Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Two Upcoming Events for Equipping Planters

Find your place in urban church planting! Want to rediscover the birthplace of the RCA on Manhattan in New York City? Scholarships of $250 are available to send potential planters and parenting church leaders to the September 21-23, 2007, church planting track in New York City. Find yourself immersed in a celebration of the Fulton Street revival that brought thousands to Christ in 1857. (An RCA church leader was instrumental in sparking the revival.) Keynote speakers are Tim Keller of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York and Mark Batterson of Washington, D.C. Contact Tim Vink (tvink@rca.org) or Susan Ketcham (sketcham@rca.org) right away to participate as a group!

Thrive

Calling all church planters! RCA Church Multiplication is offering training for church planters, their spouses, coaches, and even church planting teams! The last training event in Orlando, Florida, was hugely successful with over twice the number of church planters and church plants than the previous one in 2006. This has led us to provide a strategic training event every six months so that we can keep up with the growing number of church plants being started all over the country. If you are in the early stages of your church plant (six weeks to 12 months) and "on the field" of your mission, we want you to plan to attend our next Thrive! church planter training in Grand Rapids, Michigan, October 29–November 2, 2007. Six highly-motivated and experienced trainers will equip you through practical steps in church planting so that you won't need to go out and "reinvent the wheel," but instead you can build on the foundations laid by others. This training also includes a focused time for all those who will work with the Hispanic community, a rapidly growing area of the RCA family. Check out our Thrive! brochure. For more information, please contact Susan Ketcham at sketcham@rca.org or (800) 968-3943, ext. 274.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

"Thrive!" Event Equips Church Planting Teams

When church planting pastors and leaders signed up for "Thrive!," an RCA planter "boot camp" in Orlando, Florida, February 26–March 2, they didn't know they'd spend a morning scrubbing toilets.

As part of a session on evangelism, the event's 75 participants divided up into four groups and headed into the community.

"Some went to start conversations with people they didn't know in the shopping mall," says Randy Weener, who organized "Thrive!" and serves as pastor of Spring Valley Community Church in Allendale, Michigan. "The second group went to a local apartment complex and handed out little cards reminding them that the time change was coming. The third group went to the local university and handed out rolls of Mentos to students. A fourth group went to local businesses, retail stores, and offices and cleaned toilets for them."

Weener says the group made 500 "touch points" with the gospel during the morning, from brief encounters to 15-minute conversations. The point was to meet legitimate needs, start conversations, and see where those conversations went.

Thrive

The morning was an exercise in needs-oriented evangelism, one of Natural Church Development's eight characteristics of healthy, growing churches. NCD is a church health tool used across the denomination, and "Thrive!" was organized around its eight characteristics. "The goal is to have a strong, balanced foundation for ministry," says Tim Vink, coordinator of multiplication for the RCA.

"Thrive!" is a week of intense training. Church planters met with mentors and coaches throughout the week, participated in workshops, and worked on ministry action plans (MAPs) for their congregation. "The teams get a big poster board and mini sticky notes to plan the next six to 18 months of ministry," Vink says. "They fold up the MAP and take it home, and then go into action mode. We try to get them on a mountaintop with vision and wisdom, and they go back home to the valley and live it out."

Weener says the event also developed "networks of camaraderie" and featured plenty of opportunity for swapping ideas.