We believe God receives glory through breathing new life into churches.
Our desire is a movement of gospel-centered, Spirit-filled restoration in churches across the Houston metro, regaining a fresh vision for the Great Commission and demonstrating that God provides new life in Christ.
Gospel Saturation
“And the word of the Lord was spreading throughout the whole region.” Acts 13:49 CSB
Gospel saturation requires cultural manifestations of the gospel to match the density and diversity of their context.
Houston is the most diverse major metro in the U.S., and it is growing larger and more diverse by the day.
Not only will this require starting new churches, but we must also fight for the renewal of plateaued and declining churches as well.
A Wave of Local Church Decline in North America
The size of a church is not the measure of its health or spiritual vitality. However, the number of congregations in rapid decline is an indicator of a bigger trend developing in North America. We are sitting at a generational seam that may result in significant congregational turn over. It is the front edge of a wave, and the number of churches in crisis will only get higher, unless we act now.
While pointing to a coming wave of decline provides a gloomy picture concerning North American missions, church renewal is possible and demonstrates a beautiful truth about the gospel. The gospel brings things back to life. Church renewal, simply put, is the idea that God may not be done with all of these churches.
God is not Done with Your church
Church renewal occurs with the realization that God is not done with your church. Churches have a life cycle. That is not a bad thing, it is a real thing. It is the nature of churches, but just because churches eventually die does not mean we should hasten that end.
We should fight for their health.
We must do all we can to foster renewal in churches that are in decline. We must fight for the health of churches as long as we have them. Established churches can take on a completely new life through the revival of a gospel-centered mindset and have new, fruitful ministry for another generation. Perhaps that “dying” church simply slowed down for a lap and by God’s grace is primed for a second wind. We need more people who are willing to roll up their sleeves and nurse dying churches back to health. We also need churches humble enough to admit that they need corrective action.
Revitalization
Revitalization, as a term in local church ministry, has been around for a while, and most pastors have at least heard of it. In short, revitalization is the process (usually slow and methodical) of bringing an unhealthy church back toward spiritual vitality. Churches, like any other organism, have a life cycle. We know that churches are born, grow, live, and eventually die. Of course, our hope is that a church's life cycle is many generations long.
Think of revitalization as the process of nursing a church back toward health. Often, revitalization occurs through the steady leadership of pastors and key leaders in a congregation. These leaders re-evaluate their ministry and context in order to make the necessary adjustments to return the church to its biblical mission.
Replanting
Replanting aims at the same goal: taking a dying church and bringing it back to life. However, this process differs in some significant ways from that of revitalization. A replanting process admits that a church's situation is severe enough that traditional measure of revitalization may not be the best method of restoring vitality. In fact, the ideal candidate for replanting is often that congregation that realizes it has approached (or passed) its end of life.
In these instances, replanting uses the remaining footprint, existing congregation, and the legacy of the original church to birth a new church start in its place. Replanting allows for more drastic changes and provides those churches in the most dire circumstances with hope for the gospel legacy of their congregation to continue through the ministry of an essentially new church.
A Process of Renewal
For too long now, our sending paradigm has been one of recruitment. And, our churches, our networks, our conventions, and associations have all played a part in doing it this way. Our organizations tasked with planting simply become recruiters. Churches that want to take part in sending often do the same. In this way, the sending church is involved in identification, but it is identification from outside. Everyone wants an equipping pipeline these days, but after it is set up, they begin looking outside of themselves for the people to fill it.
Discovery Phase
Recruitment is zero-sum. In other words, recruitment alone can never be multiplicative. A church that recruits their next planter from outside did not add another planter to the pool, they merely moved one discovered by another church. For every planter recruited and gained from the outside, another equipping system loses a planter. Cooperative equipping strategies with national sending agencies, through state conventions and associations, and even boutique networks are good and needed, but we must address a root problem: a waning supply of people to fill them.
Implementation Phase
We have talked about leadership development in the local church for a long time now. It usually goes hand-in-hand with the discipleship conversation. Unfortunately, it is often assumed that these leaders are being developed to scale up the ministry of the local congregation. Leaders to lead small groups and potentially serve in ministry roles in a congregation are important, but we must also consider how we are identifying and developing those leaders that a church will send out from the congregation for the work of the ministry. And these sent out tasks are diverse, ranging from church planting and replanting, to diaspora and international missions. This goal, sending out people from within the church to an array of Great Commission tasks, is the true heart of a sending church.
Does your church need renewal?
Jump-Start Identification
The first (and most important) phase of Pathways audits the church’s current culture and practice in order to make systemic changes that create a culture of identification. Without a healthy identification culture that continually calls church members to the array of sent out tasks, churches cannot accomplish multiplicative sending.
UBA works with churches to evaluate current practices at macro, meso, and micro levels inside the church to implement an identification strategy. Creating a real sending culture takes time and repeated effort from the pulpit, to the small groups, to the talk in the hallways. Making sure there is an essential alignment of message at each of these levels and processes in place that aid in identification is the first work for any church that wants to become a sending church.
COOPERATIVE EQUIPPING
After identification begins to occur, churches cooperate with other churches to provide equipping cohorts. In the past, equipping pipelines were most often established inside individual churches. However, churches cooperating with other churches to provide equipping for potential sent out ones creates a number of significant benefits.
No longer is equipping only accessible to those churches large enough to run equipping residencies.
Additionally, sent out ones receive training in the strengths and approaches of multiple churches instead of one.
Finally, cooperative equipping forms the basis of team sending. As potential sent out ones from different churches are equipped together, they can form sending teams that span multiple churches. This is key to developing a strategy for coordinated sending.
UBA helps local churches form cooperative equipping cohorts. These cohorts may form around church planting, international missions, replanting, or other sent out tasks, and will include multiple churches working together to train and equip their potential sent out ones.
COORDINATED SENDING
When churches equip together, they can send together in new ways. Imagine a church plant or international missions team developed from multiple churches through cooperative equipping. This team now has two, three, or four sending churches with which to partner and from which they can receive support.
When church plants or missionaries are sent as teams, the chances of success are much higher. Team planting allows new pastors to share the responsibility of planting. This creates more opportunities for ministry and more opportunities for support strategies such as bi-vocational or covocational planting. Coordinated sending means more missions resources.
Coordinated sending also means easy on-ramps to the many sending structures already present in Houston and beyond. Sending Pathways provides potential sent out ones with foundational equipping that allows them to easily begin the assessment process with other partners such as the Houston Church Planting Network, state conventions, the International Mission Board, or other sending agencies. Pathways does not compete with these structures but builds bridges between them and the local church.
CONTINUED SUPPORT
Sending churches continue to support the work of those they send. Support comes in many forms. Sometimes it is financial, helping a new church as it becomes sustainable, or meeting the financial needs of an international missionary. At other times, it is human resources that are needed, as supporting churches come alongside new church plants for community outreach. It should always involve prayer, counsel, and fellowship.
Pathways creates channels for this continued support to occur alongside other churches. As teams are cooperatively equipped and the sending is coordinated between churches and other partners, then multi-church support networks and relationships are formed that allow for better and more secure support for each new work without the total burden resting on one sending church.
We want your church to be a part of Pathways.
Every church can benefit from an intentional process of examination concerning their sending process. Even if your church is already a true sending church, you can accomplish more when you work with other churches to develop pathways to multiplicative sending. We want to see a city full of churches that cooperatively produce their own sent out ones for an array of Great Commission tasks. This is how Houston (and beyond) reaches gospel saturation.
To find out more about how your church can participate in this city-wide sending initiative, click the button below and send us an email.