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The Need to Plant! – Part 1

Posted by Nathan on December 08, 2009
Church Planting, Great Commission

plant1

A few weeks ago my friend Aaron Coalson asked me to write a post on Church Planting for his blog. Aaron has become a great friend. God has been and will continue to use him for great things in this life! The following post is part one of his request. I hope you enjoy! Check out Aaron’s blog when you get a chance!

Church Planting is my passion! Next year, Lord willing, my family and I will relocate to Raleigh, NC, to plant a church. We are excited about this new endeavor and cannot wait to see how God will work in our lives.

Why plant a church? Tim Keller, pastor/planter of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City, states it best,

“The vigorous, continual planting of new congregations is the single most crucial strategy for 1) the numerical growth of the Body of Christ in any city, and 2) the continual corporate renewal and revival of the existing churches in a city. Nothing else–not crusades, outreach programs, para-church ministries, growing mega-churches, congregational consulting, nor church renewal processes–will have the consistent impact of dynamic, extensive church planting.” (Source)

C. Peter Wagner in his book, Church Planting for a Greater Harvest, says, “The most effective evangelistic methodology under heaven is planting new churches.” If we are going to reach America with the Gospel of Christ, it must involve church planting. The church is the mechanism God has chosen to carry out this task. Church planting is rooted in the Great Commission (Matt. 28:19-20) and its extent is given in Acts 1:8. The early church accomplished the Great Commission through church planting. It is the most effective means of baptizing and discipling new believers. That was true in the first century and remains true to this day.

On my personal journey, while in seminary at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, I read a book entitled The Church of Irresistible Influence. The author, Robert Lewis, posed the question, “If your church were to close it’s doors tomorrow, would your community even notice you left?” Unfortunately, I believe many of our churches in America have become so inward focused that they have neglected their communities. They say they are interested in the lost, but they are not intentional about engaging them. Ron Sylvia, in his book Starting New Churches on Purpose, says, “Today’s churches must move outside the walls of the building and invade the community.” Unlike the Field of Dreams, we cannot have a “if we build it, they will come” mentality. We must take the church to the lost! Church planting is a great way to be intentional about engaging communities. It is my desire to plant a church that actively engages its community. Remember the statement, “People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.”

I challenge you to read through the book of Acts thinking specifically in the context of church planting. In doing so, you will see the book in a whole new light. It is the history of the church’s expansion, and it is the history of a church planting movement. I believe with all my heart that we can see a church planting movement in North America. If more churches catch the vision, and more Christians get on their knees praying for a movement of God, we can, in this generation, see the Gospel sweep through the United States and the world! My prayer is that God would use me in some small way in that movement.

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