Give Fred Barnes credit. He knows a good idea when he sees one. Writing for the "
Houses of Worship" column of
The Wall Street Journal,
Barnes tells the story of how he and his wife came to leave The Falls
Church near Washington, DC and then to join another congregation.
Barnes, one of the nation's best-known journalists, makes clear that
he and his wife were not leaving The Falls Church out of a sense of
frustration or disappointment. "We didn't leave in anger. We didn't
have political or theological anxieties. Rather, we left for a new
church because our old church wanted us to," Barnes relates.
The Falls Church wanted Fred and Barbara Barnes to help start a new
congregation. The Falls Church is an evangelical congregation formerly
associated with the Episcopal Church. The congregation left that
denomination in 2005, clearly distancing itself from the liberal
direction of that denomination. Now, The Falls Church intends to start
a new congregation, Christ the King Church.
"The Falls Church has become entrepreneurial as well as
evangelical," Barnes proudly reports. "It's in the church-planting
business."
John Yates, pastor of The Falls Church, says that he had wanted to
start a new congregation as far back as twenty years ago, but his
bishop "wouldn't allow us to discuss it." No longer hindered by that
bishop, The Falls Church is now planting a new congregation near
Alexandria, and Fred and Barbara Barnes are assisting the effort. They
are, he reports, among the older folks in the congregation. Most
attendees are young Washingtonian types. The way Fred Barnes describes
the church, it sounds to be a very energetic and self-consciously
evangelical congregation. The church is no doubt blessed to have the
Barneses as founding members.
In his article, Fred Barnes explained the concept of church planting to the readers of
The Wall Street Journal. In his words:
Church planting is a burgeoning movement among evangelicals who
are conservative in doctrine (but not fundamentalist) and inclusive in
their outreach to nonbelievers and lapsed Christians. It's a growing
missionary field.
There's a theory behind church planting. It rejects the idea of
trying to fill up existing churches before building new ones. Old
churches are often "closed clubs" that don't attract new residents or
young people or "the lost," says the Rev. Johnny Kurcina, an assistant
pastor of The Falls Church. Besides, population increase far exceeds
church growth in America. This is especially true in cities.
The only strange aspect of this article is the sense that church
planting is a new idea. Church planting is indeed a "burgeoning
movement," but it is not new. As a matter of fact, the church planting
movement began in the first century -- and was central to the New
Testament pattern for the church. If this seems new to some, it is
only because they are rediscovering a very old idea.
On the other hand, there is something newly energetic about the
church planting movement. Younger pastors are increasingly attracted
to the vision of starting a new congregation and seeing it established
with solid conviction, deep passion, evangelistic commitment, and
strategic focus. They see the need and are ready to take up the
challenge.
They also understand the New Testament's impulse toward
reproduction. Christians are to reproduce themselves through witness
and evangelism, and churches are to reproduce themselves through
missions and church planting. Growth leads to growth.
As a seminary president I am very aware of the fact that an
unprecedented number of students currently preparing for ministry are
interested in planting a church. There is great gain and potential in
this resurgence of interest. This is an intrepid generation driven by
a bold vision and grounded in deep biblical convictions.
But, even as the church planting movement is a sign of such great
promise, we cannot forget the multiple thousands of existing
congregations that desperately need the leadership and influence of
these young pastors. We need a generation committed to both church
planting and church recovery -- a generation that sees the glory of God
in planting new congregations and in leading existing congregations
into deeper conviction, bolder vision, and greater faithfulness.
The most powerful ideas are rarely new, but these same ideas must be
captured anew again and again. Jesus Christ promised that the very
gates of hell will not prevail against His church. This new generation
of young pastors intends to push back against hell through bold and
visionary ministry. Expect to see the sparks fly.