Thursday, July 24, 2008

Church Planting Stages

I presented the following at Delta's quarterly Family Meeting to communicate the different phases of a church plant. A pdf download of the information is available here.

Every church plant is different. Contexts are different, people are different, style is different, personalities are different, growth rates are different, and ministry development is different. But one thing that all church plants have in common is the stages that they go through, much like the stages of building a brand new home. Some stages overlap, some stages are shorter, some are longer, and everything is chaotic like an episode of “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition”. All this said to remind us of where Delta is, to encourage us, and to give us some perspective on the massive work that God is doing.


Stage 1: Location Identification and Excavation

God calls a planter and lays a location on his heart. A planter will make plans and preparations to move to the location and then relocate. Much work is done to assess and learn the culture and context. Conversations with people center on the “house” that will be built to find people who are interested in building with the planter.

Stage 2: Foundation

The true foundation of a church plant is not in a particular program, event, meeting, structure, or even people. The true foundation of a church plant is theology – the view of who God is and how God works. Only from a solid theology built on the truth of scripture can things like vision, mission, values and ministry philosophy be determined.

Stage 3: Framing


Once the foundation is set, the framing begins to go up that determines the structure of the home. The framing in a church plant are people, and at the earliest time of a church plant these people are known as the Core Team (or Launch Team). Most people who frame a church plant are leaders (elders & deacons) or workers (members). It is from these people, with the particular gifts & passions that God has formed them with, that determine what ministries and programs develop.

Stage 4: Mechanicals

Mechanicals are things like plumbing, wiring, HVAC, etc…basically, things that make the home function and livable. For a church plant, this would include things like financial systems, assimilation, communication, etc.

Stage 5: Exterior and Interior Finishes

Things like siding, rooms, doors, and the like make up this stage. This would mirror things like the development of ministries, or “expressions” of the church (groups, children & family ministries, affinity groups, etc). It is this stage in which the church becomes uniquely recognizable.

Stage 6: Decoration

As more people “move in” to the house and bring their personalities, gifting, and passions to the home, the expressions of the church become much more refined and specialized. Departments are able to form within expressions – for example, the worship gathering expression is able to more fully develop departs of the band, A/V, hospitality, etc.

Stage 7: Additions

As the family within the home grows and matures, the need for additions becomes necessary. For a church, these will take the form of moving to a larger facility, going multi-site, and aggressively church planting.

End notes:
With every stage, there is a need for a particular type of person to be involved, particular leadership gifts necessary, and the addition of more leaders & workers. Also every stage of growth is dependent on the Master Builder making it happen, as we as Christ-followers remain humble, dependant, and obedient to Christ and His Word. The church belongs to Jesus; not the pastor or the members. It is only the church’s authentic dependence on Jesus that will allow the full power of the Gospel to be unleashed
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7 comments:

Daniel said...

Can I argue with you about #2?
I agree that the foundation is not people, ministries, programs, etc. But I want to discover what you mean about a foundation is theology.

Theology means words about/study of/ God, right? So our foundation is our words about God, our study of God? That does not seem right. What if we discover we are wrong? I know we think we have God and His Word all figured out but, for the sake of argument, what if we don't?

In my thinking this also can cause/has caused disunity among the whole body of Christ. Maybe it can lead to the same fundamentalism that we strive so hard to distance ourselves from today?

Why is our foundation not God Himself? He is revealed to us in His word so we can then know his nature (what he has reveled to us that is) and know if our foundation should be a square, triangle, or a circle.

I guess what I'm saying is in my life I strive to let God be my foundation, my guide.

Maybe I'm misunderstanding your use of the word "theology". IF by theology you mean God and his word then we are in agreement.

Ryan said...

Yes I mean God and his Word.
And what has caused disunity is that people/denoms/etc have submitted themselves to the whole of God's Word.

While I fully agree that we don't know everything about God and we never will (I personally know that i do not have it all figured out)...but He has revealed himself to us through his word so that we can know for sure the things about him that he wanted us to know.

What you explained in your reply would be called your theology :-).

Anonymous said...

Thanks for writing this.

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