In a missiological context, church planting may be defined as "initiating reproductive fellowships who reflect the kingdom of God in the world." When this happens with rapid growth, it is generally known as a
church planting movement or
disciple making movement. In a church planting movement, indigenous churches plant more churches within a people group or geographic area. A church will sponsor formation of multiple spinoff churches that will themselves very quickly reproduce new churches, generally with common teachings and doctrine. It is different from
traditional missions in that the new churches are generally started by a lay leader from the sponsoring church and not an outside
missionary. A key characteristic of an authentic church planting movement is the rapidity with which a new congregation itself starts another similar church.
History of church planting movements The modern Church Planting Movement can trace its roots to the mid-nineteenth century when
Henry Venn and
Rufus Anderson developed the three-self formula of an indigenous missions policy: "they believed that young churches should be self-propagating, self-supporting, and self-governing from their inception."
Donald McGavran, a missionary in
India who "coined the concept of 'people movements' to Christ," is credited as an early proponent of the kind of missionary work that underlies the Church Planting Movement, by focusing his missionary work on converting groups of people ("groups, tribes, villages, ethnic groups") rather than individuals. According to
One Magazine, the official organ of the
National Association of Free Will Baptists, such tactics were used successfully in
Cuba in the 1940s by Tom and Mabel Willey; in the 1950s in
North India Carlisle and Marie Hanna; and in the 1960s in
Ivory Coast by LaVerne Miley. Bhojpuri church planting movement was started by David L. Watson and produced thousands of Churches from the beginning of Nineties. This is also the longest surviving (rather thriving) movement in the world. It has become Movementum now and still producing thousands of Churches. This movement is also referred to where the term church planting movement originated. This Movement has impacted many other countries and continues to impact the other parts of India as well.
Essentials of church planting movements There are three key characteristics of a Church Planting Movement: it reproduces rapidly, multiplying churches, and that the churches are indigenous. • Within a very short time, newly planted churches are already starting new churches that follow the same pattern of rapid reproduction. Though the rate varies from place to place, Church Planting Movements always outstrip the population growth rate as they race toward reaching the entire people group. Where with other methods of church planting it may take five years to plant a church, with church planting movement, multiple generations of churches may be planted within five months. Most churches in the middle of a Movement will start as many churches as they can, with a goal of filling the area with new churches.
Methods There is not a solitary method used to spark a church planting movement. The
Training for Trainers (T4T) method has been successful in China. It differs from the
Insider Movement in that leaders do not seek to act like indigenous persons, but simply train locals who train others within their (or closely related) people group. One popular interrelated element with T4T is called OBD (Obedience Based Discipleship) but it has not met with acceptance from certain church planters. ==References==