I’ve been a Christian for more than 40 years, and I’ve never seen the interest in church planting I see today. Here’s my assessment of why this interest is so strong.
- Church planting seems easier than church revitalization. That assumption may or may not be correct, but more than one church planter has accepted the adage that “It’s easier to give birth to a baby than it is to raise the dead.”
- Potential church planters have seen too much difficulty in established churches. Granted, there are healthy established churches; however, if the potential church planter has never seen one, he gravitates toward planting.
- Young leaders have found some of their heroes in church planters. That’s much easier to do today, when planters can follow other church leaders via the Internet. Now, they can listen to sermons, podcasts, and conferences that connect them with successful church planters.
- Many seminary churches have church planting internships. I knew no church that had church planting internships when I was a seminary student 25 years ago. Today, I know several such churches just in Wake Forest (and in other seminary cities) that encourage and assist potential planters.
- Leaders have recognized the simple need for more churches. Estimates state that 259 million North Americans are not believers, and more than 80 percent of our churches are plateaued or declining. Even if every congregation in North America were healthy, we would still need more churches.
- Young leaders want more intimate fellowship. The younger generations want Christianity that is a life-on-life, eyeball-to-eyeball faith that assumes accountability and responsibility for each other. It is at least their perception that that’s harder to find in a larger established church.
- Church planters are typically good at networking. Few young leaders want to lead on their own, facing battles without warriors by their side. Church planters tend to build strong networks among themselves, and that built-in support system is attractive to young leaders.
- Bi-vocationalism is more accepted. While full-time service in the church is still the norm, intentional bi-vocationalism is increasingly accepted as a legitimate calling. That change is removing a stigma for church planters.
- Young leaders want to go to pioneer areas. Sometimes those areas are overseas, but leaders are learning that much of North America is also unreached – especially in urban settings. Doing missions by planting churches on this continent is now an option.
- God’s up to something. Even without these other reasons listed here, it’s hard to deny that God is doing something in raising up young leaders who desperately want to reach lost people and build biblically healthy churches. I don’t want to miss what God is doing.
What would you add to this list?
I believe #3 is big. I contemplated planting because some of the guys I admired most were planters who ended up growing good sized churches. But I’m simply not a start it from scratch guy, so I had to come back to reality and assess who God really made me to be and how that aligns with my call to ministry. Seems like a fair list.
Thanks for the helpful honesty, Patrick.
I believe #2 holds a lot of truth but If planters aren’t careful the new church they plant will bring its difficulty.
I like genuine feeling of intimacy with God planting brings. Perhaps we should do as intentional small groups do. Plant n then multiply!
Thanks, Russell.
Great thoughts. I might add one. Entrepreneurship is much more celebrated now than ever before. Maybe to a fault. We may have fewer entrepreneurs and church planters if E-Myth was required reading prior to the fact 🙂 The comment left above by Patrick is very unusual and very self-aware. Bravo Patrick.
Thanks, Jason, for your thoughts.