4 Essentials for Church Planters

With the advent of apps, the United States Armed Forces have started selling their survival manuals. They figure you might find yourself in dire straits and need to trap, kill and skin a goat using only a twig, or that you might simply want to train like the best.

Church plants are reportedly 70 percent more likely to reach people from an unchurched background. Established churches admit that church planters may have the inside track on outreach. Church planters know they do.

That doesn’t mean that established churches don’t reach the lost. What it means is that established churches can and should glean from the frontline approach that most planters employ. Wilderness survivors credit their narrow escape from death to a mind shift from the expectation of rescue, to survival. Church plants are naturally adapted for survival. They’ve had to possess a missional mindset out of necessity. Planters know there’s no cavalry riding over the hill. No air support. No rescue team. They are the rescue team coming.

Consider this article an app taken from the field manual of frontline church planting that will identify some necessary survival mindsets that might just save your church.

1. The Terrain Has Shifted

A survivalist must constantly survey the terrain.

Church planters recognize the ground has shifted. They’ve informed Toto we’re not in Kansas anymore. This is hostile territory; a vast spiritual wilderness that will eat unwitting churches alive.

In the Star Wars saga opening, the sprawling text tells us that the Empire has won, the Jedi Order has crumbled and the golden age of the republic is finished. Similarly culture has moved on. This is the hour for rebel outposts, underground guerilla warfare tactics and the reawakening of the Jedi ways of the first century. This is no longer the golden age of the ’80s when people poured into box churches to glut themselves on programs. Those who can’t make the jump to light speed are going to get smashed in the cultural asteroid field. Like the hair bands at the crossroads of the post-Nirvana music revolution of the ’90s, churches who can’t learn to play a different tune will no longer be able to fill stadiums.

Peyton Jones
Peyton Joneshttps://peytonjones.ninja/

Peyton Jones is content director of Exponential and an author, church planter, leadership trainer, podcaster and writer. He also founded New Breed Church Planting Network which continues to train front-line first century style apostolic church planters.

The Timeless Whisper’s Been Here All Along

To a world on edge, defensive, and hurting, Christians have a responsibility to not only listen to God but also to speak Good News in a way that can actually be heard.

How to Leverage Existing Ministries for Outreach

“You could launch new outreach ministries without removing any existing ministries, increasing your budget or adding staff.”

Doing Unto Others

Davis maintains that ministry shouldn’t be about serving at church on a Sunday morning, because those people are already saved. Instead, it should be about doing ministry on the mission field and talking to people who are unchurched.