Category Archives: Church Planting

“All disciples of Jesus are called to be a sent people”

Reflections on our recent Basic Training for #ChurchPlanters:

Wrapped up another Basic Training for Church Planters this weekend at ABC Camp in Eunice. We had about 20 church planting teams, preparing to plant new churches and campus’ across Louisiana. And we actually did this training simultaneously in English and Spanish. Find the Basic Training materials online here. Here are a few highlights:

  • Church Planting is all about relationships.
  • There is only one kingdom and it belongs to God. And God’s kingdom is extended to the ends of the earth through His church.
  • All disciples of Jesus are called to be sent people.
  • You can’t plant a church in your head, you have to plant it in the community.
  • We don’t plant churches just for the community, we plant them for the whole world.
  • Every congregation is a world missions strategy center.
  • Contextualization is answering the communities questions about God and the gospel IN their terms. NOT ON their terms.
  • Discipleship = Applying the inner meaning of the Gospel to persons at the point of their need.
  • Multiplication principles: You reap what you sow. You reap later than you sow. You reap more than you sow.
  • Don’t just start services, start making disciples.
  • Discipling is a process of learning to obey Jesus.
  • Disciples are shaped by serving, not just sitting and singing.
  • Don’t use people to get ministry done. Use ministry to get people done.
  • Small Groups are the seedbed to develop new leaders.
  • In church history, a significant amount of missionary activity and advance was carried out by unrecognized teams of church planters. i.e – the Moravians
  • The Moravians saw witnessing as the common concern from all members of the faith community and sent small groups of ordinary believers to plant churches and testify for Christ in new areas.
  • “Ultimately, each church will be evaluated by only one thing – its disciples. Your church is only as good as her disciples. It does not matter how good your praise, preaching, programs, or property are; if your disciples are passive, needy, consumeristic, and not radically obedient…” Neil Cole

Why Block Parties?

Our church & association of churches conducts a lot of Block Parties. Bridge Church does so many we decided to get our own Block Party Trailer. Our Associations Block Party Trailer is used at least 40 times each year for a wide variety of events. Recently I was asked if Block Parties are effective or just something else to add to a long list of things that keep Christians busy, but not bearing fruit. Here’s a few reasons why I think Block Parties are a great tool in the outreach strategy of a missional church:

1. GATHERING. Someone said there is three keys to church planting or church growth: 1) Gathering people, 2) Gathering people, 3) Gathering people. The Evangelistic Block Party is a great way to gather people or gather where people are & build relationships, share the gospel, cultivate community, & have fun doing it.

2. INCARNATION. “The word became flesh & blood & moved into the neighborhood” John 1:14 (MSG). A Block Party is a great way to get the church building relationships where people are. We do Block Parties in neighborhoods & subdivisions, at local parks. I also love to incarnate at the communities Block Party type of events. Why try to gather people when they’re already going to be gathered somewhere else. Just build the right relationships, show you care, & add Incarnational Christians to the party! Some good places to incarnate through Block Partying:

  • Multi-Housing complexes. Many times the manager already has a budget for community events. He/she just doesn’t have the time or know how to pull them off.
  • Subdivisions & neighborhoods. Use your yard or the communities common space.
  • Area Events. Every community has a festival of some kind. Get involved, pay for space, or whatever you have to do to add your life to the party.

In the incarnation, Jesus got close to our needs. Be prepared when you get close to the needs of people to be changed & challenged. Incarnation can hurt if you have thin skin. That’s probably why we don’t do it that much. I can send a postcard mailer & 40-50% of the people will throw it away. No harm to me b/c I don’t see their reaction. When you’re there, you do see their reaction. You’ve got to know the season, which leads us to #3…

3. SPIRITUAL FARMING. There are really three reasons for any outreach event a congregation or small group conducts: 1) CULTIVATION, 2) PLANTING SEEDS; 3) HARVESTING. Block Party can be an environment for all three to take place. And it’s important to know ahead of time which one of these you are doing so that you can measure effectiveness.

Using Block Parties to CULTIVATE. Cultivation is an important part of evangelistic ministry & it’s something that we are leaving off our strategy as churches in the West (see Dr. Chuck Kelly’s great message about Spiritual Farming here) Why? Probably because it doesn’t net immediate results. But it is necessary for healthy multiplication of disciples over the long haul. If I plant seeds without knowing & improving the conditions of the soil, my garden may have a short life.

We’ve used Block Parties to Cultivate or initiate relationships in new communities over the past three years & it’s helped us in several ways:

  • To show apartment managers & community leaders that we care.
  • To test the spiritual soil or readiness of an area or population segment for the Gospel.
  • To find the persons of peace in a neighborhood.
  • To train a team & work out the kinks in the “how to’s” of Block Partying

What does a cultivative Block Party look like? No real agenda. Loud music. Food. Opportunities to interact & engage in conversation. A lot of “this is what we’re about” talk. And a hardy “WE’LL BE BACK’  when it’s over. Focus is on finding those few people that show interest & readiness to hear the gospel.

Here’s a list of goals that one of our Block Party teams recently wrote up for a cultivative event we do each month in our city:

  • learn/memorize the name of one child you speak to (so you can call them by name next month when you see them)
  • tell at least 10 people (total): who Bridge Church is, what we are about, and what we believe
  • see at least one person/family we meet at the BP at another Bridge Church event – (“If you like what we do here at the Block Party, you would love coming to ______ (Our neighborhood block parties, Guy’s/Girl’s Night, Outdoor Movie night, FIA, Sunday morning service).”
  • each time we speak with someone, have the conversation go beyond, “what type of balloon would you like”, “would you like a fan”, “what color face paint do you want”….actually engage others in conversation, “what is your name”, “where do you work”, “how long have you lived in this area”.

Using Block Parties to PLANT SEEDS. Cultivating & planting seeds are closely related. In gardening you’re often doing both at the same time. In Evangelistic ministry like Block Partying it denotes another step of intentionality. For us in some of our new communities where the soil has been hard, this has looked like…

  • introducing New Testaments & giving them away to everyone who attends
  • having a Mic & having someone give a quick testimony as to why we’re there
  • inviting people to a follow up event like a Bible Study in the area
  • or inviting them to church

Using Block Parties as a HARVEST tool. It takes a season to grow a harvest. It also takes mature plants, the right conditions, the right tools for a harvest, & a somewhat knowledgeable harvester. For an evangelistic Block Party to be a Harvest event you should have the trust of the people that have given you permission, people who are ready to harvest – i.e. that can share the gospel & lead someone to put their faith in Christ, & the right harvest tools. Some ways to use Block Parties to harvest:

  • Have 12 or more people trained to actively share the gospel with the crowd.
  • Have a Prayer or Spiritual Interest tent designated with trained counselors stationed there.
  • Share the gospel & give an opportunity to respond from a stage. Utilizing an evangelists, an entertainer of some kind, or a personal testimony of someone in the group.

Block parties can be an easy & fun tool to have in your outreach strategy. For best results apply gardening principles:

  • Know what season you’re in – cultivating, planting, or harvesting.
  • Plant generously. the more seeds you plant the more you’ll harvest.
  • Prepare for a harvest.
  • Have fun! Christian should bring life to every party!

If you’re interested in doing a block party yourself, start at our Northshore Baptist Associations Block Party Trailer page, or join Bridge Church this week at several Block Parties we’re doing:

  • Columbia Street Block Party in downtown Covington, tonight, Friday, June 29, 6-8pm. Cultivative event. We’ll be painting faces & passing out balloon animals & making new friends.
  • Oak Villa Mobile Home Park, Sunday, July 1, 5-7pm. We’ve been cultivating & planting seeds for two years in this community. Getting ready to start harvesting!
  • The Groves Apartments, Monday, July 2 5:30-7pm. Cultivating relationships in a brand new apartment complex.
  • Madisonville 4th of July Celebration, July 4, 2pm-until. Incarnating at a local 4th of July party. This one’s going to be a blast!

“How many ER visits did you make as a child?” #churchplanting

This is one of my favorite questions to ask prospective church planters. The question behind the question is, are you a risk taker at heart?

My childhood consisted of lots of stitches; caused by nearly everything needing to be jumped off of, ran with, touched, explored, mishandled, thrown, or kicked. I’ve even got a few scars that wouldn’t be seen at this point except my mom probably just wouldn’t take me to the ER again for fear of an OCS visit.

Church didn’t capture my heart early on, probably because it seemed too safe. When I was invited to my first church plant in Irving, TX, I was home. Risky, messy, scary, challenging. I was the last one to leave & the first one to arrive the next week.

One of the challenges for us as church leaders is how do we provide opportunities for the kid with scars all over his face.

How to Plant a Church Without Losing Your Marriage

Great list for anyone in ministry or not, by Brian & Amy Bloye in their new book It’s Personal: Surviving and Thriving on the Journey of Church Planting.

  1. Do what is important, not what is urgent. “If you try to make everyone happy, the ones who lose out will be the ones your know will forgive you: your spouse and your children.”
  2. Bring fun and adventure into your relationship. “when wives of pastors get involved in extra-marital affairs, it tends to be because the other man was someone who was fun to be with.”
  3. Take time off every week. “Sometimes it appears that you can’t afford a day off; the truth is, it’s the other way around. You can’t afford not to take a day off.”
  4. Keep intimacy a priority.
  5. Focus on being a team.
  6. Find your significance & security in Christ. “We were created, as human beings, to find our meaning not in what we do but in what God has done for us.”
  7. Make time for meaningful communication. “Get the conversation rolling…keep your ears unclogged – listen attentively.”
  8. Help your spouse go as far as he or she can go. Don’t put extra weights on him or her. Help him feel light and fast in the race of life.
  9. Share your spiritual lives with each other. The pastor shares his spiritual journey from the stage. Do it at home as well.
  10. Make your spouse your project. Get to know her strengths and weaknesses, love languages, keep a prayer list of her needs. etc.
  11. Set meaningful boundaries. “people come and go, and even staff come and go, the only constants are God and the two of us; to lose us is to lose everything…”

This book is really helpful. Looking forward to sharing it with church planting friends.

Current Church Planting Bibliography

More than occasionally I’m asked by people interested in Church planting, “Hey, what should I be reading?” Here’s my current top ten list of favorites in no particular order. All of these are in the category of “I wish I’d read that before I planted a church.”

Other books that have been foundational for me personally: The Externally Focused Church by Eric Swanson and Rick RusawThe Tangible Kingdom: Creating Incarnational Community by Hugh Halter and Matt Smay, Total Church: A Radical Reshaping Around Gospel and Community by Steve Timmis.

What would be your recommendations?

A Disciple is: Self-Feeder, Easy-Bleeder, Passionate-Breeder

Loved this statement of values and definition of discipleship by a new church out west:

HOUSE UNITED
…a community bent on extending God’s Kingdom by building relationships that point to Jesus.
— Impacting our culture outside the church walls.
— Going into the world and Serving those in need.
— Invading secular space by gathering at beaches, coffee houses, parks, homes etc.

We Value… growing, worshipping and serving in community and making disciples who are…

1. Self-Feeders (Personally engaging with God and His word)
  • Developing habits that bring us to maturity in Christ
  • Practicing accountability in the area of personal growth

2. Easy-Bleeders (Sacrificing self for others)

  • Involving ourselves in social justice endeavors
  • Participating in missional opportunities…serving the poor and needy

3. Passionate-Breeders (Multiplying God’s kingdom)

  • Going into the world, engaging our culture to build relationships that point to Christ
  • Making disciples who make disciples

Agreed! Praying for more Self-Feeders, Easy-Bleeders, Passionate-Breeders.

via Dave Devries.

On Multi-Site Church

Our Church Multiplication Network Round-tabled this week about multi-site church. We learned from local practitioners Woodland Park Baptist, Hammond and Celebration Church. Most of the q’s were practical, not theological, which may demonstrate that this trend is becoming more mainstream as research is showing. As a church planter and strategists, I love multi-site, because it’s the heart of New Testament church growth: MULTIPLICATION, OFF-CAMPUS MULTIPLICATION. Here’s a few big takeaways and some of the resources that we shared:

  • “We took this journey on our knees” ~ Pete Charpentier, Pastor of Woodland Park Baptist in Hammond
  • “We just didn’t believe the best use of our resources was to build a bigger building”~ Peter Charpentier
  • “We’re doing this because God said ‘Go and make disciples'” ~ Pete Charpentier
  • Multi-Site has a 90% success rate.
  • Only 20% of Multi-Site expressions are video based.
  • “We never use the word ‘merger.’ Adoption is a better term” ~ Craig Ratliff, Celebration Church, St. Bernard
  • Multi-site churches now outnumber Mega-churches in North America.

Resources on Multi-Site:

A few books I’ve read and recommended that dealt with Multi-Site.

And I appreciate what one of the initial innovators and author of The Multi-Site Church Revolution Geoff Surratt recently wrote as a caution. Find his post here.

Multisite is a great tool for some churches to fulfill their God-given mission. It is not, however, the right direction for many or even most churches. Multisite can be a drain on leadership and budgets, it can feed an already overfed pastor ego and it can be very difficult to undo. (Once a site is launched it is really hard to un-launch.)

For a church that is experiencing rapid growth, or has a God-inspired passion for a unique outreach into an underserved community, multisite is brilliant way to expand the Kingdom. But for a church that is just looking for a new growth curve or the next big thing multisite is a terrible idea. It is never a good idea to attempt to give birth when you aren’t pregnant. 

On Discipleship #verge2012

Got to catch a couple of sessions of the Verge Conference this week via Simulcast with some of our Northshore Church Multipliers. This conference and network has really stimulated my thinking over the past couple of years. Here’s a few big take away’s from the sessions we caught:

  • “If God is a missionary God, we must become a missionary people. If God is an incarnational God, we must become an incarnational people.” ~Alan Hirsch
  • The Jesus Mission = Reach, Restore, Reproduce ~Dave Ferguson
  • “What if we took the words of Jesus seriously and didn’t water them down?” from the video Sara’s story. Incredible testimony. Watch it here.
  • We all must live as missionaries. “A missionary sacrifices everything but the Gospel for the sake of the Gospel.” ~Todd Engstrom
  • “Consumerism is a cancer that kills mission.” ~Jen Hatmaker
  • “Live it or you have no hope of leading it.” ~Jen Hatmaker
  • “If people imitated you, where would the kingdom be in five years?” ~Jen Hatmaker
  • Does the church affirm comfort as a Christian virtue when Jesus affirmed death? ~Jeff Vanderstelt
  • Most Christians are not willing to die for the one who died for them. ~Jeff Vanderstelt
  • The Great Commission is to make disciples, not converts. ~Gilbert from India
  • The fruit of the mango is a mango tree. The fruit of discipleship is a disciple maker. ~Gilbert from India
  • Discipleship is leading people to an ongoing surrender and dependency to Jesus as Lord. ~Jeff Vanderstelt
  • You will make disciples, but what are you making disciples of?
  • We all look great from afar off, but are we willing to allow people to get close enough to imitate us? ~Jo Saxton
  • You can’t be what you can’t see. From afar we can illustrate and inspire, but imitation can’t happen. ~Jo Saxton

Multiplication Needed

We cannot fulfill the Great Commission simply through the expansion of existing churches. Nor can we accomplish our mission merely through the addition of new churches. We must focus on multiplication, planting a variety of dynamic churches that will grow and reproduce.

 – Dr. Steve Ogne, via Dave Devries

Agreed. What if you had to fulfill the Great Commission through the people in your church? How would you plan to multiply?

On Church Buildings and Portable Church

Great thoughts from Geoff Surratt on the Problems w/Church Buildings & why/how to make portable church sustainable. Our church has been portable since inception in 2009. There are limitations, but Surratt does a great job demonstrating that the grass is not always greener on the side of having a permanent building. I learned this the hard way when our first church plant moved from being portable and meeting in an unairconditioned fire station to owning our own property. The building sucked much of the energy out of community ministries but we had air conditioning. Interestingly enough, 6 months later, many of our leaders were saying, “I wish we were back in the fire station.” Below is a synopsis of Surratt’s comments. All the posts are well worth reading for church planters and those thinking of multiplying through multi-site:

I agree with Surratt: “Church buildings are not evil, obviously most churches have had them for the past 1700 years. But if we are going to really make a dent in reaching lost people I think we are going to have to literally think outside the box.” 

Part 1: What a Building Won’t Do

  • First, a building won’t make you a real church. I’m sure you realize that the Christian church built few, if any, buildings before 300 AD.
  • a building doesn’t validate a church, the anointing of the Holy Spirit validates a church.
  • if you have a leadership development problem, a discipleship problem or a volunteer recruitment problem now, you will still have those challenges once you have a building. If people aren’t growing at your church now they still won’t be growing when you put a permanent roof over their heads.

Part 2: The Hidden Costs

  • Buildings Attract Christians – If your target audience is now sitting in someone else’s pew, then a new building is just the bait to lure them in. If you really are after the unchurched, a building might not have the impact you think it will have.
  • Buildings Eat 24/7 – When you get a permanent facility you won’t have to set up and tear down any more, but you will have to pour endless amounts of cash into the care and feeding of your new money pit.
  • Buildings Modify Vision – Once you have a permanent location the vision of your church will be greatly impacted by your building. A lot of what you do will be guided by paying for your box, filling up your box and expanding your box.

Part 3: 8 Ways to Make Portable Sustainable

  1. Realize you have meeting space now
  2. Lease an office space with a small to medium size meeting room
  3. Have multiple teams for set up and tear down
  4. Select the right team leaders
  5. Honor the setup and tear down teams
  6. Build community into the teams
  7. Create a path for advancement
  8. Hire the setup/tear down crew

And interestingly enough, 62% of residents in our community recently said in a professional opinion poll that they would be ok with attending church in a school, movie theater or other public building.

Thoughts? Follow-up questions? Ideas or experiences on portable church?