Of Elephants and Rabbits - Church Multiplication

8 posts / 0 new
Last post
pastorjoek's picture

 

A few years ago I attended a West Coast Regional Ministry Summit which got me thinking about church multiplication and ways to get it done.  The illustration was shared by our guide for the discussion comparing elephants and rabbits in the area of multiplication.  The scenario was take two elephants (male and female) place them good close proximity to each other and come back a year later.  At that time how many elephants will there be?  The answer is 3 (the two you left a year ago and one more).  Now take two rabbits (male and female), place them in close proximity and leave them there for a year.  When you come back how many will there be?  The answer was more than 200,000!!!  Then our guide asked us to consider the way we go about church planting today and made the analogy that we handle church multiplication more like elephants than rabbits.

While I appreciate this scenario there are also more ideas to draw from it.  First, the average lifespan of elephants is much greater than that of rabbits.  So if a church begins and ends within a few years having reached more than a few people with the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ; people who did not know Him before, then I think that should be okay.  We should not expect rabbits to outlast elephants.  Second, this means the way we think about church would have to change in order to see church multiplication take place.  

I have a friend named John Wagenveld who works with a mission organization called "Multiplication Network".  They work primarily to resource church leaders and churches in Latin America and China toward church multiplication movements.  John has said there are 3 obstacles to church multiplication - 1) The need for a seminary trained pastor in each congregation, 2) The need for a paid pastor in each congregation, and 3) The need for a building owned and used primarily if not exclusively by the congregation.  These three factors cause us to reproduce more like elephants than rabbits in our church planting strategies.  But does it have to be this way? 

Some have suggested that our current church order does not permit this type of model, and I would agree if we are speaking only about "established" congregations (what you might call elephants).  However, if we are talking about groups of believers gathering together for Bible study, worship, and prayer even as they go out into the places God has uniquely placed them to serve as Christ's representatives praying for their family, friends, and neighbors and looking for opportunities to share their hope in Jesus as they live authentically as people who know they are saved by grace through faith in Jesus, (what we might call rabbits) then I think they can fit under the umbrella of "established" congregations without ever seeking to become or even feeling the need to become organized themselves.  Then when their purpose has been served they can end the group and start new ones with new believers and non-believers in their different circles of influence.  

I recently read a quote from the book Missional Church: "A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America" edited by Darrel Guder.  The quote was from David Bosch from South Africa and was made in 1991 (20 years ago): 

The churches shaped by the Reformation were left with a view of the church

that was not directly intended by the Reformers, but nevertheless resulted from the way that they spoke about the church.  Those churches came to conceive the church as 'a place where certain things happen'.  The Reformers emphasized as the 'marks of the true church' that such a church exists wherever the gospel is rightly preached, the sacraments rightly administered, and (they sometimes added) church

discipline exercised.  In their time, these emphases may have been profoundly missional since they asserted the authority of the Bible for the church's life and proclamation as well as the importance of making that proclamation accessible to all people.  But over time, these 'marks' narrowed the church's definition of itself toward 'a place where' idea.  This understanding was not so much articulated as presumed.  It was never officially stated in a formal creed but was so ingrained in the churches' practice that it became dominant in the churches' self-understanding."  (p. 79-80)

 

At another recent meeting of West Coast Regional Ministry Team I raised the suggestion that church plants could exist as emerging groups without ever feeling the need to become organized with their own building and paid staff.  Yet when I raised the question the answer I received was the marks of the true church from Belgic Confession Article 29 “pure preaching of the gospel, pure administration of the sacraments, and practice church discipline”.  It seems there is an assumption even today among new church developers that these marks require “a place where” in order to be properly administered.   Yet as Bosch suggests this need not be so.  

 

So I am curious what do you think about this?  Am I nuts?  Is this crazy?  Why can’t this model of church multiplication, which flourishes in developing countries, not flourish in North America?  

 

Finally, I want to end with this definition of “missional” church, which I read in a book by Ed Stetzer (Comeback Churches: How 300 Churches Turned Around and Yours Can Too): “Missional churches do what missionaries do, regardless of the context ... study and learn language, become part of culture, proclaim the Good News, be the presence of Christ, and contextualize bibilcal life and church for that culture.”  (p. 4)  This is what I mean when I say “missional church”.  It is God’s people; Christ’s body; doing the work of the Lord everywhere.

John Zylstra's picture

You are not nuts.   You are not crazy.   Some seminary trained preachers preach the pure word of God, but some don't.  Some established churches practices church discipline but some don't.   Some administer sacraments purely, but some don't.   A missional group may be as much "church" as any of these established churches, and may have the "marks" of the church, or may make similar mistakes or different mistakes than established churches.  Preach the word in season, and out of season (indoors, and outdoors, and without doors...).  

pastorjoek's picture

Thanks John.  It is good to know at least one guy thinks I am not nuts.  I recently shared the Bosch quote with another friend of mine and he said Bosch is drawing too much of a distinction between the church as institution and the church as organism.  Yet I see Bosch challenging the model of what the church as institution has become (i.e. "a place where") rather than distinguishing between the two.  I believe Bosch sees the church as institution (with creeds, confessions, sacraments, corporate worship, and preaching) and the church as organism are one in the same and ought to operate that way.  What do you think?

John Zylstra's picture

They are obviously not the same.   Unless you think only one denomination, or one local church is 'the church".    The church is the people of God, the body of Christ.    The institutional is a particular manifestation of that in a particular time and place.  I think the principles should be the same, but sometimes there is more discipline for example between church groups than within church groups.   Sometimes the confessions are professed more by one church, but practiced more by another church that does not have them down on paper.   Sometimes the best corporate worship is biblically practiced in a non-building setting, where people(two or three prophets) take turns in speaking, where each one shares a word, or a hymn or spiritual song, or a prayer.  

A certificate of incorporation is not a bad thing, but if we think the certificate is the most important part of authenticity or legitimacy, then we certainly have it wrong.

pastorjoek's picture

So what are the implications of this for church multiplication?  Should we be concerned with planting institutional CRC's or should we be more concerned with bringing new believers to a greater knowledge of the love and grace given in Jesus?  This is where my dilemma comes in.  I am a committed member of the CRCNA as a minister of the Word in that same denomination, but my greatest concern is for the advancement of Christ's Kingdom to the furtherance of God's glory.           Are these two separate issues?  

John Zylstra's picture

First, we need to trust God.  I know that sounds like a stupid oversimplification, but it is so important, that it can never be forgotten nor neglected.   It is God's kingdom, not ours, and we seek God's glory, not our own (personal nor denominational).    So, the issue of bringing God's word is not separate from denomination, but always it is first God's word, then perhaps denomination.   The more we focus on denomination, the less the denomination will benefit.  

We do not plant churches just so we can say we have more churches, do we?  do we?  Aren't we planting churches so that no lambs and sheep will be lost?   So that God's word speaks more clearly?   So that is what we should focus on first. 

In a "planting" situation, we plant God's word.   To bring in the lost.   Then we use God's word to encourage the saved.   Bringing new believers to a greater knowledge of love and grace in Jesus is good, necessary.   But in essence, it is the same purpose for old believers;  a greater knowledge of love and grace in Christ.   Just at a different stage.   And we know how quickly and urgently new believers capture this knowledge, often not taking it for granted, nor being complacent like "old" believers.  

The new church plant should be a natural consequence of the mission effort.   And I certainly do not agree with the nonsense of having a group that has been worshipping together, being called an emerging church for ten or twenty years.   That is simply absurd, hierarchical, autocratic, and egotistical.   The normal situation would be perhaps about three years, maybe less.   This sounds scary sometimes.   But only if you put on unreasonable expectations.   And remember, we need to trust the Lord. 

pastorjoek's picture

Thanks again John.  I really resonate with what you are saying.  Planting God's word is the key.  Paul says, "I planted, Apollos watered, and God made it grow."  I also believe reaching people who don't know Jesus with the truth about Jesus must be our focus for planting God's word.  We still must help God's people grow in the grace and knowledge of Jesus, but I think the best way they can grow is by participating in God's mission with Him.  That's what's at the heart of it for me.  I recently read the book "The Sacrament of Evangelism" by Jerry Root and Stan Guthrie; an excellent book and I highly recommend it.  In the book they  suggest that the sacraments (baptism and the Lord's Supper) are about experiencing a greater awareness of God's presence.  If that is true, then they claim we are never more aware of God's presence than when we are participating in mission with Him.  They contend God is already at work in the lives of our family, friends, and neighbors so we need to develop the ability to discern what God is already doing and join Him in it.  That's really good stuff!

Ben Van Arragon's picture

Joe,

If you're interested in a church that has structured itself according to a central site/satellites/home church model, check out The Meeting House:

http://themeetinghouse.ca/

Post new comment

Login using social networks

You may login with either your assigned username or your e-mail address.
The password field is case sensitive. Don't remember your password? Click here to request a new one.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <strike> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <br> <p>
  • You may quote other posts using [quote] tags.

More information about formatting options

By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.
Post new comment


Comment Policy

Subscribe to:

X [Close]

Just click to subscribe to email notifications for this:
- Post (i.e. all new comments in this discussion)
- Author (i.e. anything posted by this person)
- Forum (i.e. all new discussions in this forum)
- Network (i.e. weekly summary of new articles and blogs)

You can choose to get notified instantly when something is posted or on a daily/weekly basis.

Notifications can be adjusted or removed any time. To do so, go to the "Notifications" tab of your Network profile or use the link at the bottom of the emails.



Add a Comment

Latest Comments

Get The Network weekly email!

Don‘t miss the latest blogs, articles, and news from The Network.

Get our weekly recap, delivered right to your inbox every Tuesday.

We will not share your e-mail address with anyone for any reason.