Archive for Acts 29

Meet Acts 29

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Tim Challies (challies.com) recently started a series on his blog called “Meet the Ministries.”  This past Monday he featured Acts 29 and an interview with Scott Thomas.  Acts 29 is the church planting network of which we are a part and I would encourage you to read this excellent piece.

Below is a an especially compelling quote by Scott regarding being a movement:

“A movement is of God. We cannot control a movement anymore than we can control the wind. But we can fly our kites higher in the wind. We will continue to release more line into the wind through influence and we will subsequently have less control of the outcomes. But that’s where faith and mission collide and we are willing to take that risk for the glory of God and the expansion of His Kingdom.”

Meet the Ministries: Acts 29

Foolish Cross Interview

I recently had the opportunity to do a video interview with Adam Stahr for his blog, Foolish Cross.  Adam asked me questions about 2 Pillars Church, Acts 29, calling, and a few other topics.  I’m excited for Adam to be a part of 2 Pillars Church and I’m excited to see the work that God is doing in and through him.

Check out the video below and check out the Foolish Cross blog as well.

Last A29 Bootcamp of the Year

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The last Acts 29 Bootcamp of the year is set for November 10-11 at Sojourn Community Church in Louisville.  The theme of the conference is Ambition.  Here’s the promo info:

AMBITION. Simply knowing how to plant and lead a church is not enough.  Knowledge must come hand-in-hand with God-given ambition.  The Apostle Paul responded to God’s call to make the gospel known among the Gentiles with zealous determination.  Paul, empowered by the Holy Spirit, made it his ambition to take the gospel to those who did not have it even if it cost him everything.  He proclaimed the gospel, gathered believers into churches, established elders, and discipled believers; and he did all this with zeal and passion.  In the hope of this type of ambition overflowing in the Church, we would like to invite you to the Acts 29 Network Ambition Boot Camp, November 10-11, 2009, which will focus on planting and leading churches with God-given ambition.

If you are interested in going or want to find out more of the details, check out the Ambition webpage for registration details and the stacked-up schedule and speaker list.

2 Pillars Update for Coram Deo

A few weeks back I was down at The Journey here in St. Louis for the Acts 29 Quarterly Regional.  While I was there, I met up with Bob Thune from Coram Deo up in Omaha.  Coram Deo is a Strategic Partner of 2 Pillars Church and as such, they shot this short status update video to take home and share with their people.

We’re grateful to be teamed up with Acts 29 in general and Coram Deo in particular.

(Originally posted on the Coram Deo Blog)

10 Ways to be a Great Church Plant Core Group

Luke Simmons is a fellow Acts 29 church planter who planted Second Mile Church in south Phoenix.  Luke recently posted to his blog notes from a talk he gave on “10 Ways to be a Great Church Plant Core Group.”  As a young church plant ourselves, there is much to glean from Luke’s post which I have re-posted below:

We’ve been so blessed at Second Mile to have such a great core group — we called them the “launch team” — who have done so much to help us start in strength. Tomorrow morning I’m going to be sharing with a group of men from the core group at Christchurch of East Mesa, a new sister church of ours (both of us were launched out of East Valley Bible Church in Gilbert). My contention is that it doesn’t matter how gifted or called the church planter is if his team is not on board in living out the vision of the new work.

So I made a top 10 list to help these guys start the church in a healthy way:

1. Your primary job is to create a culture that you and God will be happy about 10 years from now. This is a difficult thing to do, and part of the goal behind our current Core Values series. Who you are in the early days is who you will be later. Sure, some things change. But the DNA of who you are as a church and what drives you is formed quickly. Even though many core group members eventually move on, their role as culture-creators is essential.

2. Your new pastor and church will eventually disappoint you and let you down. People get into a new church thinking it will be utopia. It isn’t. Even if it is for a while, eventually the glitter rubs off. If you find the perfect church, leave because you will ruin it.

3. Work to create an evangelistic texture to every ministry environment. Evangelism is not just one program or an event. It happens all the time as people feel comfortable inviting friends and welcoming them into the community. Tim Keller’s resource on Evangelism & Church Planting in Postmodern Cities is very helpful here.

4. Always talk as though nobody knows who your heroes are. Christianity has its own little subculture, and different churches have their own set of “heroes” that they admire and talk about. But if you mention “Piper,” “Keller,” “Crowder,” “Luther,” etc. without explanation and assume everyone knows who those people are, it creates insiders and outsiders in a way that isn’t helpful. For us, and for Christchurch, it’s important not to assume people know who “East Valley” (our sending church) or “Tom” (our sending church’s pastor) are. One lady visited a group, kept hearing from an older woman about all the things “Tom” used to say and assumed that he was the lady’s deceased husband! Either way, to people who are far from God or not from your tradition, this is unhelpful and alienating.

5. Be known by what you’re for, not what you’re against. Is the church started from a positive vision for something or as a reaction against something? It makes all the cultural difference in the world.

6. Don’t moralize your personal preferences. Sometimes people are drawn to a new core group because they think it’s an opportunity to “create the church I’d like to attend.” But if those preferences (styles, times, songs, programs, plans) become sacred and moralized (i.e. “this is the right way to do it”), you’ll be disappointed (at best) or divisive (at worst), convinced that everyone else is sinful and bad.

7. Leave your current church on great terms (or go make it right if you didn’t). For a Christian who’s joining the core group of a church plant, this is really important. Don’t leave with baggage from your last church. If you’ve been in a position of leadership or responsibility, communicate with the people you’ve been working with. Don’t disappear out of nowhere, don’t drop the ball, and don’t smear mud on people or things that you didn’t like there. If you’ve already left and you’re guilty of division or gossip or dropping the ball, go apologize, ask for forgiveness, and make it right. Don’t bring your personal junk into this new work and think it won’t negatively influence the new work.

8. Relentlessly involve new people. I’ve realized that, in general, the “80-20 rule” where 20% of people do all the work is not the fault of the 80%. They would like to be involved. But once the 20% know each other and who they can count on to get things done, they stop asking people outside that circle. That’s why it’s huge to constantly be meeting and involving new people.

9. Be ready for change. I call this the “Brett Farve Retirement Principle” or the “for now” principle. One of my mentors says you should end every sentence with “for now” because the only constant thing in a new church is change. We’ve followed this advice and it is very good (for now).

10. Direction, not intention, determines your destination. This line was stolen from Andy Stanley’s “Principle of the Path” and simply means that where you’re headed is where you’re headed, even if you’d like to be headed somewhere else. The implication is that the things you want to be true of you in the future have to be part of the equation now or they will be very difficult to implement to the culture someday.

These are things that we’re still working on and trying to develop, and I’m thankful for the men and women who are striving to make them a reality in our church. It’s made the early days of this effort a sincere joy.

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