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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Two Word Review of Viral Churches: Get It!,
By Chuck Warnock "Chuck Warnock" (Chatham, VA United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) (Kindle Edition)
Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird's new book, Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers, packs a punch like no other church planting book I've read. Stetzer and Bird, both experienced church planters turned missional researchers, deliver compelling examples of real churches engaged in church multiplication strategies. These networks of church planters are reshaping the theology, philosophy, and execution of sustainable church planting in ways not seen since the Baptists and Methodists struck out across America in the 1800's planting congregations.
Ed Stetzer, president of LifeWay Research, and Warren Bird, director of the research division of Leadership Network, teamed up to study over 200 church-planting churches, 100-leaders, 45 church planting networks, 84 organic church leaders, 12 church planting experts, 53 colleges and seminaries, 54 doctoral dissertations, 41-journal articles, and 100+ church planting books and manuals -- all with the goal of understanding this new surge of church planting multiplication that is sweeping America. The premise of the book is church planting must shift from growth by addition to break-out surges through church multiplication. In other words, Stetzer and Bird contend that churches-planting- churches is the winning strategy to meet the Great Commission challenge in America. Chapter titles give clues to the emphases in Viral Churches: One: Introduction: National Awakening Two: Church Planting Three: Growth by Multiplication Four: New Players Five: KIngdom Cooperation Six: Predictors of Success Seven: Thriving Eight: House Churches Nine: Multi-Site Strategy Ten: Rapid Growth Eleven: Funding Twelve: The New Scorecard Thirteen: Obstacles to Missional Replication Fourteen: Conclusion: We Need to Take Another Approach I particularly like the emphasis that Stetzer and Bird give to the concept of "small." Here's what they say - "In reality a church grows bigger by doing small better." "Simple, small replicable units are how the kingdom is best advanced." `"Big" produces more consumers in church, but small produces more contributors.' "Small is often the place of the kingdom's agenda, the place to plant the mustard seed and permeate the yeast." "Movements occur through small units that are readily reproducible." The authors point out that they are advocating churches that produce a "50% conversion rate (new believers) at a 50% reproduction rate (new churches) through three generations." In their chapter on "The New Scorecard" the authors advocate counting "sending capacity" rather than "seating capacity." But even seating capacity comes into play, as they demonstrate that mathematically over 94-million Americans would be turned away from church if all 310-million of us decided to attend on any given Sunday. Another dramatic chart illustrates that a church that adds 20 members a year will have 400 members at the end of 20 years. But through multiplication a church that plants 1 church of 20 people, which the next year plants another church of 20 people, and so on for 20-years, will have reached over 10-million in the same period of time! Of course, this kind of church Ponzi-scheme is a theoretical example, but there is no doubt that new churches grow faster, reach more people, baptize more new believers, and create more new ministries than established churches. The book is not without its faults, like the definition of missional is to "act like a missionary." Missional encompasses far more than that, but the book succeeds in giving the view from 10,000 feet of the whats, whys, and hows of the viral church movement. Other books can provide the detail, but Stetzer and Bird draw the big picture. In short, get this book, read it, study it, look at the endnotes and the bibliography, take it to heart, and see if God isn't saying something to us about how to reach our nation with the gospel. You can get the Kindle edition now (which is the version I downloaded for this review), and the print edition will come out on April 26. This is an important book, chock full of hard data, impressive examples, compelling stories, and a rock-solid argument: plant churches that plant churches that plant churches to reach America. Disclaimer: I purchased my own copy of the Kindle edition, and received no inducement to purchase or review this book.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Church planting takes off,
By
This review is from: Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) (Hardcover)
After decades of net decline, more churches are now being started each year in the US (4,000) than are closing (3,500), according to Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird in this book. Although some of the church planting activity (around 12%) is coming from denominations, and some from individual churches, most is coming from networks of church-planting churches.
Churches which operate amongst ethnic groups are finding strong responsiveness to the gospel. Churches involved in planting are among the healthiest churches because of their emphasis on recruiting and training leaders. A church which sponsors a new church typically experiences increased worship attendance and giving over the following five years. Planter assessment, training and coaching are key predictors of planting success. Four years after planting, 68% of new churches have survived, 62% have achieved financial independence, and average attendance is 84. Unlike other books which highlight just one style of church planting, this book seeks to cover them all, providing a wealth of reliable information gained from various research projects. It is probably not the first book I would choose for inspiration, as I found some of the chapters heavy going, but it does provide a very useful overview of what is really going on in the church planting world. This makes it essential reading for church leaders who are concerned about fulfilling the Great Commission.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Planting Churches,
By Mark Driscoll (Seattle, Wa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) (Hardcover)
Viral Churches by Ed Stetzer and Warren Bird. Is a great new book on how to plant lots of churches.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Deep and Wide...,
This review is from: Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) (Hardcover)
This book runs deep as you would expect. But, there is also a breadth of perception that comes from these two men. Both are uniquily positioned to understand the curch multiplication efforts of others. Maybe not a manual, but certainly a worthy foundational tool!
www.ralphmoorehawaii
4.0 out of 5 stars
Moving from Church Multiplication to a Church Planting Movement,
By
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This review is from: Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) (Hardcover)
Stetzer, Ed and Warren Bird. 2010. Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. ISBN 978-0-470-55045-8 (cloth).
The title of this book shows the direction it takes - turning church planters in church planting movement makers. In the 14 chapters of this challenging book, Stetzer, along with Bird, seek to cast a vision for not just church planting and multiplication but seeing a movement develop that dynamically sees churches multiply. This is not a book that needs to be read in order of its chapter development but can be looked at depending on the chapter For those in a North American context, Stetzer announces that "An important shift happened in recent years. After decades of net decline, more U.S. churches are being started each year (approximately 4,000) than are being closed each year (approximately 3,500)" (p. 1). This is good news--although the book acknowledges in a footnote that the statistics on this question are difficult to come by. Although this book is North American in context, it can be used to contextualize the same principles in other countries. On pages 212-213 you will find a list of churches or networks that are seriously seeking to develop a church multiplication movement. The annotated bibliography for church multiplication found on pages 225 to 232 is extremely helpful for those wanting to know more about seeing the increase of churches by multiplication. What is worth the price of the book alone is the section in chapter 12 "The New Scorecard: Measuring a Church Multiplication Movement." In this chapter the authors deal with the "obstacles to North American Church Multiplication." I personally found this discussion fascinating as we looked at the North American context. It could be of help for others working in similar contexts to determine what is blocking true multiplication. Get this book and enjoy reading more about the vision for church multiplication in a dynamic way. I have ordered two more copies of this book to share with two leaders in a church where we are seeing the need to multiply. Maybe you should do the same.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The hope of the future Church!!,
By
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This review is from: Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) (Hardcover)
This book gets at the heart of what a missional movement should look like. Ed is clear about the reality we are in, but is optimistic about a new approach. Whether you have planted or not this is a great read to inspire and cultivate church planting. We all need leaders who can speak truth into our lives and this book does that. I was reminded throughout this book that the Holy Spirit is the catalyst for this movement.
I recommend you read it with someone and share your thoughts. It does not matter what kind of church plant you are in this book covers it all.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another Stetzer Jewel,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) (Hardcover)
Stetzer is a leader in the church planting movement, and well-deserved. This book is full of valuable, insightful material.
3 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Viral Churches,
This review is from: Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) (Hardcover)
After twenty-five pages of the author repeating how churches need to plant churches that don't just add churches one by one, but should plant other churches exponentially, the author finally admits that he never did this. He says it's what is supposed to happen and other people need to make it happen. The book is redundant and insubstantial. While the author has great church planting experience, this is simply a vague theory.
Viral Churches - avoid it like the plague! |
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Viral Churches: Helping Church Planters Become Movement Makers (Jossey-Bass Leadership Network Series) by Ed Stetzer (Hardcover - April 26, 2010)
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