Home Outreach Leaders Articles for Outreach & Missions 5 Ways to Be a Church-Planting Church Plant

5 Ways to Be a Church-Planting Church Plant

Every church ought to be involved in the work of church planting. If our churches are connected to the Vine, if we are seeking to be Acts 1:8 churches, we will see the kind of fruit the risen Christ bore out in the book of Acts. Hashtag church planting.

It is good and right for us to crave and pray for an Acts 2 culture in our churches. And why not long for the whole book? Bold evangelism, faithful suffering, revival, mission to unreached peoples and church planting.

Ed Stetzer provides a helpful piece for established churches getting involved in church planting. I don’t intend to add to Ed’s work. And I highly recommend Brian Howard’s article at The Gospel Coalition where he writes out a six-year plan on how to become a church-planting church.

But what can a current church plant do, from day one, to be a church-planting church plant? I want to provide five simple steps that you can take today.

It may seem daunting to think about planting future churches when you are still trying to plant one church. Being a part of Jesus’ mission to plant churches to the ends of the earth will look different for all of us; but Jesus wants our churches to plant churches. The church of Christ has always been a church-planting church; we didn’t stay a single megachurch in Jerusalem. Involvement will differ from church to church, but it must not be absent.

Here are five ways a church plant can be a church-planting church plant.

1. Talk About Being a Church-Planting Church

Let the same vision that’s driving your church plant drive you to help plant other churches. Train men and send them out. Cast vision for funding church plants. Put it in your DNA. Whatever you are dreaming and white-boarding for your plant, remember to ask: “What does Jesus want for his church?” That is far more significant than all of our doodling. Have church planting in your DNA, culture, vision, plans and prayers from the outset. It isn’t arrogant, inherently, to talk this way—it’s biblical. This is what it means to be a Great Commission church.

2. Save for a Future Church Plant

As you craft budgets and ministries, make a budget for future church planting. It is wise to save for a future facility as people begin to give on Sundays, but don’t short-change their tithes and offerings. Steward those sacrificial gifts for the future. Before you begin to save for a future facility, begin to save for a future church plant. Have a Kingdom mind in your Excel spreadsheets. Think beyond your plant. Think generationally.

3. Adopt a Church Planter in Another Country

Jesus wants our churches to be “For the City” or “In the Farm Community for the Farm Community.” And the Lord also wants us to be “For the Nations.” That’s non-negotiable. As a new church plant, you may not be able to send folks to Zimbabwe, but you could adopt a church planter in Zimbabwe. Setup a relationship of prayer, fellowship and financial support with a church planter in another country. In doing so, you are creating a culture committed to the Nations and church planting.