06-14-12

what’s wrong with local church planting? just about everything

I told an old col­lege friend that I thought church plant­ing was unbib­li­cal and I’m pretty sure he thought I fell off the deep end. He quickly explained what his def­i­n­i­tion of church plant­ing is and asked how I could dis­agree with that. I had no qualms with his def­i­n­i­tion, but what he may not real­ize is that his def­i­n­i­tion is def­i­nitely in the minority.

Here’s my beef with the preva­lent model of church plant­ing. The whole thing is peo­ple putting the cart in front of the horse and very lit­tle reliance on the work of the Holy Spirit. Here’s what I see, and cor­rect me if I’m wrong.

A church is a body of believ­ers. All ele­ments within the church such as elders, dea­cons, build­ings, wor­ship teams, etc are all prac­ti­cal out­flows. How­ever, what hap­pens is some guy gets an idea that he wants to start a church some­where across the coun­try. Why not in his home­town or in a neigh­bor­ing state? That’s for another post.

So, he starts rais­ing sup­port, starts a blog (if he’s really pro­gres­sive), takes a “sur­vey trip”, begins writ­ing down a plan for the first church-​​done-​​right, fig­ures out a name with a great story/​biblical expla­na­tion behind it, finds some min­istry part­ners, and then fig­ures out a cul­tural strat­egy to get peo­ple into this great church that doesn’t even exist yet.

Therein lies the prob­lem. I thought a church was a made up of a group of peo­ple? Yet, you’ve already got a “church” and you’re try­ing to find peo­ple for it? That doesn’t sound like a church to me and def­i­nitely not a healthy way to start one.

Let’s con­sider for a moment per­haps some­thing a lit­tle more bib­li­cal. Last time I checked, the apos­tles were just going out, preach­ing the gospel. Some­times they stuck around for a few years, some­times they were just pass­ing through. They didn’t raise sup­port (though some churches sup­ported them). They had jobs and they made their own liv­ing as they trav­elled around. As men and women came to know the truth, they began meet­ing reg­u­larly, and voila! they had a church.

Going with the intent to plant a church and with pre­con­ceived notions about how it’s going to work is 1) unbib­li­cal, 2) will most likely dis­ap­point, 3) is harm­ful to the poten­tial real church body that you might have. I feel like the men­tal­ity of these church planters is “I’m going to go be a pas­tor or bust”. If it doesn’t work out, they either give up or go some­where else where they think it might work bet­ter which calls into ques­tion whether the Holy Spirit was really lead­ing in the first place.

Instead their should be a men­tal­ity of “I’d like to live here, work here, and while I’m liv­ing in this place, I will inten­tion­ally make God’s name famous.” That way, if you don’t see a con­vert in 5yr, it’s no sweat off your back because you didn’t come with the intent to build a “church”, you don’t feel the pres­sure of sup­port­ers with expec­ta­tions, and con­vert or not, you’re still accom­plish­ing God’s direc­tive for every Christian.

Sec­ond, these pre­con­ceived notions do not allow for the spon­ta­neous work­ing of the Holy Spirit among a church body. Instead of let­ting the church organ­i­cally grow, let people’s gifts come out and uniquely serve in the body, and the church mak­ing deci­sions among them­selves how they want their spir­i­tual fam­ily to func­tion; it’s all dic­tated by some guy who comes in think­ing he’s got the right way with­out real­iz­ing that the Holy Spirit is far larger than he can com­pre­hend and works in ways we have yet to see.

So, do I have a prob­lem with this model of church plant­ing? Yep…a big one. I’m more a fan of liv­ing life that glo­ri­fies God and mak­ing dis­ci­ples while you’re at it. Let­ting the out­flow of that hap­pen nat­u­rally and in God’s timing.

As a clar­i­fi­ca­tion, I rec­og­nize that most things are prac­ti­cal out­flows of a group of believ­ers, but some things are man­dated once a church has formed. These include elders, dea­cons, and the sacraments.

Andrew is a 20-​​something Chris­t­ian who strives to live a very sim­ple lifestyle after real­iz­ing the van­ity of rush­ing around and all the mate­ri­al­ism of our soci­ety. He wants to squeeze the most out of life and live each day extra­or­di­nar­ily through sim­ple means. This blog is a run­ning com­men­tary of his jour­ney of faith and prac­ti­cal­ity, and how your life can go from nor­mal to extra­or­di­nary too! Andrew is the author and edi­tor of Live [Sim­ply] Free, and con­tin­ues on the jour­ney of declut­ter­ing and sim­pli­fy­ing his life. Fol­low him on Twit­ter @Andrew_Randazzo.
 whats wrong with local church planting? just about everything
Andrew Randazzo
  • Donita­jo­smith

    Well put, another thing that irks me to no end is a satel­lite church. I know of a mega church that took over a church that was strug­gling, instead of build­ing this strug­gling church up by plac­ing one of their MANY asso­ciate pas­tors there they have a skele­ton wor­ship band drive the 30 mins with a DVD of the head pas­tor preach­ing. There is no com­mu­nity out­reach, no sense of own­er­ship any­more among the decreased con­gre­ga­tion. Just seems like a wasted oppor­tu­nity to me on so many levels.

    • http://livesimplyfree.com/ Andrew Ran­dazzo

      Donita, I totally agree, that’s really frus­trat­ing. Those kind of mod­els do not leave much room for the Holy Spirit to work, and that’s one of the biggest prob­lems with the Amer­i­can church. We’ve dra­mat­i­cally damp­ened and deval­ued the work of the Holy Spirit. We’ve become too com­fort­able and like every­thing to be planned and work smoothly/​flawlessly. Which means the church has become a very man-​​centered approach.

  • Joye

    Dear Andrew, Your blog res­onates with me so very much. In our small com­mu­nity, we have over 30 con­gre­ga­tions meet­ing weekly (some in the same build­ing at dif­fer­ent times). Per­haps the fac­tor that is miss­ing is the very process you are describ­ing. Very well stated.
    To use the Jesus model of para­bles, this fac­tor is very sim­i­lar to many peo­ple who want to open a busi­ness. They decide to open up a busi­ness, with­out doing the needed home­work before the busi­ness starts (is there an unmet need, are there suf­fi­cient cus­tomers, can I pro­vide the ser­vice at a price they will pay, and will it meet their needs on a con­tin­u­ous basis). Most new busi­nesses fail, because they don’t do their home­work correctly.

    In that light, a church planter should con­sult the best mar­ket­ing study available.…the guid­ance of the holy spirit. If God wants an addi­tional church in the com­mu­nity, it will be blessed spir­i­tu­ally. If not, per­haps the prompt­ing is not for a new church, but to meet the needs of the peo­ple through a dif­fer­ent method.

    • http://livesimplyfree.com/ Andrew Ran­dazzo

      Ya, I agree Joye. God calls us to be of one mind, together for the gospel. Unless a place is absolutely spir­i­tu­ally des­o­late, I would be very hes­i­tant to start a new church. I’d rather join a church and func­tion with that body than start­ing all over just because I have some dif­fer­ent the­o­log­i­cal pref­er­ences that don’t impede on the gospel.

  • Matthew Kuiper

    More blog posts like this please.

    • http://livesimplyfree.com/ Andrew Ran­dazzo

      They’re a com­ing my friend. They’re a com­ing… :)