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GupBrea 08-10-138 Breaking Tradition to Accomplish
Vision Training Leaders for a Church-Planting Movement Paul R.
Gupta and Sherwood G. Lingenfelter BMH Books,
Winona Lake, IN, 2006, 244 pp., ISBN 0-88469-305-8 |
Paul
(Bobby) Gupta is President and Director of the Hindustan Bible Institute
(HBI) and College in Chennai, India.
He also pastors New Calvary Bible Church and he is the founder of the
Indian National Evangelical Fellowship.
Lingenfelter is Professor and Provost and Sr. Vice President at Fuller
Theological Seminary. Gupta has been a
primary motivating force behind a vision to see the Great Commission
fulfilled in India through saturation church planting. The book tells how God is working to
mobilize the whole church in India for church planting and about how leaders
are being trained to support the movement.
1. God Restores a Vision for HIB An
organization can lose its focus.
Bobby's father was the founder of HBI and after he died, "The
priority to develop godly, mature individuals, skilled in sharing their faith
and proclaiming God's Word to the unreached, took second place to the
development of individuals of knowledge who could serve in the professional
ministries of the church." (15)
The re-established foundation of HBI is pastoral leadership, missions,
and biblical theology. (22) "I
have concluded that formal education is ill suited and cannot effectively
equip evangelists, church planters, and apostolic leaders for
ministry." "The skills…can
be understood and mastered only through practice." (23) 2. A New Paradigm: Non-Formal
Training To produce
evangelists requires students who have a passion for evangelism and church
planting. Training must include much
repetition, immediate application, and the teaching of others what they are
learning. (28-9) Church planting
requires additional skills which are imparted through two years of on-the-job
and field-based training. (34) By 2003
the average was 4.5 churches started per year per missionary. (38) 3. Assessing Impact: Mid-Course
Corrections Progress
requires changing course based on experience.
Church planters had little time to study and interpret Scripture so a
non-formal process of advanced training for biblical and systematic theology was
developed and conducted in 5-day sessions six times a year. (44) "The
only way a church will grow is when the church planter takes time to make
disciples and empower others intentionally to help him in the
process." The four-stage process:
"Come and see," "Follow me," "Learn from me," and "Remain
with me." The INEC
[India National Evangelical Fellowship] has set a goal to develop 2000
pastors in the movement by 2020, and to encourage each pastor to plant five
churches and train five leaders." (50) "One
of the significant strengths of Bobby's leadership of this training and
church-planting movement is his commitment to continuous assessment of
outcomes in reference to their clearly defined 'ends.' They collect and analyze data in each
training cycle to discern how well each individual is performing, and to
discern the impact of the movement." (53, Lingenfelter) 4. Developing Cross-Cultural
Missionaries "Planting
churches outside their own language area proved far more challenging than
anyone imagined." "To meet
this challenge, they had to develop a completely new training program and
recruit more highly educated couples to equip for this task." (57) India has
more than 600,000 villages and more than 4693 people groups. (27) Only 10% have any significant Christian
witness. (59) "To reach these
distinct groups, India must equip and mobilize a large number of
cross-culturally trained missionaries." (59) "Missionaries must be equipped to face
resistance, to accept a slow response, and to overcome the temptation of
losing sight of the targeted group." (59) Without proper skills the church will not be
contextualized and become indigenous.
Further the church planter must not plant churches but enable the
people being discipled to develop the church. (60) "When the missionary becomes the
church planter and not the facilitator of a church-planting movement, he will
attract individuals who are deviants from the local culture and are, most
likely, more comfortable with the missionary's culture." (60) "Listening
to one another has become one of our most powerful training techniques. When they can get out of the ministry
environment, discuss with others objectively, and make decisions with the
counsel of many, it reduces the risk of making cultural blunders and provides
wisdom for effective ministry decisions." (65) "The
very next step is developing leaders in the church. We cannot wait for more materials or
training. If the church is going to be
a Great Commission church, the very next step is to teach people to share
their faith with others and make disciples, using what they have
learned." (73) "The goal is
to empower new disciples to define the vision and mission of their local
church." (73) 5. Equipping Local Churches for
Church Planting "Pastors
fail to glorify God when they do not enable every member to fulfill his or
her ministry of witness." (80) To
disciple all people groups in India requires pastors, apostles, teachers,
evangelists and prophets. "For
God's work in India, the pastor must have a vision for the unreached in his
town and beyond, and mobilize his people to fulfill God's mission for His
church." (82) Apostles, like
Paul, equip others to serve as pastors and teachers. He must "be a visionary leader who
brings evangelists, pastors, and missionaries together to envision God's
purpose and mission for the church…."
He evangelizes and preaches but even more, trains others. (83)
"Among the evangelical churches in India we understand prophets
as those whom God has given the church to keep it from compromise with the
world and sin." "But more
importantly, he leads us to uphold our values, maintain our vision, stay with
our purpose, and properly select the strategies consistent with our
understanding of the Word of God." (87) "The
goal to plant a church in every village or a church for every 1,000 people in
India demands hundreds of thousands of workers." The answer is not more educational
institutions, but rather to mobilize thousands of leaders in local
churches…." (92) "The
transformation of local churches to become Great Commission churches is not a
simple task." "We taught our
people to look at the world through the compassionate eyes of Jesus, and
challenged them to give financially and to be personally committed and
involved. As a result they prayed,
gave, sent, and went. We first
committed to give 50 percent of all we received in offering to missions. But God led us to do more." (94) "By the end of 2004, the church
supported 30 national missionaries, 28 of whom are working in India and two
others outside of India." (95)
"Mission must be the heartbeat of every church." (95) Part II. The Birth of a National
Church-Planting Movement 6.
Understanding the Task Key
Question from Jim Montgomery: "What will India look like when we have
fulfilled the Great Commission in India?" (107) "To disciple the whole nation, we, the
leaders, had to challenge the whole church to take the whole gospel to the
whole nation." (108) "By
1995 the Lord had moved in the churches of India to plant 50,000 new churches
(Johnstone 1991), and to commit to 500,000 more." (118) 7. Refocusing Strategy -
Mobilizing District Leaders The scale
of the task in each state was so enormous that participants could not imagine
how to achieve it. Therefore we
refocused on developing church-planting movements for every district of each
state. (124) We then examined which villages had the
largest number of Christians to mobilize to disciple their district. (125) We needed a John Knox in each district, one
who would say 'give me the district or I die.' (130)
8.
Equipping Leaders - Mobilizing Local Churches "The
magnitude of the task required a wholly new approach to leadership
training." (137) "Our
biggest challenge then lay in 'the mobilization of the national church to do
the work of evangelism…'" (140) "Each
believer has a birthright to participate in fulfilling the Great
Commission." (153) Part III. Challenges to Accomplish the Vision 9.
Regional Contextualized Training Who will
train pastors for 500,000 churches?
HBI envisions ten regional extensions. (159) There are currently four.
(164) "The
centers have eliminated the interruptions in ministry and have improved the
student return rate for the training. Contextualizing the training has
enhanced the impact locally without losing the vision of the movement."
(167) 10. Developing Master Trainers "How
do teachers teach a class in which students speak ten or more different
languages? It requires master trainers
and trainers of trainers. (173) "Our
experience at HBI shows us that we need to provide at least 50 percent of the
support needs of our evangelists and church planters. Our core faculty, the master trainers, all
receive full-time financial support from HBI." (181) "The opportunity and challenge for the
western church is to invest in the equipping of leaders in India, Africa, and
the poorest nations of Asia."
"The Lord is waiting for the rich to partner with the poor to
make disciples of the nations." (182) 11. Partnership for Mission in the
21st Century We must
rethink how western and world Christians may work together. (187) Most of the fastest-growing churches
are in the poorest nations. The
growing edge of mission is strategic partnership, working together to reach
the unreached. (188) "By working
alongside nationals, expatriate missionaries can multiply their impact one
hundred fold." (188) "Equipping
Indians for cross-cultural ministry has proven just as challenging as
equipping westerners. Because western
missionaries have already struggled for two hundred years with these issues,
they have gained knowledge, theoretical and practical skills, and training
methods of immense value for training Indian cross-cultural workers and
teams. Westerners also have extensive
training and experience in the academic and technical aspects of quipping
leaders for a wide range of church and service ministries." (188-89) Bringing
short-term workers "had the unanticipated consequence of helping the
average church member to understand missions in a whole new way." (189) "There
is a synergism in these international partnerships that empowers the ministry
and leads the partners to support, enhance, and love one another, and thus
expand the kingdom of God." (192) Cautions: "Work
must never substitute for a deep relationship together that is focused upon
the Lord Jesus Christ." (200) "The
partner with money will be tempted to use the control of money to dominate
the partner who does not have money." (200) "Differences
about organizational culture may become more important that mission."
(201) "The
urgency of the task may replace the critical priority for relationships, and
when relationships are broken, God refuses to bless the work." (201) 12. Training Leaders for a
Church-Planting Movement The
authors suggest several lessons. Here
are a few: "Mission
is more than proclamation; it is about making disciples!" (206) "The
church is God's most powerful instrument in fulfilling His mission."
(208) "The
local church and pastor are the front line of leadership training."
(209) "We
must develop leaders in the context of their own cultures to meet the need of
thousands of new churches." In regard
to training leaders, it's not about the curriculum, it's about mobilizing and
equipping people and about character and commitment. It requires financial support,
contextualization, and trainers of trainers. Some
challenges facing the church: "If
churches plant more churches, but the people bring little or no
transformation into society, then the mission of making disciples will not
succeed. Leaders must be intentional
in their efforts to make disciples of the lost, inviting people into a
powerfully transforming relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ, and forming
new missional communities that bring spiritual, social, economic, and
political transformation into their villages and towns." (216) "Church
leaders must be vigilant in these times, and through a biblical theology of
suffering prepare their people for a time of possible severe
persecution." (217) |
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