18 May, 2024

Exponential, Outreach Team for ‘Church Multiplication Challenge’

by | 18 September, 2019 | 0 comments

Exponential and Outreach magazine are partnering for “The Church Multiplication Challenge,” and an initial goal of identifying 100 reproducing churches has expanded to 1,000.

“We want to see reproduction and multiplication become normative,” Exponential CEO Todd Wilson says in an article at ReproducingChurches.org. “We want to see leaders changing their scorecards as they think differently about what it means to lead successful churches and to build legacies that last.”

The response thus far has been encouraging, Wilson says, especially since an attempt several years ago to identify 10 rapidly multiplying churches fell far short. (The research team couldn’t find even five.) Still, even now, more needs to be done.

“The truth is that less than 10 percent of U.S. churches are reproducing or multiplying,” according to the article. “And congregational growth—size—is still the normative measure of success in the U.S. church.”

Church leaders can consider joining the list of churches committed to reproducing and multiplying by reviewing “Church Multiplication Challenge” material and signing on at ReproducingChurches.org.

Among the 100 churches committed to multiplying and reproducing listed in Outreach magazine are 2|42 Community Church (Brighton, Mich.), Community Christian Church (Naperville, Ill.), Lifepointe Church (Raleigh, N.C.), Mountain Christian Church (Joppa, Md.), Momentum Christian Church (McDonough, Ga.), New Life Christian Church (Chantilly, Va.), Real Life Ministries (Post Falls, Idaho), Restore Community Church (Kansas City, Mo.), Rise City Church (Lakeside, Calif.), RiverTree Church (Canton, Ohio), and The Foundry (Baltimore, Md.).

Churches that have subsequently signed on for the “Church Multiplication Challenge” include Suncrest Christian Church (St. John, Ind.) and East 91st Street Christian Church (Indianapolis). Again, go to ReproducingChurches.org to learn more.

Todd Wilson, president and CEO of Exponential, discussed this concept in recent days on the Carey Nieuwhof Leadership Podcast, along with guest J.D. Greear, lead pastor of The Summit Church (Durham, N.C.)—one of the churches on Outreach’s list—and also president of the Southern Baptist Convention. They talked about the five levels of multiplying churches, why reproducing churches are the future, and explained how every church can think about reproducing in a healthy way by taking the Church Multiplication Challenge.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Big Little Churches

“A church with only 12 members is barely a church, but almost every weekend I preach in small Missouri churches whose attendances range from 12 to 112,” Daniel Schantz writes. “When people hear that I am preaching at such small churches they often shake their heads and say, ‘That’s a shame. Why don’t they just close the doors and go to a bigger church that has more to offer them?’” . . .

Long-Tenured Pastors Say Love Is Key to Their Staying

What does it take to pastor a church for the long haul? Christian Standard posed this question to Bob Stevens who has served with Allensburg Church of Christ in Ohio for 40 years; Jerran Jackson, 44-year minister with Clarksburg (Indiana) Christian Church; and David Simpson, pastor with Lanier Christian Church in Georgia for 48 years. . . .

THROWBACK THURSDAY: ‘Barton W. Stone—Champion of the Word’ (1962)

Sam Stone wrote in 1962, “If the early leaders of the Restoration movement are like men engaged in a race, it might be said that Barton Warren Stone took an early lead, but was later passed by Alexander Campbell.” Sam Stone contended that Barton Stone was deserving of greater appreciation . . . and he did so by presenting this “survey of his life.” . . .

ICOM Announces Speakers (Plus News Briefs)

The lineup of speakers has been set for this fall’s International Conference On Missions, which will take place Nov. 14-16 in Lexington, Ky. The theme this year is “Entrusted.” . . . Plus briefs from Ozark Christian College, Exponential, and the Northwest Christian Convention.

Follow Us