Notes for the Journey

Notes for the Journey

David Limiero  //  Husband, Father, Follower of Jesus, Church Planter, Encourager of Church Planters, Serious Fan of Good Coffee and Good Books.

Mar 12 / 11:01am

»Church Planting Missiology -- Pastoral or Apostolic

JD Payne has started an interesting series of articles on the missiology used in North American church planting. His question: are we primarily coming from a pastoral missiology, or an apostolic one?

I'm one of three church planting missionaries in my family. My brother Steve works with new churches among the Oromo people in Ethiopia with CMF International, and my wife's twin sister and her husband are planting church in rural Paraguay with SIM. Our strategy when we planted our church in Bakersfield in 2003 was definitely pastoral, and theirs was definitely apostolic.

Since then, we've shared some interesting conversations, and I've come to agree with JD Payne that we need to rethink not just our strategy, but the missiology from which that strategy flows. That's led me to an ongoing dialogue with colleagues who are planting churches internationally.

As part of that dialogue, I'm helping coordinate a workshop track on church planting at the National Missionary Convention, and am working with Doug Lucas of Team Expansion on casting a vision for 1000 new church plants in the US and 1000 church planting movements worldwide between now and 2020.

Meanwhile, our church in Bakersfield has participated with Stadia in the launching of two other congregations -- one Anglo and one Latino -- as well as starting a small missional community in a low-income apartment complex a few miles from our Sunday morning campus. I'm still wrestling with the issues, but that hasn't stopped us from planting churches while we wrestle!

If you're a church planter, how would you describe your own missiology -- pastoral or apostolic? What thoughts do you have on how this has worked in your context?

 

2 comments

Mar 12, 2010
 said...
Apostolic. Some planting pastors stick around too long to the detriment of the 'plant' & as result of unrealistic expectations from the Body who want a 'Pastor', which many 'planters are not. We tend to be 'Pioneers' not 'Settlers' & as such are not necessarily gifted pastorally. We need to encourage Planters to embrace their unique ability & apostolic calling & do what God wants them to do not what man expects them to do as a result of outdated cultural mores.

And remember.......'Don't take care, Take Risks' :-)

Mar 12, 2010
David Limiero said...

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