Friday, August 21, 2009

Equipping the Church Planter

What do you think about the conclusion of Ed Stetzer in this final few paragraphs of his Enrichment Article?

Twenty years ago the parachute drop was the dominant church-planting method. This occurs when a sending denomination or church drops a church planter and family into a community with little training or support. By the grace of God, many of these church planters succeeded in planting healthy, growing, and reproducing churches; however, many did not. In fact, many of the alarming statistics regarding the survivability of new church plants may simply be outdated.

Imagine being asked to begin a business with only a city to face and a dream to make reality. No one gave you any resources and no one trained you how to accomplish this task. The person who said yes to such a request would either be a supreme hero or an utter fool.

Now, imagine being asked to start a church without knowing if you possessed the gifts and calling to do so, without any specific church-planting training, and without any field support in the form of a mentor, coach, supervisor, or peer network. The task would be daunting to say the least. Many church planters experience this scenario and many subsequently fail. Let us not fail these God-called church planters. Instead, we need systems to help them be a part of a growing movement that is penetrating the darkness and bringing many people into God’s kingdom.

We have learned over the past 20 years that support must be given to those entering the mission field. The support must come from us. It is difficult to plant a church. Not everyone can do it. A church planter should be gifted, called, trained, and supported. Church-planting systems were developed by church planters to address this great need. Assessment, training, mentoring, and support groups have proven to provide valuable assistance enabling church planters to plant larger, healthier, and more successful churches. We have learned that church planters perform better when surrounded by a team committed to their success. Church-planting systems provide an excellent framework for such a team to function. We believe Christ has sent us to every city and every nation. Let’s prepare one another for the task of reaping God’s harvest through church planting.



Read the Whole article here

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Boot Camp



Research has shown that churches have a 90 percent survival rate after five years if they are planted using a proven and intentional system. Churches who do not use a proven system have only a 50 percent survival rate.

We offer three strategic BootCamp tracks:
BootCamp

Coaches Training: An introduction to basic coaching principles to prepare you to serve as a 'table coach' during the BootCamp process.

Church Planter Training: A weeklong strategic planning event that prepares the multipliers for the early stages and eventual maturing of a church. We will equip the multiplier to recruit and mobilize workers, communicate vision and be a strategic planner.

Church Health Component: This track is designed for churches that are declining or have reached a plateau but desire to renew their vision, strategy and passion.

Illinois District Boot Camp Info