(McCallum, 2001)
McCallum, D. (2001). Urban home
church planting at Xenos. In Xenos. Retrieved January 22, 2002 from the World Wide Web:
http://www.xenos.org/classes/leadership/urbanhousechurchplanting.htm
Urban Home Church Planting at Xenos
Dennis McCallum
Concept
Xenos sees itself as an underground indigenous house
church-planting movement.
- Underground means that our growth is primarily
through neighborhood groups, not through large worship services or seekers
meetings. It also implies the leaders of home churches are all lay people
(i.e. they are not professionals, but "tentmakers"). Even when staffers lead
home groups, they receive no compensation for that part of their ministry. A
church planting movement is a grassroots movement, not a staff-driven
movement.
- Indigenous, means the leadership for the home
churches has to come from within the home churches themselves via a process of
personal discipleship. Xenos leaders would ask even experienced leaders from
other churches to spend time in a home church becoming one of the trusted
leaders in that group before sending them out with their own group.
- House Church-planting movement, means the
development of such groups, if carried out properly, should lead to
multiplication, or exponential, growth, unlike plans where a central office
arranges groups from lists of applicants and leaders. In a church planting
movement, the impetus for planting churches comes from within each group.
Church planting also implies that the groups are relatively self-sufficient
for ministry, as opposed to groups that are heavily dependent on program-heavy
worship services or the central leadership of the church.
In addition to the self-replicating house churches, Xenos
fields a large central leadership and programs directed by paid staff. We also
have a main campus, or facility for headquarters. The reasons for the staff and
programs are:
- The early church seems to have had unified elderships in
each city, but multiple house churches. For instance, the church in Jerusalem
had thousands attending, but they all related to the single eldership of the
apostles, while also meeting "from house to house." (Compare Acts 2:41; 42;
46) In Ephesus, the group must have numbered in the hundreds or (more likely)
the thousands, judging from the size of the pile of books and charms they
burned (Acts 19:19), yet they had a single eldership. (Acts 20:17) These
examples suggest the existence of both self-replicating house churches and a
central leadership group. We also see the early church's ability to form
special ministry teams or programs, like collections for the poor in Judea or
mission teams to go out to other cities. (Acts. 11:28-30, 13:1-3, 2 Cor. 8,9)
Specialized teams or programs are appropriate for specialized ministries.
- We think house churches can draw strength from each other
by banding together for these special cooperative, joint ministry projects and
programs. These could include:
- Large meetings where home churches can come
together to share in the special gifting some strong teachers, preachers and
evangelists offer;
- Missions-sending efforts which usually cost too
much for any home church to fund on it's own;
- Ministry to the poor—home churches are usually
weak or completely ineffective at developing meaningful community
development ministries;
- Ministries to children and students—home churches
tend to gravitate to a given age group and find it difficult to diversify
into different age groups. Special thrusts to reach students are usually
more effective when program-based. Even groups that started as student
groups tend to "grow up" and lose their connection to student ministry;
- Counseling and support ministries that require
more expertise than most home churches can deliver;
- Sharing expertise in home church ministry—many
home churches are very low on experience, so it makes sense to have some of
the most experienced home church leaders available for consultation and
advice. These usually have to be paid staff because the time demands of such
availability would be too great for tent makers;
- Sharing Theological Expertise—Theologians and
scholars follow a special calling that is impractical for most home church
leaders. It makes sense to arrange for clusters of home churches to share
access to theologically trained equippers who can take people's learning to
the next level. By banning together, home churches can afford to have their
own staff theologians and classes.
Clearly, combining a cell-based and program-based approach
seems promising, but contains dangers as well. Organizational theorists have
noticed the program-based portion of the church tends to attract personnel and
resources away from the church-planting movement. The eldership has to be
vigilant for unnecessary programmatic growth while holding all programs to the
same standard—that they are facilitating the church-planting movement, not
restricting it. At Xenos, we agree the cell-based portion of the church must
predominate over the program-based portion.
Elements of Successful Urban Home Church Planting at Xenos
A church planting movement will not just happen. Only if we
clearly mark our goal and strive toward it with careful planning, can we expect
God to deliver results. Some of the important elements of success in our opinion
are:
- Commitment to an
ecclesiology compatible with New Testament practice
- Unless we believe strongly in the concept of body life as described in key
New Testament passages like 1 Corinthians 12 and 14, Eph. 4, 1 Peter 3, Col.
2:19 and the book of Acts, we will never achieve such a movement. American
churches, in particular, will likely follow successive spiritual fads that
sweep the church in America every other year, resulting in an divergence of
effort into unfruitful endeavors. In particular, we believe the church must
reject, in part or in whole, revivalism. Under revivalism, the key to
spirituality is revival—an event where the Spirit of God catches the church up
in a spiritual experience of rejuvenation and catharsis that converts the
lost, heals the sick and delivers sinners. We believe revivals happen, even
though this is not a New Testament emphasis. New Testament Christians are
never instructed how to bring about a revival. Further, the ideology that
places revival as the key to success in the church is destructive to the
notion of a church planting movement. People look to such supernatural events
for a shortcut. This expectation drains energy from regular daily evangelism,
living for God and discipleship, which seem mundane and unremarkable by
comparison. Church multiplication takes daily effort, often exerted in very
non-showy quiet ways, such as building up fellow believers and engaging in
friendship evangelism as a way of life. Consistency is essential. If a
spiritual revival comes, we should accept it with joy. But waiting for the
Spirit to "fall" runs counter to the lifestyle needed for successful church
planting.
- A commitment to the concept and practice of personal
discipleship - A house church is not based on any amazing music groups or
drama acts. At the center of each fruitful home church are a group of sincere,
spiritually minded, loving people. It is our leaders and workers who draw
people into a home church. Likewise, to plant another home church, nothing
will do but the duplication of a similar group of leaders and workers for the
new group. Home church planting doesn't depend on any secret structural or
programmatic approaches. It depends on discipleship. This process of moving
individuals from unbelief, self-centeredness, sin-dependency and ignorance to
a place of spiritual maturity takes years of patient investment, training,
friendship and sacrifice. Recent studies of American Christianity have
demonstrated the church in America talks about personal discipleship, but does
not practice it. In healthy home churches most of the members should either be
trying to disciple others or be under discipleship by others. We need clear
goals for
discipleship. We should also avoid
any
conception of discipleship that implies control or authoritarian theories.
- A team approach - At Xenos, home churches are led
by teams, not individuals. Likewise, the average home church has a "second
line" of workers. These are relatively well-trained and motivated members who
back up the leaders and are themselves in preparation for leading their own
home church. When planting a new home church then, we have to look at the
group as a team made up of four to six leaders and another four to eight
second-line workers. Under a team theory, the team is greater than the sum of
its parts. In other words, we need to look at how a group works together, and
the balance of different gifting, personalities, maturity levels and ministry
development. If we know of specific weaknesses in key leaders, these might be
offset by strengths in others on their team. Part of the process of planting a
home church is to work with members of the new team to help them understand
their contribution to the team. Young Christians who may doubt themselves when
it comes to leading a group by themselves, may feel a good level of confidence
about their particular contribution to a team. This approach also suggests we
should try to define the outline of the new team as soon as possible after the
previous church plant.
- A commitment to organic church growth. We believe
God grows his church as he wills, and we are to be "coworkers with God" (1 Cor.
3:9) seeking to cooperate with what he is doing. If we believe the Spirit
needs to lead the church, one implication is that God brings about
relationships and ministries that tend to order the church a certain way. (1 Cor.
12:18 "He has placed the members in the body just as he wills.") Based on this
notion, leaders of an existing home church will look for ways to plant a new
home church naturally, not artificially. By natural, we mean they will seek to
keep young Christians together with those to whom they minister and with whom
they have invested relationally. An artificial plant would be one in which
leaders are established by seniority over people they did not win or disciple,
and with whom they do not have established relationships. (This is a problem
with centrally organized small group systems that create entire groups through
a bureau or geographically. Referring people to existing groups would be a
different proposition). If our younger Christian workers see themselves
building a team that will eventually go out with them to lead a home church,
we can anticipate a high level of motivation. If we shuffle people around, we
can expect people to feel "jerked around" and disgruntled. Planting a new
church will not be viewed as a victorious event beginning a new adventure, but
as the occasion of loss and heartache. To avoid this, groups need to
plan well in
advance, watching what God is doing and reacting accordingly.
- A strong prayer ministry - At Xenos, we have seen
that successful church planting is associated with dedication to prayer. Our
best church planting teams have regular times of prayer together for the
mission of the church. A good prayer meeting should be based on a prayer list
prepared in advance by one of the members. Praying for non-Christian friends
by name as well as key goals in the home church will turn back the attacks of
the evil one and unleash the power of God into the church.
- A mission-oriented self-concept - We are familiar
with cases in other churches as well as in Xenos where a home church reached
the point where they were full and needed to plant a new group, only to have
the members and even the leaders refuse. The refusal to plant a new church was
usually based mainly on the fact that members didn't want to upset a situation
they saw as very happy and wholesome. In our view, such groups are far from
wholesome. They are desperately sick! The members have come to see the home
church as something that exists for their well-being and happiness, not for
accomplishing the will of God. A well-led home church sees itself as a team
setting out to accomplish a mission, even at the expense of acute personal
suffering. If the planting ethic or an outward, missional focus is taught and
modeled from the beginning of a home church, people come to the time of church
planting with excitement and joy that their mission has been successful. This
joy may possibly be combined with tears about the friendships that will
undergo change in the future, but never to the point where members would even
consider not going forward. Members in a successful church-planting movement
see themselves as participants in a vast, spiritual war. Both concern for the
lost and excitement over the fact that we are going to win drive them forward
to a position of self-sacrificial love.
- A willingness to fail - Church planting should be
done carefully and every group planted should have good prospects for success,
based on the best estimates of the leadership of that group and the central
leadership of the church. However, approaches that seek to
eliminate the
possibility of failure become so conservative and cautious they cannot
generate the excitement and motivation needed to drive a movement. God wants
those to serve him who are willing either to fail or succeed and be faithful
in either case. (1 Cor. 4:2) Only leaders and workers who are egocentric will
refuse to risk the perils of failure in ministry. At the same time, the
church's leadership need to develop a program for failed groups that will
recover as many people as possible and nurture them back to readiness to try
again.
- Centralized support for equipping - While not
really necessary, it makes sense for the larger church to band together and
form a program to assist home churches in equipping their people. This kind of
program usually includes classes taught by leaders with some kind of
expertise. Although home churches could equip their own people, such a program
will speed up the process and relieve home group leaders from part of their
burden. We do not believe such a program will work apart from personal
discipleship in the home church. At Xenos, our
class system adds a
minimum of approximately 230 classroom hours of instruction to the leadership
training program in the home church.
- An actual plan for planting - If everything else is
in place and a home church is growing to capacity, leaders need to decide how
they will plant. There are several possibilities here, and
material has
been written on how to decide the planting method.
Constraints on Church Planting
While the notion of church multiplication is common in
contemporary ecclesiological and missiological theory, successful examples of
church planting movements are hard to document, especially in the U.S. Why is
such a promising and biblical concept so often unsuccessful? There are probably
many answers to this question, but in our view, most failures fall into the a
few basic categories:
- Superficiality - American church leaders tend to
interpret the biblical picture of church planting in very superficial and
non-demanding ways. Leadership in a home church is seen as something that must
not significantly interfere with typical bourgeois American middle-class
living. American culture already places heavy time demands on the modern
family that may interfere with an adequate family life. Most American families
are convinced they have to:
- work long hours;
- be available for any travel demands their careers may
dictate;
- belong to sports leagues;
- keep their houses and yards immaculate;
- clean and care for their late-model cars;
- shop for the latest styles;
- maintain their hobbies;
- keep up with several weekly TV serials;
- take their kids to every sports league and activity
available at school;
If we add attendance at one or two church meetings per
week, who has time to do any more?
When we compare American living to the early church, we see a striking
contrast. In the early church they were "day by day" having meals together and
meeting from house to house. (Acts 2:46) This expression suggests Christian
community took up a very large part of people's lives. Deep community like
that described in the New Testament requires significant time investment into
relationships. We can't drive up to the McDonald's window and demand community
be handed through the window! How can the "one another" passages in the New
Testament be viewed as realistic apart from heavy time investment? Likewise,
the training needed to become competent as Christian leaders takes a great
deal of time investment. Becoming a man or woman of God ready to lead a flock
for him will certainly interfere in a massive way with materialistic and
entertainment pursuits that so dominate the schedules of adult Americans
today. Like the rich young ruler, many American church members must turn away
in sadness at the New Testament picture of radical Christian living.
The result of the divergence between the radical commitment of the New
Testament church and today's petty bourgeois approach, where only our leftover
minutes are devoted to spiritual growth and community is superficiality.
Church leaders try to patch together some form of community outwardly like
that in the New Testament, but without the devotion and investment assumed in
the New Testament. They feel they don't dare call on their people for their
time (or, they realize whether they call on them for time doesn't matter,
because they aren't going to get it anyway). But simply introducing a
structure involving home groups to a church is not going to produce New
Testament-style fellowship, let alone a church-planting movement. Although
such groups may superficially resemble New Testament house churches, the heart
of the matter is missing—men and women of God sold out to each other and the
non-Christian world in the love of Christ!
Superficial groups may substitute artificial exercises for real relational
closeness. Members may be called on to share something embarrassing, or huddle
in prayer where they have to reveal a key need in their lives. People who
aren't really close at all, try to act like they are close. Likewise,
superficial groups may substitute a scripted approach to ministry for real
ministry. Leaders are told what to say and do during a meeting and during
personal encounters because they don't understand the Bible or other people
well enough to respond to situations creatively and spontaneously. People who
are seeing each other in a personal setting for the only time that week, or
even the only time in two weeks cannot be expected to know each other's needs
or how to meet those needs. The demands of personal discipleship virtually
always are too high for today's superficial approaches to home group ministry
(unless personal discipleship is also redefined in superficial terms). But
without effective, deep discipleship we see little prospect of multiplication,
either of disciples or of home churches.
- Impatience - We believe the
American church is enamored with spiritual shortcuts. For instance, we want
shortcuts to spiritual health and deliverance from sin through a variety of
pathways involving miracles or esoteric insights. Plodding, steady spiritual
growth seems too unmiraculous for quick-fix Americans. Likewise, when it comes
to evangelism and church growth, Americans are fascinated by approaches that
provide quick growth. Our media resounds with stories about churches that went
from nothing to thousands in a few years or even a few months. And we admit
God does work this way in supernatural revival, and he has worked that way at
Xenos. But is explosive growth in a short time really the norm for Christian
ministry? Is this something we should seek or desire? We think not. We believe
building quality and depth in a self-replicating, church-planting movement
will eventually result in big numbers of people being reached, in fact bigger
numbers than revivalism can ever hope to achieve. But leaders and members have
to take the long view if they are to successfully pursue a house-church
planting strategy.
Many impatient churches aren't even willing to pursue home fellowship in any
meaningful way, but focus almost exclusively on public shows or musical
programs that promise more rapid growth. Such groups are unwilling to invest
in any pursuit that takes manpower or resources away from the worship
services.
In the field of home groups, the Yonngi Cho experience in Korea may have
caused problems here for the American church. Cho's formula involves doubling
and planting small groups every six months. This model is so aggressive it
could begin with one six-person small group, and win every adult on earth in
13 years! We think that's a bit impatient, and it should also be clear that
something isn't working in the model. We fear the peril of planting such
rapidly reproducing groups is unavoidable shallowness in practice. "Ministry"
becomes oversimplified to mean nothing more than praying God will "fix" or
heal those with complicated problems. Our reading of the Bible suggests to the
contrary, people have to grow out of their problems through a gradual process
including struggle, learning, slow growth—and prayer, too. In extreme cases,
members of groups with oversimplified ministry models may even pretend to be
changed and keep their hurts or sins secret in the future.
Our own ministry has suffered in the past as a result of impatience.
Overheating the growth of the church can have catastrophic results as groups
are duplicated in numbers, but steadily decline in depth, quality and
maturity. Eventually people begin to lose confidence in the whole project
because they sense their lives are as messed up as ever and that their
relationships are shallow and transitory. An overheated impatient church
planting ministry may eventually become unstable, like a house of cards in
danger of complete collapse. In the ensuing chaos, the leadership of the
church may turn away from house-church planting completely, the membership may
become very demoralized, or a division of the church could result.
One thing that always suffers in an impatient atmosphere is personal
discipleship. Experience suggests most new Christians need to undergo a
process of discipleship lasting some years before they can be expected to lead
a group or disciple others. But impatient leaders can't stand the long haul
implied in a discipleship approach.
Learning also suffers in impatient churches. Justified theologically, the
ignorance of members is excused and even glorified over against "bookworms"
and "ivory-tower" theologians who are "do-nothings." Unfortunately, under this
super-spiritual approach, New Testament admonitions to "study to show yourself
a workman approved by God, having no need to be ashamed, and handling
accurately the word of truth" become nonsensical. Neither are we able to
"preach the word," as Paul urges Timothy (2 Tim. 2:15; 4:2). Impatient
churches usually shortcut to formulaic teaching that holds no one's interest
and cannot offer the answers we need to cope with the falsehood of the world
system. The result of an ignorance-based, church-planting approach is a steady
reduction of quality in churches planted. Such weak and confused churches tend
to collapse over time.
- Inward Focus - We have talked with quite a few
churches who started a home group ministry, only to see the groups turn inward
and lose evangelistic effectiveness. Such groups are mainly interested in
blessing each other and have lost the excitement of evangelism. This pathology
is desperate because it is extremely hard to turn around. If anything, we
believe that groups who turn inward are in even worse shape than impatient or
superficial groups.
- We detail elsewhere
11 other reasons
why such church planting movements have not sprung up in America. But church
planting movements do spring up in other cultures! This is not a pipe dream or
a historical curiosity from the first century.