Author Archives: Lane Corley

Planning for an Evangelistic Culture

wheatNew churches tend to be more evangelistic. As a matter of fact, data has shown that established Southern Baptist churches baptize 3.4 people per 100 members, and new SBC churches baptize 11.7 people per 100 members. Why? I believe, one simple reason is in the way we plan. As the pastor of a local church, I started my week with this mindset – “They’re coming, how do I get ready?” That is, the members will be coming to church on Wednesday & Sunday, so get ready for them. The insiders. How’s the sermon? How’s the building? How do I make the insiders happy?

When I became a church planter, that changed subtly to “They’re NOT coming, how do I get ready?” That motivated me to different means. How will I invite people & let them know about the gathering? How will I communicate so they will understand what church is about? How will I present the gospel? How will I GO into the world? How can I get this message out?

Creating and evangelistic culture is about living for those who are NOT there yet. And helping get ready for those who are NOT coming. When we can get every person, every ministry, every sermon, the longing of every heart in the church geared toward THEM, an evangelistic culture is beginning to blossom.

I want to live by, “They’re NOT coming, how do we get ready?” and get out & do all we can to invite, share, invest, & serve, so that they’ll do much more than just come to our church, but so they’ll be part of that great throng surrounding Jesus in worship for all eternity.

And folks, the reality is, THEY’RE NOT COMING. Evangelical church attendance is around 10% of the population or less across Louisiana. The assumption that most people go to church somewhere is just false.

So how are you planning this week?

Week of Prayer for Louisiana Missions

Hope you’ll join me for the Week of Prayer for Louisiana Missions as we pray for some of the great mission projects going on across Louisiana. You can follow each day of the week of prayer HERE. And videos to promote Louisiana Missions in your church & across your social media platforms are HERE.

And this month is also the emphasis for the Georgia Barnette State Missions offering. This years goal is $1.8 million. 100% of this offering will go to support missions in Louisiana. What kind of things does it support? You can find the 2016 allocations HERE. I’m grateful for the generosity of Louisiana Baptist churches that allows us to continue to plant churches, start compassion ministries, minister at our global ports, & much more.

Kick off today by praying for Level Ground Community Church, a new church in New Orleans. Get their story & how to pray for them HERE.

Pastor Daylon Taylor engages children from the Holly Grove neighborhood of New Orleans at Level Ground Community Church.

Pastor Daylon Taylor engages children from the Holly Grove neighborhood of New Orleans at Level Ground Community Church.

Starting an Associational Church Multiplication Movement

multiply-your-church-264x300Good strategy should create the right conditions for a church multiplication movement to reach every people group & population segment in our communities. Here’s five steps to an associational strategy for church multiplication:  

Step 1: Mobilize an Associational Missions or Church Planting Team. Intentionality will be best maintained by men & women with a heart for missions & church multiplication who work in concert with the Director of Missions & other partners to strategize for reaching the lost in the area.

Step 2: Conduct an Area-Wide Feasibility Study or Probe. A probe of the area should include intense demographic & ecclesiographic research. To maximize buy in, it may also include organizing a vision tour or windshield survey across the area with Pastors & church leaders. A probe may also include polling pastors & staff members & key leaders in the community about the need for new churches & ministries in the region.

Step 3: Map the Strategy based on the Probe. Combining extensive data collection with soundbites from organized efforts to determine needs, the church planting team should then be ready to go to a map & start pinpointing potential locations for churches & ministries. The LBC Engage Map can be a great tool for this & church planting priorities can immediately be available for recruiting planters & resources to projects determined by the the Church Planting Team via the world wide web.

Step 4: Discover & Develop qualified planters & team members. Once we know who we need to reach & where, we can best determine who we need to be looking & praying for to take on the mission of planting a church in that area. It will also help the state convention in planning resources & training events that will best assist planting in the region. Armed with data & vision for meeting the specific needs of communities we can be more intentional in gathering resources & recruiting partners & team members.   

Step 5: Network church planting leaders & enthusiasts for celebration, encouragement, health, & recruitment. Engaging the lost community through church planting will lead to stories that need to be told, wounds & scars that need to be healed, & greater interest in diving into the church planting pool. A regular network meeting in the region will be a great tool to keep the movement going & keep points going onto the map & multiplication of disciples, groups, & churches going for years to come.

Utilizing this strategy, one of our Louisiana associations has started 14 new churches since 2000, with only one failed plant. That’s a 93% success rate!  The Louisiana Baptists Missions & Ministry Team is here to assist with 10-3-1 Strategy Development. We can assist you & your team with each of these steps as we move toward a strategy that engages every person in Louisiana with the Gospel.  

Build Retreat and Rest Into Your Church Planting Journey

rest“Come away by yourselves to a desolate place and rest a while” Mark 6:31 ESV

Be intentional about building in retreat & rest into your church planting journey. A bunch of good partners for ministers on a tight budget in this regard. Here’s a few around Louisiana & vicinity:

Also, most of our Associational Camps across Louisiana offer free stays for Pastors in need of retreat & rest:

Let me know if you know of others!

Katrina Memories

Rode out Katrina’s aftermath in Waldheim, LA while planting Hope Church, between Covington & Bogalusa, LA. The community lost about 30% of its trees. A few memories still stuck in my head:

  • The weatherman saying, “a little jog to the west.”
  • Preaching Sun, Aug 28, 2005, to a small group of people who mostly had their bags packed for a nervous trip north.
  • Seeing my family drive away into the endless stream of cars heading north.
  • The sound of generators running from miles around.
  • The smell of pine sap, sweat, and chain saw bar oil. It’s forever burned into my nostrils.
  • The trees. So many trees….
  • 10 weeks without electricity.
  • MRE’s and Southern Baptist cooked pastalaya.
  • Countless volunteers (I wish I could remember all their names) who cooked, cut, constructed, & deconstructed, hugged, cried, sweated, & bled with Gulf Coast folks for more than a year.
  • Rice crispy treats!!! Our church received a call, “Can you take the contents of a truck from TN?” “What’s in it?” “Not sure.” It was a 40′ truck load of rice crispy treats. Took forever to get rid of them. Still have night mares about rice crispy treats.
  • Saying good-bye to friends who had to move away.
  • The heart breaking sights and sounds in the city of New Orleans & the Gulf Coast of Mississippi.
  • Seeing the heartbreak of St. Bernard Parish residents as volunteers pulled the flooded, molded contents of their homes to the curb.
  • The day my family came home :)).
  • Laying down in my bed for the first night with electricity and realizing the trees were no longer there to cover the street lights. Couldn’t sleep for a week.
  • Hearing my atheist neighbor ask, “What is God trying to tell us, Pastor?”
  • Hearing people say Katrina was a good thing because it helped me realize I needed God and needed others. (Also, see my post on What’s worse than a Cat 4 Hurricane).

Conversational Discipleship Tools

CoffeeShopEvangelism & Discipleship takes place today over multiple if not many conversations (Billy Graham says at least 20). Here’s a few tools that work well over coffee or in a small group setting:

  1. How to START or Re-START the Christian Life – PDF
  2. How to Get a Grip on the Bible – PDF, Issuu
  3. Allowing the Teachings of Jesus to Go Deep. How to use HERE.
  4. Discover Your SHAPE for Ministry – PDF
  5. 25 Training Objectives for Disciples by David Platt

What tools have worked for you in growing in your faith & making disciples?

“A Prophet Not A Promoter”

A Church Leader’s Prayer:

Lord Jesus, I come to Thee for spiritual preparation. Lay Thy hand upon me, anoint me with the oil of the New Testament prophet. Save me from the error of judging a church by its size, its popularity or the amount of its yearly offering. Help me to remember that I am a prophet – not a promoter, not a religious manager. Let me never become a slave to crowds. Heal my soul of carnal ambitions and deliver me from the itch for publicity.

A.W. Tozer

Beneath the Surface: Going to Church vs. Getting Involved in the Life of a Church

“every individual Christian will find in the communion of a local church the most perfect atmosphere for the fullest development of his spiritual life.” ~ A.W. Tozer

My observation is that most people never experience “the fullest development of his spiritual life” through the church or see the great value, because they may GO TO CHURCH, but they don’t get involved in the LIFE OF A CHURCH. There’s a big difference. Going to church makes you a CONSUMER of its services. Getting involved in the life of a church puts you in “COMMUNION” with a life source fed by God himself. The Apostle Paul said it like this

“From Him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love, as each part does its work.” ~ Ephesians 4:16

It’s consuming vs. serving, sharing life, supporting, being supported, building up, being built up, etc.

ForestThe enduring image of church for me is that of a forest. A forest stays strong, even in dry seasons, because BENEATH THE SURFACE, the roots of the trees are feeding off of one another for growth & strength. Roots can’t share their life with a tree that just lays itself upon the surface. It has to take root & do life with the others.

“I tried church, but it didn’t help.” Probably not, if you just showed up every now & then with little commitment, little humbling of yourself, little sharing of your life, little getting involved in relationships, little investment in ministries, little digging deep to support & be supported.

I love the Tozer quote, because I’ve experience it. Now, don’t read it wrong. The church is NOT a “perfect atmosphere.” Far from it. It is the perfect atmosphere for spiritual development BECAUSE of its imperfections. Relationships with people that are struggling through life together, growing as individuals, utilizing unique gifts no matter how imperfectly. And seeing God in Christ feed & nourish & heal & empower each other. It’s a beautiful thing! But you won’t see it on the surface by just GOING TO CHURCH.

Out of the Box Ideas for Starting More Groups

IMG_5095Notes & Presentations from the 2015 ReGroup Conference. Shared today at the ReGroup Conference at First Baptist Lafayette. Enjoyed sharing some learnings on where Small Group Strategies & Church Planting intersect. Here’s my two presentations & my notes:

One of the least common denominators of New Testament Christianity is the small group of people gathered around the word of God. So we need to figure it out.

Sought to answer two questions in my breakouts:

  1. How do we start more groups from the unchurched population?
  2. How do we start more groups when I have no or limited space?

Notes from Session One: Starting Discovering Groups – 

  1. Empower your Apostolic leaders to start new groups. Say yes to those with an itch to start new things in different places. More on Sending the Apostolic leaders in your church HERE.
  2. Make it simple for EVERYONE to see themselves reaching their friends. (Example: The HOST Strategy)
  3. 3 out of 21 Meals – Encourage people to see meal times as opportunities to invest in unchurched people. And you’re going to eat anyway. More on this in the book Saturate: Being Disciples of Jesus in the Everyday Stuff of Life by Jeff Vanderstelt.
  4. Groups with a Purpose – People may get involved with a mission or project before they get involved in your church. What need can you meet in the community that will gather people in relationship & move step by step to sharing the gospel.
  5. “Discussion Group” – Go Hall of Tyrranus on your community. Some people will come only if they can ask questions & discuss.
  6. Start a Book Club – Yours &/or Theirs. At your home, church, or consider getting involved in book clubs in the community book stores or libraries to invite people to your group. Try a nondescript invite to a Bible Study or discussion & see what happens.
  7. Meetup.com & other social media sites – Utilize Social Media to gather people. People are looking online for spiritual connections & helps.
  8. Don’t neglect Community Bulletin Boards, Newspapers, Coupon Mags, Radio.
  9. Look for Affinity Groups: Stay at home moms, Sr. Adults, Service Industry (Monday nights), First Responders, Dads (Allprodad.com), etc.
  10. Look for Needs in the Community that Group studies can meet: Grief, Addiction, Money, Marriage, Parenting, Parenting Your Parents, Step family issues, etc..

Notes from Session Two: Out of the Box Ideas for Starting More Groups when you have no or limited space:

  1. Double the opportunity by launching a new service &/or new Sunday School hour.
  2. Clean out the Closets. Utilize EVERY possible space. Most churches under utilize their space.
  3. Groups that kill two birds with one stone. Service oriented groups. Make ministry & group life synonymous.
  4. Think beyond Sunday morning. It’s Biblical to start groups every day of the week.
  5. Go public with your groups! There’s more 3rd spaces today than ever before.
  6. No need to be afraid of Home groups. HOST Strategy.

Why Multi-Site Church? 6 Benefits

PlantMulti-site Church development continues to be a great tool for multiplying & revitalize churches. A few observations about current multi-site churches among Louisiana Baptists,

  • those churches have experienced a combined 30% growth in attendance since becoming multi-site.
  • 80% have experienced growth in worship & small groups.
  • Half have included a church merger or gifting of a building from a declining church as part of the multisite development.
  • Half have requested & received cooperative funding from the Missions & Ministries Team of our state convention for the new sites.
  • ALL of them were growing churches BEFORE multisite development, not BECAUSE of multi-site development.

One of the big takeaways: Multisite is NOT a tool for getting your church to grow, but to multiply your growing DNA to a new community.

Dennis Watson, Pastor of Celebration Church in New Orleans, which has 6 campuses & planning more gives six benefits of a Multisite Campus Strategy, Multi-site enables your church to:

  • Grow larger and smaller at the same time.
  • Overcome geographic and cultural barriers to reach new people.
  • Address more community needs and provide more community support.
  • Involve more people in growth and outreach opportunities.
  • Staff with generalists and specialists, so that both groups can be utilized.
  • Provide a new church vibe with a big church punch.

How can our church know if multisite is in our future:

  • Do you have a vision for church revitalization that may include merging with a declining congregation?
  • Are you running out of space, but do not feel led to build bigger?
  • Has your church been in decline and could possibly be a candidate for merging with a sister congregation?
  • Take this MultiSiteDiagnosis Self Assessment.

Doing some Multi-Site readiness roundtables this week in southeast Louisiana. Let me know if you’d like more info.