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How to Pioneer
How to Pioneer
How to Pioneer
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How to Pioneer

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New Christian communities created by pioneer ministers, both lay and ordained, are popping up everywhere - on housing estates, in community centres, schools and in numerous other places. This book fills the gap for a practical guide for all who are engaged in this form of ministry.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 11, 2016
ISBN9781781400036
How to Pioneer

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    Book preview

    How to Pioneer - David Male

    How to Pioneer

    HOW TO PIONEER

    (even if you haven’t a clue)

    David Male

    CHPlogo.jpg

    Church House Publishing

    Church House

    Great Smith Street

    London SW1P 3AZ

    ISBN 978 1 78140 001 2

    Published 2016 by Church House Publishing

    Copyright © David Male 2016

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, or stored or transmitted by any means or in any form, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system without written permission which should be sought from [email protected]

    The author has asserted his rights under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the author of this Work.

    The opinions expressed in this book are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of the General Synod or The Archbishops’ Council of the Church of England.

    Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, Anglicized Edition, copyright © 1989, 1995 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Printed and bound in England by

    CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon

    Contents

    Foreword by the Archbishop of Canterbury

    Preface

    Acknowledgements

    1. Introduction: Setting the scene for the book

    2. The art of seeing

    Case study: Missional Church, Acton Vale, London

    3. Developing a team

    Case study: Rural parishes in Norfolk

    4. The art of the start

    5. Making connections

    Case study: Connections, Saxmundham, Suffolk

    6. Building community around Jesus

    Case study: Fur Clemt cafe, Wigan

    7. Telling the Jesus story

    8. Growing disciples in community

    Case study: Fun-Key Church, Richmond, North Yorkshire

    9. How to avoid rotas and other useful advice

    Case study: Pebbles, St Lawrence, Essex

    10. Ending and beginnings

    Resources

    Foreword

    Every morning I am surprised.

    I almost do a double take when I look at the face in the mirror whilst I am shaving and think, ‘This is the face of the Archbishop of Canterbury.’ Behind this is not a doubt that God has called me. It’s not even a regret that he has (well, most days anyway). It’s that I can’t quite believe God could use a person like me.

    But the wonder of the gospel is that people like me and you are called to follow Jesus and are used in his service. What he requires of us is obedience and faith, not multi-competence and self-certainty.

    Often when we hear the word ‘Pioneer’, we think of someone who we don’t usually know, or just saw fleetingly on a stage before they went off to inspire another crowd. Someone who is a make-it-happen person. Someone who blazes their trail and doesn’t have a shred of doubt or incompetence but brings what others can only dream about into reality. In our minds a pioneer is a super-hero figure who, whilst breathing the same air as mortals, doesn’t really let their feet touch the same ground.

    This thinking doesn’t help us, because very few of us are like this, maybe 1 in 100, 000. And because most of us aren’t like this we assume it’s just other people who can be involved in the pioneering work of God. And so we don’t count ourselves into the fresh things of God.

    But we know the church of Jesus Christ desperately needs to be taken forward not simply maintained.

    This is why I really rate this book. In it each of us hear a call which involves us in the new things the Holy Spirit is doing. This is a ‘Can do’ book, a book best put into the hands of people who sense a desire to respond to the call of God to reimagine things, but don’t quite know the steps to realise it. It is deeply practical, deeply hopeful and deeply involving.

    In reading it we will be confronted once again by the God who miraculously calls his church into being in the lives of ordinary men and women who are simply obedient to do what He calls us to. The local church is the hope for every community. For it is among us that the life of Jesus Christ is made visible. The wine of the Spirit takes on the shape of the wineskins. These wineskins are our life together.

    I pray fervently that the fruit of this book would be God’s pioneering work of building his church in neighbourhoods and networks, in parishes and amongst people who keep wondering with amazement that God has chosen to use people like them to do things like this.

    Justin Welby

    Archbishop of Canterbury

    Preface

    I realized about a year ago that there was no simple book available that I could give to people who wanted to start a new small Christian community that was for and with those who did not normally go to church. So I have set out to write a guidebook that will help people get started, especially if they are not sure how to proceed.

    One of my strong convictions is that many people can do this. You don’t need to be a church professional, or particularly holy or highly theologically trained. It really is not ‘rocket science’. I believe that, with a few basic principles and practices and the right kind of support and backing, many more people could start something new. If we want to see Jesus’ Church made much more accessible to people in their workplaces, social lives, networks, neighbourhoods and community activities we need thousands more of these kinds of communities in every place and area.

    We have to be realistic about the statistics, which tell us that the majority of people are unlikely to go to their local church as it now exists, however good it is. So we need to develop church where people live their everyday lives and that connects with them, where they are. I have been involved in these kinds of communities for over 20 years. With a small group of friends I was involved in starting the Net Church in Huddersfield which was created specifically to connect with people who did not go to church. I did this for nine years before moving to train people, lay and ordained, across the UK and internationally to develop and lead these kinds of new communities.

    I really hope and pray that this book might encourage you to take the step of starting something new. Together we can make a real difference. Please read the book and, above all, give it a go!

    The Church of England Pioneer website, www.cofepioneer.org, has links to this book with further information and stories.

    Acknowledgements

    Thank you to all the people who in many different ways have contributed to this book. Thanks to all my colleagues in Ministry Division and Fresh Expressions and all the stimulus of former colleagues and students from Cambridge, A block and the CPL team. For the pioneers on a Friday morning a special thanks for allowing me to try out some of this material on you. The advice and encouragement of many small community leaders whom I have talked to has spurred me on to write this. Thanks to all the leaders and participants on my local MSM course – much of the thinking for this book started on those Tuesday evenings. Also to Church House Publishing for their encouragement to do this book. Finally, to my wife Heather, who as always has encouraged and enthused me, especially when the writing was not easy.

    1. Introduction: Setting the scene for the book

    Jill has a seven-year-old child who attends the local primary school near her house. She looks forward to the brief moments each day when she chats with other parents at the school gate. Some of them have become great friends. In a busy day it’s an oasis of normality for Jill. These people know she goes to the local church. Sometimes Jill wonders if these parents would ever come with her to the local church. She loves the church but it seems culturally so different to their lives. Many of them are busy on Sundays with football, swimming or shopping. What can she do?

    Philip and Jen host a book club in

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