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What church planters want you to know
Shane Pruitt, Southern Baptists of Texas Convention
February 25, 2016
5 MIN READ TIME

What church planters want you to know

What church planters want you to know
Shane Pruitt, Southern Baptists of Texas Convention
February 25, 2016

What is a church planter?

A simple definition of a church planter is one who plants (or starts) a new local church. That leads to the question, “What is a good definition for church?” The word “church” originally comes from the Greek word ekklesia, which is defined as “an assembly” or “called-out ones.” The root meaning of “church” is not that of a building but of a people.

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Shane Pruitt

Beyond just a Greek definition of the word, the New Testament model of the local church is a group of people who confess Jesus as Lord and Savior and live out the Great Commission.

So, to combine these ideas, a church planter would be one called by God to start a new movement of people who commonly trust in Jesus and are faithful disciples of Him.

Who is this kind of person that in the process of church planting often leaves a steady salary and an established ministry for the complete unknown? Is he brave or is he naïve enough to try it? Even for church planters, these are sometimes hard questions to answer.

While not an exhaustive list, here are a few characteristics about church planters that are helpful to know as you pray for and support them in their work:

  1. Planters (at least most of them) are not trying to steal people from your church but to reach a segment of people not hearing and/or responding to the gospel in a particular location. They are focused primarily on those people, not on wooing members of other churches.

  2. Church plants could benefit from you sending people from your church. Like green plants need air and water, every new ministry needs two basic things: resources and people. What a blessing it can be when established churches prayerfully support the work God is doing by intentionally challenging some of their members to go out as laborers into the harvest to live like missionaries.

  3. Planters have put everything on the line – finances, families, pride, fears, everything. One of the most amazing things you can do for a church planter is commit to walk with him through this process. Commit to six months, a year or a lifetime. For a planter to know that someone else has his best interest in mind instills courage to dream God-sized dreams.

  4. Planters desperately need faith and wisdom. When starting a church, literally hundreds of decisions have to be made. Church planters need prayer and counsel to help them make wise decisions and maintain a strong faith in God. In the face of risk, great challenges and, at times, internal opposition, being encouraged to have faith in God to do the work He has called them to is incredibly important.

  5. Planters fear failure but know it’s a very real possibility. Many struggle with coming to grips with failure, as many church plants do not survive past their third year. A key spiritual battle is for the planter to fully and daily give the future and the work to God so that he is free to minister with joy and confidence rather than worry. Even the apostle Paul suffered with these kinds of fearful thoughts when he wrote, “And, apart from other things, there is the daily pressure on me of my anxiety for all the churches” (2 Corinthians 11:28).

  6. Planters need a pastor, too. They desperately need your help, and they know that. While they don’t necessarily want to be constantly critiqued and prodded, they often appreciate fresh eyes, outside perspective and wisdom that comes from experience. Sometimes they’ll ask. Sometimes they won’t. But if you’ll listen well and ask insightful, caring questions, they will be glad to listen when you offer advice and thank you for it.

  7. Planters have a wife and a family. The pioneering nature of church planting can be extremely hard on a church planter’s spouse and children. Often, planters are bivocational, working a job on top of pastoring. Pray for them and challenge them not to sacrifice their families on the altar of ministry. At the beginning, planters are preachers, greeters, chair-stackers, toilet-cleaners and much more. As a result, their families can suffer. Help them to value their wives and pastor their children.

So, who is this man called to plant a church? Likely, he is nothing more than a follower of Jesus, called by God to “go” with nothing more than a vision that can only come from God. But when it comes down to it, he is just someone being obedient to the will of God, and really, that is all that matters.

(EDITOR’S NOTE – Shane Pruitt is director of missions for the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention.)