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Daniel Im

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Church Multiplication

Campus Pastor Skill #1: How to Close a Service

August 16, 2016 By Daniel Im

Campus pastors are not highly paid emcees or volunteer coordinators as I outlined in this previous article.

Campus pastors play a critical role in the life of a multisite church. They are the vision carriers for their campus, the equipper of the equippers, the pastor of that community, and the unifying ligament to the other campuses and the broader church.

Typically, campus pastors don’t preach, unless they are also a part of the teaching team. As a result, the preaching either comes via video from the main campus, or the teaching team will prepare the sermon together and each preach it live at their respective campuses.

I’ve been a teaching pastor in both models, and they each have their respective positives and negatives. In any case, in both models, someone needs to close out the service. And my conviction is that it needs to be the campus pastor. This is one of the primary public ways that the campus pastor can shepherd their campus. Yes, obviously this will happen through leadership development environments, coffee, and ministry done together, but as a regular and ongoing rhythm, the campus pastor needs to close out the service.

As a regular and ongoing rhythm, the campus pastor needs to close out the service

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I’ve seen campus pastors do this well and I’ve also seen them do it poorly. Check out this chart I developed.

Closing out a service chart - danielim.com

This may seem pretty straightforward, but you’d be surprised at how difficult it is to stick to the positive ways to close out a service.

I know this because I’ve often done the latter when serving as a campus pastor—especially when I forgot to share an announcement earlier in the service, or needed to reemphasize a programming issue.

As a campus pastor, if you have closed out the service well by contextualizing the message to your campus, then leave any last announcement to the very end of the service, after your prayer! This is because once you finish praying, you often have the opportunity to share one more thing while people are beginning to leave. Don’t make this too long, otherwise, the positive impact of your closing will wane.

An Example…

I’m blessed to serve as a Teaching Pastor at The Fellowship, alongside two great campus pastors: Len Taylor and Scott Matthews. While being different in personality, leadership style, and demeanor, I’m so encouraged to tag team in ministry with them. There is no one perfect way to close out a service because every campus pastor needs to be true to their unique personality and leadership style. There is, however, a wrong way to close out a service—and that’s to just copy someone else and try to be someone you aren’t.

Earlier this year, I preached a message on prayer at the Two Rivers Campus of my church. Check out this video of Scott Matthews, the campus pastor, closing out this service by:

  • Shepherding the church
  • Sharing how it impacted him
  • Reiterating some important points
  • Celebrating ministry wins and creating a sense momentum
  • And offering next steps

Join me next time as I share Campus Pastor Skill #2: How to Lead Across.

Pastor, What Makes Your City Unique?

July 26, 2016 By Daniel Im

photo-1438978280647-f359d95ebda4 -1000

The type of leader who plants an urban church looks different than the one who plants a rural one.

This is a relatively unimpressive statement for obvious reasons. After all, those who would want to live on a 20 acre piece of land and raise chickens are typically not the same type of people who would want to live in an 800 square foot high rise and prune a banzai tree or a Chia pet. (Remember when that was a thing?)

This is kind of like someone who asks you if they can ask you a question, when by virtue of asking you that question, they’ve already asked you a question. Or, as the great philosopher and comedian Steve Martin said, “A day without sunshine is like, you know, night.”

What makes something obvious anyway? And who determines what constitutes as common knowledge?

Okay, before I cause you to have an existential breakdown, let me get to the point of this nonsense.

The Point

In the past few months, I’ve been traveling quite a bit talking about church planting, leadership, and discipleship. I’ve been sharing from my latest book that I co-authored with Ed Stetzer, Planting Missional Churches, as well as from the latest research we conducted on church planting and multiplication. You can download that research for free here.

As a result, I’ve had the privilege and blessing to meet with church planters and pastors in major metropolitan cities like New York, Houston, and Los Angeles. And I’ve noticed something.

The type of leader who plants a church in New York is different than the type of leader who plants in Houston or Los Angeles.

It’s not that they necessarily look different, or require distinctive theological education, but there’s definitely a difference. It’s almost…intangible.

It’s kind of like when someone asks a happily married couple how to tell if someone is the one. The answer is often, “You just know when you know.”

[Read more…] about Pastor, What Makes Your City Unique?

Multisite AND Church Planting

May 10, 2016 By Daniel Im

5.Multisite-Twitter

Through the research LifeWay conducted surveying multisite pastors, we discovered a trend among many pastors considering multisite. For them, “the multi-site strategy [did] not replace any other method of participating in kingdom growth. It [did] not replace church planting, personal evangelism, visitation programs, investing and inviting, servant evangelism, or evangelistic training.”[1]

For them it was merely another strategy to reach their city:

Planting churches, building larger buildings, adding services, adding venues at your current site, and relocating a campus are all still viable solutions today. Multi-site does not replace these other solutions. It adds one more possibility for consideration.[2]

Some once believed this move to grow via multiple campuses was a temporary trend, but it appears to be a trend that’s here to stay. After all, there are more than 8,000 multisite churches in the US alone with more than 5 million people worshipping in them![3] While it was once the domain of only the largest megachurches, multisite is now a common option for smaller churches to consider. In fact, although a thousand is the average size of the church that goes multisite, many have gone multisite at eighty.[4]

What’s interesting though, is the number of churches that utilize a multisite methodology and are also committed to church planting. The two are definitely not exclusive of each other.

Take a look at these three different models that are committed to both multisite and church planting:

[Read more…] about Multisite AND Church Planting

Top Quotes and Images for Planting Missional Churches

May 3, 2016 By Daniel Im

10.AllSizes-Twitter

Here are my 11 Favorite Quotes for Planting Missional Churches: Your Guide to Starting Churches that Multiply:

  1. Missional means being a missionary without ever leaving your city.
  2. Church planters should be known first and foremost as people of integrity.
  3. Success is measured in multiplication of churches and quality of disciples.
  4. If your church is empty in a single location, it will still be empty with two locations.
  5. Multisite is not a substitute for church planting; it’s a substitute for a large auditorium.
  6. You cannot lead people to godliness when you are not regularly encountering God.
  7. You cannot love a city if you do not know a city.
  8. Without an intentional developmental approach, the church is likely to become a mile wide and an inch deep.
  9. Everywhere Christians have gone to share the gospel churches were formed.
  10. Churches
 of all sizes and ages can take part
 in church planting.
  11. Your ultimate calling is not to plant a church; it’s a calling to come to Jesus himself.

I’d be honored if you shared these images with your friends and followers on your favorite social media platforms!

1.Missional-Twitter

[Read more…] about Top Quotes and Images for Planting Missional Churches

Join Me at Exponential East 2016

April 26, 2016 By Daniel Im

Here are a few ways that you can grow during one of the largest church planting conferences of the year, Exponential East 2016.

If You’re Not in Orlando…

  • Tune into the Exponential live stream here for all the main sessions.
  • Download my new eBook, Multiplication Today, Movements Tomorrow: Practices, Barriers, and an Ecosystem here
    • If you’re not registered as a Free or Plus member at NewChurches.com, then you can go here to register for free and get the eBook

If You’re in Orlando,

  • Say Hello to me by visiting one of my workshops listed below
  • Purchase my new book with Ed Stetzer, Planting Missional Churches: Your Guide to Starting Churches that Multiply for 40% off

[Read more…] about Join Me at Exponential East 2016

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