Archive for May, 2009

Facebook and Twitter

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Social networking is a huge part of life for me right now at this stage of church planting.  As such, I’ve finally succumbed.  I’m no longer simply a blog snob.  If you want to be my friend (to be read with thick sarcasm), check me out on Facebook.  If you want a little bit more of a glimpse into my life, you can follow me on Twitter.twitter_logo

Two Views on the Unreached in Lincoln

While I was in Lincoln a few weeks back I had the opportunity to hang out with a couple of guys who serve in two different ministry contexts there in the city.  The first was a guy in his 50s who does Christian counseling.  The second was the 20s and  30s pastor (in his late 20s or early 30s himself) at a mega church that meets out towards the edge of town.  In meeting with these two guys I posed basically the same question to them and got two radically different answers.

The question was along the lines of: What is the general mentality of the unreached in Lincoln?  In other words, if 2 Pillars Church is going to be on mission to reach the unreached for Christ, what should that look like?

The older gentlemen response was that “people just don’t think.”  His experience has been that people he encounters simply go through life without ever thinking that much about eternal matters.  The result that he sees is people that show up in his office who have had a pretty normal life, never had too much trouble, and then wham-o — tragedy strikes, suffering sets in and they’ve got nothing in their personal, moral arsenal to deal with it.  They blow up.  They’ve been blind-sided and they don’t have a clue what to do with the pieces of their life that are crumbling to the ground.  His perspective was that people simply don’t stop to think about God until they’re desperate.  His solution was that we need to get people to *think* before their lives blow up.

The younger guy’s response, on the contrary, was that the unreached actually do have questions but that they simply see the church as not having the answers.  His experience has been that people really *do think* and they really do contemplate God and things eternal, but that they simply are put off by churches that seem to have all the right answers to all the wrong questions.  Likewise he sees an attitude among young unbelievers that loses respect for churches that don’t engage them where they are with the questions they have (think, “come to my church and I’ll show you all the answers” vs. “meet me at the pub and we’ll talk about it”).

Two perspectives.

Which is right?

The answer is both.  There are certainly people that don’t slow down to contemplate; don’t stop while alive to think about life after death; and don’t really think there is any use for God in their life until the crap hits the fan and they’ve got no where else to turn.  But the other camp is out there too.  People (and young people in particular) are also asking questions and seeking answers.  They long to be a part of something bigger than themselves and they have notions that it has something to do with God.  The problem is they’ve got lots of questions.  What do they do with the exclusive claims of Christianity?  Why does God let bad things happen to good people?  How would I go about getting myself right before the Creator of the Universe if he is so holy?  Why does there appear to be so much disunity in the Church if Jesus told us to love one another?  If I were to become a Christian, what would I have to give up?

You see, it’s both.  Both groups exist and both have to be ministered too.  My own take is that people start off in their 20s and 30s with a lot of questions and when they don’t get answered they end up giving up on those questions on heading their own way.  Having given up on God, they ignore him the rest of their life until that life blows up.

But what if it didn’t have to go down that way?  What if as a church we met both of these groups where they are?  What if instead of showing up with all the right answers to all the wrong questions, we shut up and listened to the questions people actually have and struggle with?  What if we entered into their lives and walked the path with them a little?  What if instead of requiring them to come to church to get their answers, we went to them to hear their questions?  Would there be fewer people that show up in the counseling office in their 40s with their life blown to pieces?

Jesus said, “Everyone then who hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house on the rock. And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house, but it did not fall, because it had been founded on the rock. And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand. And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell, and great was the fall of it.”

When people are in the storm being washed about because they built their house on sand, let’s help them find solid ground.  But when people are on the beach, looking around for a tan and a place to build – let’s hear them out and let’s show them how the rock of Christ is the foundation they need.  Let’s let them ask their hard questions and let’s enter their lives to see where those questions are coming from.  Let’s not just throw books at them and scurry them on their way, but let’s do life with them and help them to see that the Gospel is the answer to every question.

The Gospel in All of Life

I had to privilege of preaching at The Refuge down in St. Charles yesterday.  I preached on the “Gospel in All of Life” and preached from various passages in Romans.  We didn’t get the audio recorded, so the wordle below will have to do (click on it for a bigger image).  It was an interesting day at their church plant.  Their big trailer that they keep at the big storage yard had a big lock that got changed which meant a stripped down service with no sound equipment.  They really did a great job though with an acoustic guitar and a banjo.

Wordle: The Gospel in All of Life

Church Plant Fundraising: Logistics [Preparation]

You may think you’re all set to fundraise but before you do, here are some logistical questions to think through.

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  1. After you meet with someone, how are you going to follow-up?
  2. How are you going to keep track of who you’ve met with, what transpired from that meeting (a commitment to give, a commitment to pray, a commitment to consider giving, or a respectful decline), who you still need to meet with, etc?
  3. Where will people send their money when they give?
  4. How will you communicate regularly with your supporters?
  5. How will you keep tabs on someone falling behind their monthly commitment?
  6. Can you pull off electronic giving?
  7. How will you log and keep track of what supporters have given?
  8. How will you handle providing tax receipts to supporters?
  9. Do you need 501c3 status?

All of these questions need to be answered before you push the button.  To some extent you’re pushing a 500 pound boulder up a hill and are nearing the crest.  Once you get to the crest and nudge it over the edge, you’ve got to be ready to run with this baby as it barrels down the other side.

Here’s how we’ve gone about addressing the questions above.

Get Hooked Up with a Mother Church
If you don’t have a sending church, you have a disadvantage.  We don’t have a sending church per se, but we do have strategic partners.  My advice is to find a church near the area you’ll be planting that can help you with some of the logistics of fundraising.  If they’re an existing church, you can likely fundraise under them and take advantage of their 501c3 status (#9 above), their giving record-keeping system and tax receipt tracking (#7 and #8) and possibly even their system for pulling off electronic giving (#6).  One of our strategic partners is located in Omaha which is an hour from Lincoln.  Per their generosity, we’ve been able to fundraise under them which means that when people give, they write out the check to the strategic partner (designate it to us via the memo line) and send it to them (#3).  The ministry assistant at our partner church then handles the receiving of all of the giving, the logging of the contributions, and simply generates a report for me to review.  That report is then used to keep tabs on who is giving and when (#5).  Having a partnering church to help in this way has saved me a lot of time, a lot of energy, a lot of headaches, and has been a huge blessing.

Have a Good System of Your Own
Assuming that you’ve got a good list of contacts, add some columns to that spreadsheet for keeping track of status.  Personally, I tried to add categories of status so that I could easily sort by status to see who I’ve contacted, who I’ve met with, who I need to follow up with, etc (#2).

Following-Up and Communicating
Assuming that you will be meeting face-to-face with most of your contacts, you’ll need to be sure to follow-up with them (#1).  Roughly half of all of the commitments that we’ve received have taken place via the follow-up call.  For me, I used my categorized status list to keep track of when I met with someone so that I could easily flag myself to follow-up with them 2-3 weeks after we met.  Open and regular communication is key here too.  You don’t want to meet with someone, get their commitment, and sail off into the sunset to plant your church.  What you’re doing is assembling a team of prayer and financial supporters.  If you get their commitment and turn and run the other direction, you’re using God’s people rather than allowing them to be a part of what He’s doing through you.

In the next post, I’ll lay out how I architected my overall process for fundraising from initial contact to closure.  Included in that, I’ll describe how I regularly communicate with supporters (#4).

Upcoming Preaching Dates

For anyone interested, I’ve got my preaching schedule set for the summer.  Some upcoming dates:

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