Category Archives: Obstacles to North American Church Multiplication

Holy Insatisfaction

Change or die.

Be judged or be ignored.

Things cannot (and will not) stay the way they are.

World Venture (my missions organization) has to stick its neck out. Business as usual is not an option if mission is still a goal. If radical change is not sought, mission will cease.

Radical is not only an option, it is the only option.

Church planting in Québec is difficult. Thousands of neighborhoods across the Province without a “matys evangelion” (Gospel witness). Only a radical movement can change this.

So I’m calling out World Venture.

And I’m calling out myself.

What could this look like?

It looks like something we have never seen. That’s the hard part. We have to invent it ourselves. We can’t rely on existing models.

We are the early church. We are the printing press, the reformation, and the haystack prayer meeting. We are the next unimaginable.

Is the next step safe? No way.

We don’t know how this is going to end up. There is no guarantee of success. It may fall to pieces.

But wouldn’t you rather die part of a movement that matters?

Wouldn’t you rather be part of a spectacular failure rather than a slow insignificant death always asking what could have been?

This is dangerous.

I’m excited.

Let’s go.


We are struggling with discipleship

Liberating people to disciple other people is one of the greatest, if not the greatest challenge in church planting… and in churches, period. Instead of discipling new christians, we tend to draw them in to become a mechanism in the machine.

I’m personally struggling with these questions as we continue with church planting in Québec. Here is how Ed Stetzer puts it:

Ed StetzerSo, they (church planters) sincerely set out with a new formula that will fill the local middle school gymnasium or movie theater with lost people. They have a vision of lost people streaming en masse through the doors on launch Sunday shouting, “I found it!” No wonder that planter will spend the majority of the week getting the production ready. The band, slides, movie clips, coffee and donuts, are all a part of an environment that helps people feel at home. But at the end of the day, the demanding grind of an attractive church can potentially take away from the pursuit of those far from God. Simply put, when you have an attractive plant it can end up solely with an attractional strategy. The end result will be that you “sell” a new and better church (product) to consumers of religious goods and services.

It is possible (and even common) to spend too much energy focused on only one aspect of the church plant: the Sunday morning crowds. There are many solutions, including opening up new lanes to all kinds of church planting, something Warren Bird and I discuss in Viral Churches.

One solution is to personally invest significant time in relationships with lost people and new believers. The sermons may need to be simpler with less “special effects.” The band may need less programmatic direction and more relational investment with you. At the end of the day, the core team and lead planter must personally invest heavily in the harvest. Not only is that great for the moment (for those lost people, etc.) but it creates the culture for the future of every person who connects with your church. The long term future of the new church is in the harvest, not a Disneyfied Sunday morning experience.

I think there are some inherent tensions in Ed’s books and writings (maybe I’ll share them at a later date), but I think he is onto one of the main issues. And effectively responding to this challenge will liberate the québecker church like never before.


Why Church Planting is Difficult on the Island of Montréal

Planting French-speaking churches on the island of Montréal (1.9 million live on the island, 4 million live in the region) is excruciatingly difficult.

Please God, raise up a new generation of young people committed to raising families on the island as they live out the radical love of Jesus Christ for Your glory.
Who will respond to this challenge?


(#8) Obstacle to N. American Church Multiplication: Theological Drift

Drift Toward Theological Bankruptcy

John Piper & CJ Mahaney pray for Matt Chandler

“Church planting movements are usually found among people with robust beliefs, not generic belief systems.” -p. 180

“The way to create a church multiplication movement on this continent is not by deemphasizing belief systems. Rather, it is by enhancing the view that proper doctrine is the work of all the saints, not just a special clergy classification.” -p. 180

“In robust growing movements around the world, people respect and honor Scriptures as God’s Word in conjunction with a spiritual robustness of knowing God. And this knowledge of God, especially the soul-stirring and foot-moving immediacy of it, is something that has incredible effects when it is connected to the empowerment of God’s people to minister and witness.” -p. 180

(Another insight, again, from the book “Viral Churches” by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird)

Click here to see all obstacles to N. American Church Multiplication from the book


(#7) Obstacle to N. American Church Multiplication: Lack of Intentional Reproduction

A Methodist circuit riding preacher from the early 1800's

Lack of Intentional Reproduction:

“Movements occur through small units that are readily reproducible. Those who want to see movements happen need to create simply structures that welcome reproducibility at every level.” -p. 178

“Structures must accommodate movements, not vice versa. Intentionality surveying, testing, and adjusting our structures for reporduction helps to avoid the crushing weight of an organization.”-p. 179

“What we celebrate, we duplicate and replicate. Celebrating multiplication guards us from allowing our existing strucures to become bottlenecks rather than catalysts.” -p. 179

(Another insight, again, from the book “Viral Churches” by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird)

Click here to see all obstacles to N. American Church Multiplication from the book.


(#6) Obstacle to N. American Church Multiplication: Lack of Intentional Evangelism Combined With Social Good

Lack of Intentional Evangelism Combined with Social Good:

“Intentionality is focused on training people to share their faith and holding them accountable to follow through on their training. This doesn’t seem to be happening in America. If it is happening, it occurs most often in outmoded, nonindigenous ways or as a sales pitch for a particular gathering. No current western phenomenon of aggressive person-to-person relational evangelism is apparent.

Instead, many churches are so focused on the biblical mandates to cultivate purity in the church that they have lost their outward focus on redeeming the lost. That is like divorcing Jesus’ words about “repent and believe” from the “do good to others” teaching on the Sermon ont he Mount.” -p. 176

“A multiplying movement will result, with individual lives redeemed by the Gospel combined with the culture being impacted by God’s kingdom.” -p. 177

“Historical spiritual awakenings have always been accompanied by societal transformation.” -p. 176



(Another insight, again, from the book “Viral Churches” by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird)

Click here to see all obstacles to N. American Church Multiplication from the book.


(#5) Obstacle to N. American Church Multiplication: Indigenous Believers Not Functioning As Priests

Indigenous Believers Not Functioning as Priests:

Downtown Montréal

“The disempowerement of the laity simultaneously satisfies and disturbs many pastors. They suffer frustration from not being able to get others to do the work of the ministry and enjoy the sense of satisfaction that comes from ruling the roost. Such codependency is the death knell of movement Christianity.” -p. 174

“When we minimize the priesthood of believers, we lose massive impact for the Gospel.” -p.175

“True reproduction occurs when people are given permission to function as God has gifted and directed” -. 176

(Another insight, again, from the book “Viral Churches” by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird)

Click here to see all obstacles to N. American Church Multiplication from the book.


(#4) Obstacle to N. American Church Multiplication: Labor-Segmented Clergification

I've got nothing against Al, of course. But a life corresponding to 1 Timothy 3 qualifies for eldership, not a degree.

Labor-Segmented Clergification:

“The underlying value: If you are not professional clergy, then you probably can’t help. Unfortunately, this labor segmentation disempowers ordinary people from being involved in church multiplication.” -. 173

(Another insight, again, from the book “Viral Churches” by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird)

Click here to see all obstacles to N. American Church Multiplication from the book.


(#3) Obstacle to N. American Church Multiplication: Ecclesionomics

Ecclesionomics:

“…the normal pathway of a church, as it becomes established, is to hire a pastor and fund a facility. These economic realities often create invisible economic incentives and disincentives to spiritual growth within those churches. Unchecked, the normal response by a church working hard to fund a pastor, facility, and other ministry costs is to see new churches as competition.” -p. 172

(Another insight, again, from the book “Viral Churches” by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird)

Click here to see all obstacles to N. American Church Multiplication from the book.


(#2) Obstacle to N. American Church Multiplication: Cultural Christianity

Cultural Christianity:

“Western Christians have yet to find a biblically faithful way to be a good sort of “in the world” without being “of the world.” -p. 172

“We’re like the colonial British living in India, inviting people to change and be imitators of our culture, rather than a group on mission to engage the outside world with the gospel.” -p. 172

(Another insight, again, from the book “Viral Churches” by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird)

Click here to see all obstacles to N. American Church Multiplication from the book “Viral Churches


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