Outreach

Church plant

I've worked with a lot of church plants. And, I've been involved in two—as a planter. Every planter goes into the process hoping to see lives changed with the gospel. Hoping to grow. Some work. Some don't. 

Why is that? 

Well, of course there are spiritual factors at work. Some sow seeds, and others reap harvest. Sometimes God uses the plant in a unique way—that doesn't produce huge numbers of attendees. And, frankly, sometimes the planter had no business planting. It was never really what they were called to do. It looked "exciting" from the outside—all the "cool" people are doing it, but God had a different plan for the planter's life. 

But, speaking specifically about strategic type of reasons a church plant doesn't grow, I've observed a few things. 

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Here are eight reasons a church plant may not grow:

1. You live by someone else's rules. I've seen it so many times. A church plant has the rules of the denomination or an association and they simply don't work where they are located. The plant doesn't contextualize the structure to the culture and community around them. The exact same model won't always work in two different church plants—even across town from each other. Principles are often transferable, but practices aren't necessarily. 

2. You try to be like everyone else. This is similar to number one but has to do more with the planter. The planter has a vision but it's someone else's vision. They have a desire to look just like someone else they admire. Every plant needs it's own vision birth by God in the heart of its own planter. The truth presented should be the same as every other church plant, but the style of deliverance will have some uniqueness to the planter.   

3. You depend too much on outside funding. Rather than developing givers and volunteers from with inside the plant, the plant waits for the outside checks to come. The problem with outside funding is that it eventually disappears. It is rarely sustainable long-term. And, if not careful, the planter becomes dependent on these resources. Obviously there are exceptions. Some plants may never be able to fully fund themselves. But, in my experience, many times this problem exists because the planter has not discipled the people attending in the area of giving. 

4. You build programs over relationships. This is a common problem I've seen too. A church planter enters an area, implements a few programs, and believes that people will naturally acclimate to those programs. And they may for a short time. But in the end programs will not sustain people. Relationships will. 

5. You worry too much about structure. You'll get there. And you need structure. But, especially in the initial days, focus more on loving a community. Then building structure. My advice, is to have some basic structure in place, but not have that structure so rigid or controlling that you can't adapt quickly to the needs of the community. Then spend your greatest energy loving people. 

6. You waited for them to come to you.  You thought "new" would be enough. Build it they will come works in the movies. But, that doesn't even work in established churches anymore, why would it work in church plants? The future attendees in any church are usually outside somewhere waiting to be asked. And, sometimes they don't even know it. It's our job to go find them.

7. You didn't protect yourself and your family. We can't count the number of church plants that never really accomplished all that they could have because the planter wasn't healthy enough to see it through. It could be a moral failure, burnout, or a family that is falling apart under the stress of the plant. (Let me speak specifically into this one. Every planter needs mentoring, discipline and accountability. From the start. Not after the need is discovered.)

8. You held too tightly to your way.  Church plants can recruit entrepreneurial leaders. It's a natural attraction. Given the authority to actually lead this can be one of the most powerful benefits of the church plant. When the planter ignores this and keeps people from feeling empowered, growth is limited to the church planter's abilities. The planter should certainly control—or maybe the word is protect—the theological foundation, but implementation of vision should be shared with others. 

Those are only a few observations. As with the purpose of this blog, they are meant to be helpful. If God has called you to a church plant—plant well. I'm pulling for you.

Ron Edmondson is the senior pastor at Immanuel Baptist Church in Lexington, Kentucky. For the original article, visit ronedmondson.com.

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