Archive for the ‘Networks’ Category

Calvin Rejects Privatized Faith and Promotes Vulnerability in Church Planting Networks :)

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

“In the church, as Calvin conceived it, every man helped every other man. If in Christ Jesus all believers are united, then a private believer is a contradiction in terms. Not only are the blessings and the virtues given for the common good, but the faults and the weaknesses concern the other members of the body. There was to be no hypocrisy of pretending to be other than a sinner, no dissembling or cloaking of sins; but, just as God is completely honest with men, and men must be honest with God, so also believer with believer must be courageously honest and open. The quarterly meeting was a little day of judgement when, flattery and convention laid aside, each man saw himself through the eyes of his fellows and, if he were wise, harboured no resentment but knew the uniquely joyful release of voluntary humiliation.”[1]


[1] Herman J. Selderhuis, John Calvin: A Pilgrim’s Life [Downers Grove: InterVarsity, 2009], 30.

Steve Childers At Exponential Conference This Week

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Steve will be speaking this week at the national Exponential Conference (“Largest gathering of Church Planters on the Planet”) in Orlando, FL. On Monday, April 18 (TODAY!) he will be speaking at the afternoon Pre-Conference Workshop called “Best Practices in Church Planting Forum” hosted by author and missiologist, Dr. Ed Stetzer. Here’s the link.

On Thursday morning, April 22, Steve will be leading a workshop during the main conference called “How to Start & Strengthen a Regional Church Planting Network.”

Please pray for Steve and the Exponential Conference this week!

My Top Ten Mistakes In Ministry–That I Can Share Publicly: Mistake # 2

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

“If I must boast, I will boast of the things that show my weakness.” 2 Corinthians 11:30 (ESV)

Man Sorry for MistakesThis is the third in a series of blog posts called, “My Top Ten Mistakes in Ministry (That I Can Share Publicly)” After many years of ministry experience as a church planter, pastor and seminary professor I think I’ve finally learned that one of the best kept secrets to surviving well in the ministry is to stop making the same old mistakes that others (like me) have been making for decades. Instead, let’s all start making some brand new, bold, innovative and creative mistakes!

We began this series with an introduction called, “Ladies First” in which veteran church planter wife, Shari Thomas, addressed the tough topic, What I Wish I Had Known About Church Plantingfrom the perspective of the church planter’s/pastor’s spouse. Last time we looked at Mistake #1 called, “Failing to Understand the Importance of How I Define Ministry Success.” This time we’ll take a brief look at Mistake #2 (these are in no intentional order) I wish someone had the wisdom and guts to tell me before I began church planting/pastoral ministry more than 30 years ago.

Mistake #2: Managing My Time And Not My Life

clock-headIn his classic article, “Tyranny of the Urgent”, Charles Hummel writes, “‘Have you ever wished for a thirty-hour day?’ Surely this extra time would relieve the tremendous pressure under which we live. Our lives leave a trail of unfinished tasks. Unanswered emails, unvisited friends, unread books and articles, etc., haunt quiet moments when we stop to evaluate. We desperately need relief.

But would a thirty-hour day really solve the problem? Wouldn’t we soon be just as frustrated as we are now with our twenty-four allotment? “A mother’s work is never done”, and neither is that of . . . any pastor. Nor will the passage of time help us catch up. Children grow in number and age to require more of our time. Greater experience and success in life and ministry normally bring more exacting assignments. So we find ourselves working more and enjoying it less.”

Our problem is often, unknowingly, allowing the urgent things in life to crowd out the truly important things. We all live in a constant tension between the urgent and the important.

The Gap Between the Compass and the Clock

There is an ongoing contrast between two things that continually influence our lives: the clock and the compass. Stephen Covey, in his book, First Things First, describes the clock as representing such things as our commitments, appointments,compassschedules, goals, activities; it’s how we use and manage our time. The compass represents our core life values, our conscience, our sense of personal vision and life mission; it’s what we believe is truly important in life and how we manage life.

The struggle comes when we experience a gap between the compass and the clock–when what we actually do with our time doesn’t contribute to what is truly most important in our life. In an effort to close the gap between the compass and the clock, many of us naturally turn to the field of “personal time management.” Traditional time management theory suggests that by doing things more efficiently, you’ll eventually gain control of your life and that increased control will bring personal peace and fulfillment.

Although there is much to gain from such things as planning, prioritizing and goal setting, the bottom line is that mere increased efficiency normally does not lessen the gap between the compass and the clock. In fact, I was a living example of someone who had learned how to get a lot more work done in less time, but what I was actually doing with my time was not at all what truly matters to me the most. This is why I wish someone had asked questions and said things to me like:

“How many pastors on their deathbed wish they had spent more time at the church?”

“The worst enemy of the best is often the good.”

The Answer is Not Learning to Get More Done in Less Time

The gap between what is deeply important to you (your compass) and the way you spend your time (your clock) cannot be closedTime_Management_Techniquesby simply learning to do more things more efficiently. The answer is not found in learning to get more things done in less time. In fact, increasing your time management efficiency can actually make things worse! What is needed is a new way of thinking—learning how to manage your life and not just your time, and learning how to shift your focus away from things that are urgent to the things that are trulyimportant.

Often, unless we take intentional, proactive steps to fight against it, we’ll inevitably become slaves to the “tyranny of the urgent”.  It’s been said that, “Anything less than a conscious commitment to the important is an unconscious commitment to the unimportant.”

In Isaiah 30:15 we read, “For thus the Lord God, the Holy One of Israel, has said, ‘In repentance and rest you shall be saved, In quietness and trust is your strength.’” At the root of our frantic propensity to overwork is the sin of pride—an exalted sense of our importance to the Kingdom of God. We secretly and arrogantly think things like: “If I dare to stop, the Kingdom of God just might not make it and my ministry would surely self-destruct!”

Some of us need to show our faith in God not by working harder but by working less!

Some of us have been hitting it too hard for too long, and we desperately need extended time to rest. For some it might be 6 months for others it might be 6 weeks, or maybe 6 days. For some of us the most spiritual thing we could do now is to go home and go to bed and sleep!

A seasoned missionary in Peru came up to me at a conference once to tell me that in all his years in the ministry, he has learned that there are two types of missionaries in Peru—those who take siestas (naps) every day and those who leave the field. He said, “If you don’t learn to take your siesta on your first term, you normally will not be back for your second term.”

Not Just Starting Well . . . But Finishing Well

It’s one thing to start ministry well. It’s another to finish well. We must remember (and keep reminding each other) that the ministry is not a sprint, but it’s a cross-country event. So we must pace ourselves. We must build into our lives a Sabbath Rhythm of work and rest, work and rest—daily, weekly, quarterly, yearly.

The Scriptures tell us, “When Jesus saw the crowd around him, he instructed his disciples to cross to the other side of the lake” (Matt 8:18). Jesus knew when it was time for him and his followers to pull away from the pressing demands of ministry. My prayer for you and for me is that we will too, before it’s too late.

Steve Childers is the President & CEO of Global Church Advancement, an inter-denominational ministry that provides Steve-Childers-Bio-Photochurch planting training, consultations, and resources for church planters, pastors and missionaries throughout the world. Steve has trained Christian leaders from more than 50 countries (curriculum in five major global languages) representing over 200 denominations and mission agencies. Steve is also an author, Professor of Practical Theology (since 1995) and the Director of the Doctoral program atReformed Theological Seminary, in Orlando, Florida, where he teaches church planting, missions, evangelism and spiritual formation.

To learn more about GCA:

Drew Goodmanson – Workshop – GCA Conference

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

I was asked to live-blog a seminar called The Internet & The Sovereignty of God by Drew Goodmanson. I found the seminar fascinating. Goodmanson is a pastor of Kaleo Church but he is also very involved in the Internet industry.

He opened by noting that this is an issue of contextualization. An increasing percentage of our culture is going on-line. Today’s teenager has never known a world without ready Internet access. Most teenagers have iPODs. About 2/3 of them have cell phones. Social networking occurs not on e-mail but on tools like Myspace.

Avatar-based persistent social worlds. Older kids: Habbo Hotel, Gaia Online & Second Life. Younger kids: Webkinz, Whyville, Club Penguin. (Millions of dollars are exchanged annually in “second lives.”)

Three Audiences for churches to consider with regard to the Internet.

1. Connecting with members

Increasingly, members will check their church’s website several times a week, or more. They’ll look for schedule info. They might want to post comments about the sermon.

2. Gather other Christians (like ones who move into the area)

The vast majority of those who visit churches do so because they viewed the website first. The reality is, for many, a crummy website will discourage them from attending.

3. Reaching non-Christians

70% of Americans go online. 93% of American teens aged 12-17 use the Internet. Americans aged 13-24 spend more time on-line than in front of the TV. 64% of wired Americans have pursued spiritual activity on-line. 45% of Internet users say they have made huge decisions via the Internet.

Web 2.0 — what is it?

Mass collaboration
The blogosphere is doubling in size every 5.5 months. About 120,000 blogs are created every day.
YouTube — traffic has doubled in the last year.
Facebook — 65 billion page views per month (wow! That’s more than my blog!)
Twitter — massive spike in activity in the last 18 months

45% of teens post content on the Internet. There are many dangers. Things like “World of Warcraft” can be extremely addictive. Churches have lost people to such virtual worlds.

Church Website Trends

* Brochure websites. Links to PDF newsletters. (Stage 1)
* Dynamic websites. Content management system. Allowed frequent updates. (Stage 2)
* Interactive websites. Multiple administrators. Blogs incorporated. Syndication and API integration into other sites (e.g., iTunes, Sermon Cloud). (Introduces issue of management.) (Stage 3 — NOW)

Many churches have a communication director, and they may delegate some comment moderation to certain individuals.

Things to watch for when designing a church website

1. Please do not use a splash or entry page for your website. (Will not perform well in search engines.)
2. Ensure your site works cross-browser (Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari, etc.)
3. Don’t create graphic directions without direction link.
4. Don’t have a site with complex URLs. (will be hard to lead people to it)
5. Don’t create a flash only or frames site.
6. Don’t have your site built by a hobbyist in the congregation or use a generic cms template.
7. Don’t use Christianese language. Will not be understood and received well.
8. Don’t have outdated content, coming soon or missing content. (E.g., no service times)
9. Don’t use annoying flashing icons and the like.
10. Don’t seek to make money from your church’s website.

Let your website be an artistic reflection of who you are. Kaleo Church displays testimonies, and is uploading video. Kaleo rebuilds their website every two years. A site like theirs probably costs about $10,000. And about $100/month for upkeep.

Another way to think about the shift is that in pre-Internet days, churches would toss out marketing/advertising literature and hope that it would arrest people’s attention. But today, individuals are going online and saying things like, “I’m lonely.” “I’m interested in God.” And churches can be prepared to give targeted responses. For example, people frequently search on-line for pre-marital counseling. So if a church is advertising their pre-marital classes on-line, they will likely get some non-Christian visitors.

When you design a church website, it is important that it has a high Google rank. 93% of people do not go beyond the first three hits on Google. 53% of people do not go beyond the first page. 51% of people click on the top result. 16% click on the second link. (Another way to get clicks is to pay for a Google ad. Depending on how popular your geographic market is, you might pay anywhere from $0.05 to $0.25 per click.)

So how do you get a high Google rank?

1. Get relevant links. Links from relevant sites (not just any links).
2. Great content. This will encourage people to link to your site.
3. Keyword focus
4. Themed site, site structure

SEO Book by Aaron Wall — they used to provide service to non-profits for free. It helps build web visibility.

Reach people when they need the church the most. Most families have some major issue every three years. A marriage, divorce, financial turmoil. Examples: Marriage, Death, Illness, Moves, Transition. Kaleo offers pre-marital counseling. They get many non-Christians who come and later come to Christ. Another church does hikes, and gets over 50% non-church attenders. The Rock (a church near Iowa State University) uses Facebook to connect with people.

In terms of connecting members, one church allows people reading through the Bible to leave comments about the passage being read. Other sites allow login to password-protected areas where conversations can be extended. (This works really well for gathering people of a certain flavor — e.g., artists.)

Need to remember that the goal is not to stay online. The goal is to get into life-changing relationships.

Global Church Advancement (GCA) Conference – Day 2

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

This morning I’ve been assigned to live-blog two Advanced-Track workshops. I should explain that there are three tracks of sessions represented here at the Global Church Advancement Church Planting Workshop.

Foundations Track – Establishing & strengthening vision, calling, mission, philosophy, values, styles, models, strategies and plans. This 15-session, 4.5 day training is “required” for those who have not yet gone to the field, and is highly recommended for anyone in need of revitalizing their church by revisiting all the “Foundations.”

Essentials Track – Developing & growing ministries of prayer, worship, preaching, discipleship, groups, outreach, mercy, leadership and more. This 15-session, 4.5 day training equips the church planter to grow and strengthen the church from its embryonic or infancy stage to a mature, multiplying stage.

Advanced Workshops – 28 specialized workshops covering a host of vital topics, ranging from a half-day to a full-day

At 9 AM I’ll be going to a session by Martin Ban called Gospel & Cultural Engagement. Then at 10:45 AM I’ll be at a session by Tom Nebel called “Landmines: Mistakes to Avoid, Part 2.” I will not have attended part 1, so I’ll do my best.

Martin Ban – has 18 years of church planting and senior pastor experience. Martin is a graduate of Austin College and Westminster Theological Seminary. He has planted churches in the San Francisco Bay Area and Santa Fe, New Mexico. He is currently the Senior Pastor of Christ Church Santa Fe PCA. Martin and his wife Mari Anne have 5 children (ages 20 through 7) and have been married for 23 years. They also have a dumb bloodhound named Ocho.

Tom Nebel – Director of Worldwide Church Multiplication for the Baptist Conference (BGC) and Associate Director of TeAmerica, the church planting movement of the BGC. He has participated in the planting of dozens of churches in Wisconsin and hundreds of churches across the United States. Tom is co-author (with Steve Ogne) of Empowering Leaders through Coaching, The Coach’s Logbook, Big Dreams in Small Places: Church Planting in Smaller Communities. His most recent book (with co-author Gary Rohrmayer) is Church Planting Landmines: Mistakes to Avoid in Years 2-10. Tom is a graduate of Denver Seminary and Fuller Theological Seminary. Tom and Lori make their home in Madison, Wisconsin, along with their two sons, Andrew and Matthew.

Stay tuned.

GCA Conference – I

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

I arrived in Orlando, FL a few hours ago to live-blog the Global Church Advancement Conference.  Since there are a number of parallel sessions throughout the week, the conference organizers have asked me to post on specific sessions.  Tomorrow I’ll be posting on the opening session by Steve Childers on the importance of grasping God’s vision for His kingdom as a church planter.  Later I’ll post on a session by Scotty Smith called Learning to Lead with Gospel Astonishment.   And in the evening I’ll post on a session by Drew Goodsmanson called The Internet & The Sovereignty of God.   Here’s a bit about each of the speakers. 

Steve Childers is the President of Global Church Advancement, a professor of Practical Theology (since 1995) and the director of the doctoral program at Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando, where he teaches church planting, missions, evangelism and spiritual formation. Steve is a trainer, consultant, network director for the Central Florida Network & author of many training manuals including The Church Planter Training Manual. Steve and his wife Becky live in Orlando, Florida, and have three daughters.

Scotty Smith has planted two thriving churches, including Christ  Community Church, where he is currently Pastor for Preaching, Teaching and Worship in Franklin, TN.  He serves as an adjunct professor at Covenant Theological Seminary and he also teaches at RTS, Orlando.  He co-authored books with Steven Curtis Chapman (Speechless) and with Michael Card (Unveiled Hope), and authored the books Objects of His Affection, Reign of Grace and Restoring Broken Things.  He is also a featured pastor on Modern Parables, giving an outstanding explanation of the parable of the prodigal sons.  (I previously introduced Modern Parables.)

Drew Goodmanson co-founded Kaleo Church in San Diego, part of the Acts 29 Network.  Kaleo is a church planting movement that has planted both multi-site and daughter churches.  Drew serves on the Board of Advisors for the Center for Church Communication (CFCC).  He is an author of Voices of the Virtual World, a book on the growing influence of technology on the global Christian church.  Drew is President of Monk Development, an internet development company that serves over 600 churches and ministries.  Drew lives in San Diego, CA with his wife, Heather and two sons, Gideon & Roman.