Author Archives: Lane Corley
Multiplication is Built In by God
God has designed each product of the harvest as a package of seeds to produce more. One of my favorite stress relief
projects is keeping a small veggie garden in the backyard. Did well this year, but we’ve reached the point of looking toward next year. No need to buy seeds or plants again. All we had to do was cut one open. God has packaged them into the harvest. As Bob Logan said, “In every apple is an orchard.”
The same is true for us as Christ followers and churches. We have within us all that’s needed to produce more disciples, leaders, and churches. And that’s His desire for each and every one of us.
Genesis 1:28 (ESV) And God blessed them. And God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth…
John 15:5 (ESV) I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing.
2 Timothy 2:2 (ESV) and what you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.
Are you planting seeds in the lives of others and within your sphere of influence?
Learn more about multiplication at our Partners-in-Planting Luncheon, Wednesday, August 24th, 10:30am @ FBC Madisonville. Register here.
“There is no command in the Bible to go into all the world and plant churches”
Great reminders from J.D. Payne. Read the whole article here. A few excerpts of note:
Then why is there so much talk about church planting if there is no scriptural mandate?
The Church is to make disciples of all nations (literally, “peoples,” not nation-states). The best way to fulfill this mandate of evangelizing, baptizing, and teaching obedience is through the planting of contextualized churches among the various people groups and population segments of the world.
Biblical church planting is evangelism that results in new churches. But, churches can be planted with little to no evangelism being done.
But it’s not about church planting…it is out of a disciple making movement that churches are birthed (e.g., Acts 13-14).
Unfortunately, most church planters in North America are more involved in gathering together long-term Kingdom citizens than doing evangelism that results in new churches.
Today, we plant the church first, and then (hopefully) lead the church to do evangelism.
But planting churches is cool! It is cool to quickly start a worship gathering with high quality music and preaching. It is cool to quickly develop church programs for kids, families, outreach, missions, etc.
But it’s not about planting churches.
Our mandate is about evangelism, baptisms, and teaching those new believers how to be the local church in their context. It is about teaching those new believers how to gather for worship. It is about teaching those new believers how to preach, how to pastor, how to lead children, families. It is about teaching those new believers how to do missions. There is not much that others can see, feel, and hear in the early days of a church recently birthed from the harvest. . .
Planting churches is cool. . . making disciples from out of the harvest that will become local churches is not.
But it’s not about planting churches, is it?
Meeting the Challenge of Population Growth and Church Decline
A recent study of the Northshore communities in SE Louisiana revealed that less than 4% of the popoulation attends
Southern Baptist Churches on any given weekend (11,000 attenders to 343,000 in population). Consultation with other evangelical groups revealed that less than 10% attend evangelical churches of any kind (approximately 25,000 attenders per weekend).
Over the next ten years the Northshore is projected to continue to grow at a rate of 22%, which would bring our population to over 419,000 people. 22% growth for Northshore Baptist churches would mean adding 5,296 new members in ten years. The real challenge is to increase the percentage of people attending worship gatherings and Bible Studies. Currently 3.3% of the population attends worship in Northshore Baptist churches. If we wanted to double that to 6.6% of the population in worship attendance over the next ten it would mean adding 16,434 worshipers. Currently, only 1.9% of the population attends Bible Study in NSBA churches. If we wanted to double that to 3.8% over the next ten years it would mean adding 9,304 people to our Bible Study rolls. Daunting numbers. How could we do this? And is it even possible?
Four suggestions to meet the challenge: First, we need some of our churches to breakout. Second, we need healthier and riskier church planting. Third, we need to partner to help churches in need of and willing to engage in revitalization. Fourth, we need a discipleship revolution.
Breakout Churches. A breakout church is defined by Thom Rainer in his book by that title as a church that reaches at least one person for Christ every two weeks or 26 persons per year, has a conversion ratio of 20:1 or 1 conversion for every 20 members per year, has tenured and consistent leadership, and the church makes a clear and positive impact on its community.[1] In our area, FBC Covington would be an example of a breakout church. In 1980, FBC had 322 in Sunday School and baptized 32. Dr. Waylon Bailey became pastor in 1989 and from 1990 to 2000, Sunday School attendance grew from 417 to 1,137. From 2000 to 2010, FBC relocated into a new facility, sponsored a new church on the Northshore which added 100+ members in its first five years, and today FBC has over 1,700 worshippers each week. And, since 1990, 1,745 people have been baptized through the ministry of FBC Covington. Bedico Baptist is another church that has broken out with tenured leadership. Leo Miller became Pastor in 1994. In 1995, Sunday School averaged 76 weekly attendees at Bedico. In 2000, that was up to 141, 2005 to 232, and Bedico has recently broken the 400 barrier. And since 1994, 537 have been baptized at Bedico. Others are poised to breakout across the Northshore. The momentum of growing churches breaking out will help us catch up with population growth and move past a season of decline.
Healthier and Riskier Church Planting. Healthier church planting means church planting that is led by churches with a heart to multiply and reproduce themselves for the sake of kingdom expansion. So, what’s needed for healthier church planting is healthy mother churches with a heart to reproduce. As Bob Roberts says in his great book The Multiplying Church, “The future of faith in America (and anywhere in the world, for that matter) is not tied to planting more churches, but in raising up of mother congregations of every tribe, tongue, denomination, and network that are reproducing… The hope is in pregnant mother churches.”[2]
Riskier church planting would be multiplication that targets hard to reach areas and unchurched pockets of our population. Missiologist Alan Hirsch suggests that current church models are reaching out to smaller and smaller segments of the population, with possibly as much as 60% of America untargeted by our evangelistic and outreach efforts.[3] Our study identified multi-housing residents as one potential segment that is underserved. Others may be those in their early 20’s with very little understanding of religion in any form. We need some church plants that go beyond planting a worship service that looks similar to others in the community, but will ask the question “Where is the church not?” and go there with the gospel. We need some church plants that have different scorecards and different expectations, but will faithfully deliver the message of Christ to unchurched people.
Partners in Revitalization. Church revitalization is needed to turn momentum around for congregations that are not effectively reaching their communities. This is already happening in a variety of ways on the Northshore, with Grace Memorial Baptist Church in Slidell becoming the sponsor of Covenant Baptist Church, which was in steep decline and in danger of shutting the doors. Also, with Woodland Park Baptist Church merging and taking on the assets and liabilities of New Life Church in Hammond, which was in steep decline, and now they are looking to plant a new church on the site. And FBC Hammond working through a self-assessment with the NSBA Staff to begin a process toward revitalization. Churches are needed who are willing to adopt or sponsor or merge with existing congregations for the glory of God. And churches are needed who are willing to admit there in need of coming under the wing of a benevolent parent church or work with a church wanting to help then in a revitalization effort.
A Discipleship Revolution. Call it revival, lay renewal, or awakening, what we need is a revolution of discipleship that will lead Northshore Christians to multiply themselves spreading the Gospel like a sneeze to their neighbors, classmates, coworkers, and beyond. In his book Church 3.0, Neil Cole observes, “we have lowered the bar of what it means to be a Christian, such that simply showing up to the weekly one-hour event with some regularity and a checkbook is all it takes.”[4] We must refocus on making disciples who will reproduce themselves by telling others, inviting others, and discipling others. Discipleship should lead to disciple makers on mission for others.
[1] Rainer, Tom. Breakout Churches. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 2005.
[2] Roberts, Bob. The Multiplying Church. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 2008.
[3] http://www.christianpost.com/news/alan-hirsch-church-model-reaching-only-40-percent-of-americans-47500/
[4] Cole, Neil. Church 3.0: Upgrades for the Future of the Church. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2010.
Excuses
The thing that makes an excuse so powerful is the bit of truth tucked inside. Billy Sunday said an excuse is a “skin of a reason stuffed with a lie.” I think an excuse is a reason with self instead of faith applied to it. Here’s some examples of things that are true, but are not worthy excuses.
- “I don’t want to get too close to people. Relationships are too messy.” Yes, relationships are hard & messy. People will offend you and say the wrong things and not notice you and forget to call you. Build relationships anyway.
- “Sunday is my only day to get things done.” Yes, Sunday is the perfect day to get things done before the work week. And it’s hard to wake up. And it’s hard to get the kids ready. Get involved in church anyway.
- “People will try to take advantage of you.” Yes, if you help people you will get taken advantage of. And they do get some help from the government. And they could do more to help themselves. Help people anyway.
- “I can’t share my faith b/c I might not know how to answer people’s questions.” No, you don’t know all the answers and you will get confused by their questions and you will be afraid to talk to them about your faith. Do it anyway.
- “I don’t get along with my neighbor.” Yes, your neighbor is rude not to wave at you and they don’t seem friendly and they seem to be perfectly happy. Look for opportunities to serve them and invite them into your home anyway.
- “Serving others is outside of my comfort zone.” Yes, if you put your Faith in Action you might get your hands dirty and you may not get to consume great worship songs and preaching and you might not get home before noon. Put your faith in action anyway.
If you’re looking for an excuse you’ll find one. Apply faith to any excuse and it will fade away. For the real Christian who walks by faith, what once was hard and weird and easy to excuse becomes a necessity.
Church Multiplication
A few convictions and random ideas:
- If we’re going to reach the world the church must learn to multiply. On and off campus.
- Church planting and multiplication must be done with greater simplicity, regularity, and more organically.
- As a church leader I must practice “catch and release”, “low control-high accountability”, “sending the whole church” in order to maximize multiplication and disciple making.
- Christianity started out as a movement driven by a message passed on by ordinary people across their relational networks. Christianity will spread faster as a movement than as an institution.
- Jesus regularly sent people out before they were “ready.” People are more ready than I want to admit most of the time.
- You’re never “ready” to plant a church, so that means you’re always ready to plant a church. Just do it.
- If a church doesn’t plant another church in its first three years it likely never will.
- Starting a worship service is different from planting a church or making disciples.
- Discipleship should result in disciple makers. Disciple makers will spark multiplication.
- Discipleship leads to mission. Want a missional, outwardly focused church? Teach people the ways of Jesus.
- God won’t call us to something we can’t handle. Wrong. God always calls us to impossible tasks. Church multiplication is impossible without the Holy Spirit.
Kids Questions About God
Digging a bit this morning cause I’m on the spot at a Bridge Church Kids gathering tonight. Answering kids questions
about God. Here’s a preview list, but I’m sure they’ll be others. Thank God for the wikipedia Iphone App. Any help on these?
- Does it rain in heaven?
- Why do people have to go to heaven?
- What’s your favorite book? And you can’t say the bible.
- How was God made?
- Why did Jesus die on the cross?
- Can God do anything?
- Is there church in heaven?
- Why don’t they have a cross on the top of the church?
Recent Haunting Conversations
- “I’m scared. I can’t read. I can’t get a job. I only know one way to live.” ~ 23-year old addict trying to break free in need of mentorship.
- “I failed. I’m repeating 9th grade.” ~ 15-year old fatherless student in need of mentorship.
- “I’m a lost cause. Forget about me. I’m not strong enough to make it. I don’t have anyone in this world that cares if I’m alive. I have nothing to live for. Just let me go.” ~ 40-year old inmate prepping to get out of jail, in need of mentorship.
- “I’m 8-months pregnant, my lights get cutoff on Monday. I’ve run out of options. You’re my last hope. Can you help?” ~ 24-year old single mom, in need of mentorship.
- “My father died, you’re the only person I know that goes to church. Could you help us with a memorial service?” ~ local single mom with a disabled child who lost her job the same week that her father passed away unexpectedly.
- “Doesn’t God give second chances?!?!” ~ Parent of a mentally retarded teen convicted of a sex-offense after learning that the management of their apartment complex would not allow their son to live with them upon release. Heard Dad say this as I looked at the word “UNFORGIVABLE” tattooed across his sons stomach.
A few Church Planting dates for the Fall
- 8.24 – Partners in Church Planting Luncheon, 10:30am-1pm @ FBC Mandeville. For pastors and churches interested in getting involved with Church Multiplication. Ask questions, hear about opportunities and needs, plan and strategize with other multiplication minded leaders on the Northshore.
- 8.29 – Monthly Church Multiplication Network Meeting, 11:30am @ Cafe Nola in Ponchatoula. Network meetings are for planters, planting teams, future planters, planting enthusiasts, multiplication minded church leaders. Great time to fellowship, collaborate, encourage one another. And this fall we’ll add an optional Afternoon coffee training module/learning cluster after lunch. CP Networks are vital.
- 9.8-10 – Basic Training for Church Planters, 8:30am-4:30pm each day, @ Woodland Park Baptist Church in Hammond. For anyone planting or prepping to plant a church. Also, would be good for revitalization of a church. Pre-register here.
- 9.26 – Monthly Church Multiplication Network Meeting, 11:30am @ Northshore Church in Slidell.
- 10.21-22 – Greenhouse: Organic Church Planting w/Neil Cole @ New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. http://www.nobts.edu for more info. I read everything Neil Cole writes. Looking forward to learning from him at NOBTS this fall.
- 10.24 – Monthly Church Multiplication Network Meeting, 11:30am, @ TBA
- 11.28 – Monthly Church Multiplication Network Meeting, 11:30am, @ TBA
Discipleship and Choice
American Christianity has become about choices. Early service, late service, contemporary music, traditional music,
small groups, Sunday School, big church, little church. And these choices are for the most part self-focused – “I’m looking for a great kids ministry” or “I like a small church” or “I like the early service” or “I like an older pastor.” Not that any of these things are bad and we must commend ministries in the west for making church life and the word of God as accessible for everyone as we can get it. The question is, How does this square with the New Testament picture of a disciple or follower of Christ? Read the New Testament and THE CHOICE was often RISK or SECURITY, DEATH or LIFE. I know the environment was different, w/o the freedoms and technology that we enjoy today, but did Jesus intend Christianity to be free from risk and sacrifice. Jesus said, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will save it” Luke 9:23-24. In Acts, we see the first Christ followers, after initial fears, CHOOSING risk and suffering over and over again. The Apostle Paul spoke of “the brand marks of Jesus” Galatians 6:17 (NASB) on his body, obviously speaking of the torture that he’d endured for sharing the Gospel in unreached areas. He catalogued his suffering in 2 Corinthians 11:25-28:
countless beatings, and often near death. Five times I received at the hands of the Jews the forty lashes less one.Three times I was beaten with rods. Once I was stoned. Three times I was shipwrecked; a night and a day I was adrift at sea; on frequent journeys, in danger from rivers, danger from robbers, danger from my own people, danger from Gentiles, danger in the city, danger in the wilderness, danger at sea, danger from false brothers; in toil and hardship, through many a sleepless night, in hunger and thirst, often without food,tin cold and exposure. And, apart from other things, there is the daily pressure on me of my anxiety for all the churches.
Neil Cole in his interpretive biography of Paul’s life called Journey’s to Significance suggests that Paul could have avoided the “forty lashes minus one” but could not b/c of his love for the Jews.
This type of scourging was sometimes meant to purge or restore a brother to the synagogue instead of making him suffer excommunication. The punishment was executed by three or more leaders…and was exercised for a number of reasons…including being a false teacher and entering the temple unclean, both of which Paul would be accused of having done. Saul saw the synagogues as strategically important for the mission he was ultimately called to fulfill, and so perhaps HE CHOSE to be beaten raw in this way just to maintain access. He could have escaped this horrendous suffering by being excommunicated or keeping his mouth shut, but neither was a real option for him, and so instead he endured.”
New Testament Christianity seems to ASSUME risk and its adherents seem to CHOOSE risk and sacrifice at every turn. And the catch is, according to Jesus’ words in Luke 9:24, it’s in risk and death to self that we find the thing we’re often looking for in our choices at church – security and life.
So what’s the riskiest choice you’ve made as a Christ-follower lately? To attend service at a different time? Joining a new class or group? Do those things, but ask, does this require faith and denial and sacrifice for me? If not, could I be missing a key to real obedience and growth toward God?
What can I do to risk more? Well, you’ll most likely not be asked to endure beating and torture, but here’s a few risk for starters:
- Take some risk in your neighborhood and invite someone over for coffee or dinner that you don’t know that well and build a redemptive relationship with them.
- Find an organization that’s reaching out to the hurting in your region. There are many. Like orphans and widows, inmate children, homeless or those facing imminent homelessness, the hungry through local food banks, etc., etc.
- Instead of consuming your church’s ministries, contribute by volunteering to teach or lead a group.
- Take a short-term mission trip or fund another mission trip goer.
And Pastor, I’m asking myself as a church leader – Am I offering my church the opportunity to experience growth and grace through risk, sacrifice, and adventure? If not, do we keep our church from experiencing the life Christ spoke of in Luke 9:24?
More Courageous Movie Stuff
Looking forward to the movie Courageous, coming out Sept 30th. It’s going to highlight men’s issues and challenge dad’s like nothing before. Here’s some great ideas for your church. And some input from the National Fatherhood initiative. Check out the official music video below. The movie trailer is at the end of the clip. Or find it here. Also, check out the Courageous Song lyrics below the video. Also, check out this post by Randy Alcorn about the importance of fathers and the accompanying video with cast members and ministry leaders talking about the importance of fathers.
Courageous Lyrics
We were made to be courageous
We were made to lead the way
We could be the generation
That finally breaks the chain
We were made to be courageous
We were made to be courageous
We were warriors on the front lines
Standing, unafraid
But now we’re watchers on the sidelines
While our families slip away
Where are you, men of courage?
You were made for so much more
Let the pounding of hearts cry
We will serve the Lord
We were made to be courageous
And we’re taking back the fight
We were made to be courageous
And it starts with us tonight
The only way we’ll ever stand
Is on our knees we’re lifting hands
Make us courageous
Lord, make us courageous
This is our resolution
Our answer to the call
We will love our wives and children
We refuse to let them fall
We will reignite the passion
That we buried deep inside
May the watchers become warriors
Let the men of God arise
Seek justice
Love mercy
Walk on
Be with your God
In the war of the mind
I will make my stand
In the battle of the heart
And the battle of the hand
