peer-to-peer fellowships with other planters for encouragement, support and
accountability, but generally do not experience it on a consistent basis

Ongoing coaching/mentoring of planters varies from excellent to none

Planters value having a coach/mentor to learn from, ask questions to, bounce ideas off of and
for a sense of permission giving. Availability of the coach/mentor is important

Many denominational planters have an assigned coach or are to find one. Availability and
training of coaches/mentors varies greatly


Church Planting Churches

Most of the church planting churches are new to church planting in the last 5 years

Some church planting churches partner with national networks for assessment and training

Church planting churches provide the most support and ongoing coaching for church planters

Church planting churches often provide initial core members, more resources, and sometimes
people involvement from the mother church

Planters who have attended an internship / residency program at a church planting church are
often better equipped to plantChurch planting churches are best positioned to reproduce multiple churches.

Partnering with national networks for training and denominations for connections increases their resources and potential impact


Networks

Network started churches are still a small number as the national networks have not yet
established churches as hubs in the Washington DC / Baltimore corridor

Networks are strong in assessment and training. However until they establish local hub
churches and coaches, their coaching will be sporadic and mostly by phone

With one exception, networks are all planting in the suburbs with Caucasian attendees.

Redeemer City to City is planting in the cities primarily with Caucasian and some Asian attendees

Networks would benefit by partnering with church planting churches to develop a hub training
center for them with internship/residency program

16

Denominations

Most denominations are providing opportunities for assessment and training although it varies
in amount. Coaching is often limited to availability and training of potential coaches

Denominations would benefit from having church planting churches that would develop
internship/residency programs


Collaborative Effort in Church Planting

There is not a recognized collaborative effort between churches, networks and denominations
concerning church planting in the Washington DC / Baltimore corridor

There is not a collaborative voice or trumpet call to increase the pool of strong, qualified
planting candidates

It is not easy for a potential church planter to find out what is happening with church planting
and what the needs and opportunities are so they can pray and sense God’s direction
There is not a central voice for church planting or a central communication tool to aid in
recruiting church planters or providing information on resources for church planters

“All this is For Your Benefit, so that the Grace that is Reaching
More and More People May Cause Thanksgiving to Overflow
to the Glory of God.” 2 Corinthians 4:15