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Act1v8 Beta Partners Sought

Act1v8.us Beta Test Group Forming

Go2 Church Planting is presently engaged in the development of the Act1v8.us Collaborative Problem Solving Network. We are presently recruiting 100 partners to invest with us for beta testing of the platform.

The test group will enjoy a lifetime partnership in the Act1v8.us network at a substantially reduced cost.

What is Act1v8.us? (License Plate Terminology for Activate) taken from Acts 1:8

Act1v8 is one of three key dynamics in GO2s national United States strategy called Springboard Initiative: A Decade of Multiplication 2010-2020. The goals of the strategy are three

    1. Start and establish 5,000 new churches by 2020
    2. See 500,000 new believers in Jesus in the USA by 2020
    3. Serve 50 million Americans through deeds of mercy by 2020

Act1v8 will ultimately serve 1,765 partners in what is known as a Circle of Grace. The Circle is a 15-22 mile radius of the US that can be classified as a Judean-Samaria type of mission. The 1,765 circles cover 95% of the USA population. The goal of Act1v8 is simple

Provide a problem solving collaborative social network that creates opportunities for our partner churches to

    1. mobilize their people for ministry
    2. serve and help solve real problems in their community
    3. make contact with numerous unbelievers in order to be salt and light for the purpose of evangelization
    4. engage believers in both a regional and national United States Mission conversation

Act1v8 is an effort to help churches be more locally integrated into their communities, encourage vigorous evangelism, and mobilize Christians to mission.

GO2 Church Planting believes that if many new believers are won to Christ in the geographic region, that new churches will be needed. Act1v8 is our way of increasing the demand for new churches in the United States.

In addition to the above mentioned benefits Act1v8 will generate donations for its partners to engage in even more local outreach through some combination of ads, service administration fees or membership fees. The beta testing will allow us to gauge which means of revenue is most conducive to the success of outreach and mobilization.

Costs to Join

All beta test members are asked to contribute $10,000 over a two year time frame to allow us to research and develop the platform. Beta members will be the exclusive partner with GO2 in their Circle of Grace. All contacts, funding information and donations will be distributed to the partner in accordance with previously agreed upon terms.

Estimated costs to join the network following beta testing are $25,000 per partner.

Benefits of Joining

  • Beta partners will receive free demographic research of their circle Estimated cost savings - $495 - $1500
  • 66% discount to beta members to join the network as a partner Estimated cost savings $13000-$15,000
  • Additional percentage of distributed revenue from national sales for partner use in mission

Estimated additional income unknown

  • Sole partnership rights to their Circle of Grace.
  • First selection rights of their Circle of Grace.

Beta testing partnerships will remain open until March 1, 2010. Testing of the platform will begin shortly thereafter.

Requirements to Join Beta Test Group

There are five requirements to join the Beta Test Group as a Church Partner -

  1. Must be able to sign in good conscience the Lausanne Covenant found at - http://www.lausanne.org/covenant
  2. Must be a church that will commit to seeing 2-3 new churches/campuses planted in your circle by the year 2020. GO2 will provide support services for this goal to be achieved. GO2 is foremost a church-planting agency and Act1v8 is a means to that end.
  3. Must have an already demonstrated commitment to seeking the welfare of the city.
  4. Must care deeply about reaching the lost for Christ.
  5. Must be able to clearly articulate an understanding of why the United States needs more churches and be willing to work with GO2 to reach the USA for Christ.

Help Victims in American Samoa

The Earthquake and Tsunami that hit American Samoa yesterday has caused great destruction.  Partner with GO2 Church Planting to help our brothers and sisters in American Samoa and the South Pacific. Follow this link and click donate and add your support on the Disaster Relief line item.

Relief for American Samoa

Northeast Church Planting Conference Announced

DCPI offers this training from December 1-5 2009 in Schenectady, New York.  Cost is $25 before September 15, $30 before October 15, and $40 until registration close on November 15.  This five day training will give you the Essentials of Church Planting.   The training will be held at Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary. Call 518.355.4964 for more information.

Leaders Conference Presentation

I was in Chicago last week to attend the WCA Leaderhip Summit.  I was particularly moved by the Presentations of Wess Stafford and Jessica Jackley.  My purpose for being at the summit was to help Mac Pier, our partner in New York City (circle #1 in our circles of grace campaign) present the Leadership Center partnership to a group of interested business people from the Chicago area.  The New York partners include the New York City Leadership Center, Concerts of Prayer, Go2 Church Planting, and Redeemer Church. We are praying that the leadership center idea can be reproduced in America's 40 most populated city centers.  Our GO2 role in the leadership center is to provide the social network component through our Act1v8 (Activate) social network which will launch full scale on January 1, 2010.  The social network provides an elegant platform for creating both a national and regional conversation in our society around 12 significant issues.  The purpose is very simple - to raise the demand for church planting in the United States.  This starfish like organization allows for grass roots energy to be released in a decentralized fashion.  Our hope is that while GO2 prays and works hard to supply church planters, that the social conversation will provide the demand for church planting.  Thus, both supply and demand are addressed to reach our great nation for Christ. You can view the basic idea of the activate social network by linking to www.act1v8.us and click on "The Crowd" tab, but remember it will not launch formally until January 1, 2010 and this is simply a prototype of what is coming.  Our goals - 5,000 new churches, 500,000 new believers, 50 million evangelized by the year 2020 in the United States of America.  Act1v8 will help us move towards accomplishing the final of our three goals.  Of course, none of this can happen without your prayers.  Would you please pray for us!  Be on the lookout for the premiere of our 1,765 "Circles of Grace" campaign, starting in September.

Tim

Circles of Grace - Get Activated!

Do you want to get activated for the Lord in the United States of America?  Soon GO2 will be releasing on our news and twitter feed information on the USA dispersed by examining smaller segments known as circles of Grace!  You will have the opportunity to learn more about each circle, and to get activated on behalf of that circle.  Perhaps you will even become a leading advocate for reaching this circle of America.  The Circles are Coming...soon.  Are you ready? Start praying!

New York City Partnership Announced!

GO2 Church Planting is pleased to announce a new partnership with the Church Multiplication Alliance, Redeemer Church Planting Center, and Concerts of Prayer Greater New York.  In its new Springboard Strategy of targeting Percept's 1,765 areas covering 95% of the U.S. population New York City represents Target Circle area #1 for density of population.  More than ten million people live in this targeted 15 mile radius.  Reaching this dense and diverse population requires multiple partnerships and alliances.  The task is simply too great for any one group or church to succeed individually.
GO2 will be providing support and leadership for the Alliance, working closely with the Concerts of Prayer and its large network of churches to seek funding and strategic alliances and providing systems support for what is lacking in church planter identification and training.

The Strategic partners include –

 Concerts of Prayer of Greater New York.  www.copgny.org  This organization under the direction of Dr. Mac Pier has been a uniting force for the churches of New York to collectively gather before God to seek His face for the city.  Annual prayer gatherings, multiple prayer walks, and prayer meetings highlight the work of this good and effective ministry.

Redeemer Church Planting Center http://www.redeemer.com/about_us/church_planting/

is led by Rev. Terry Gyger and Rev. Mark Reynolds is the church planting arm of Redeemer Church led by Dr. Tim Keller.  Redeemer has long been a city church focusing both within and outside of its denominational affiliations to increase a greater work force in reaching the city. Look for information on Dr. Keller and Redeemer in the June 2009 Christianity Today magazine.

Church Multiplication Alliance – The Alliance is comprised of those denominations and church planting agencies working in the city and who recognize that it takes many hands to get the evangelistic work completed.

Look soon on the GO2 web site for a listing of all our targeted areas, analysis of each, and ways in which you and your church can make a difference! Also coming soon will be opportunities for you to partner with several of our church planters with short term teams and visits to the Big Apple!

Springboard Church Initiative

The United States is a very diverse land.  Both geographically and socially America is vast, complex, and varied.  We may share the same currency, the same media programming, and even the same democratic process, but the variances between our borders and among our people are many.
    That is why church planting in the States takes considerable study of cultural factors and demographics in order to understand how best to reach any specific area.  Just as the Lord notes differences in the churches of Revelation based on their geography and mindset, so also there are differences between church plants depending on culture and values. 
Indeed an inner-city church in one of our major cities may be very different from a wealthy suburban church which is not far away from the city geographically, but a million miles away philosophically and culturally.   It  requires wisdom on the part of the church planter to understand what methodologies and ministries will work in his targeted church planting area.
This is why GO2 church planting has invested heavily in demographic partnerships to understand America.  We have identified 1,765 different areas of America which need to be targeted for new church planting.  These areas comprise 95% of the population of our country and represent all of the diversity and complexity our country holds.
We believe each of these areas needs to be targeted for church planting, and we believe that an already existing church should take the Judea - Samaritan, part of the great commission seriously. 

Jesus said in Acts 1:8  - “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth.”

 I understand this passage to be used as a model for the various parts of the Great Commission.  In this model Jerusalem refers to our immediate city, Judea to our immediate country, Samaria to people who live in our country who are different from us, and the ends of the earth to refer to foreign countries other than our own. 
If we follow this model, it is easy to see that most churches are very good at Jerusalem and “Ends of the Earth” missions.  It is not unusual to see a strong church very active in its community serving others and providing community outreach.  Those same churches are also very good at running special project missions overseas for the very needy as well as sending missionaries to many international lands.  The gap for most church mission programs is the Judea and Samaritan fields.  This is probably due to several factors, but one very real outcome is the result of such neglect, namely, the deterioration of our society and culture because salt and light is being diminished as churches close and are not replaced with new ones.
I want you to spend a moment projecting into the future 50 years.  Will the United States church be able to continue its aggressive international missions program if there are fewer churches here to support those missionaries that are sent?  If churches, in a natural life cycle begin a decline downward, how long will they remain vibrant enough to provide services to their community.? It is not enough to do local and international missions.  We MUST also do Judean and Samaritan missions if we expect the Great Commission to be fully achieved.  I hear many people in churches say they love America, and yet complain about America’s downward spiral culturally.  If we love our country, then we must try to reach it for Christ.  There is no better way than to start and establish many new churches that will increase salt and light in our society and reach the spiritually lost for Christ.
GO2 is soon to launch its Springboard Church Strategy to plant 5000 new churches by the year 2020 in the United States. This is a big goal and it cannot be done without thought.  That is why we are looking to partner with already established and vibrant churches who are willing to take ownership  of just one of the 1,765 demographic areas of America that represent the Judean and Samaritan aspects of the Great Commission.  Would that church be willing to help GO2 plant 3-5 new churches over the next decade in their adopted and targeted area?  Would that church help Springboard a church planting movement in the United States by partnering with like minded churches in a Springboard network?  5000 new churches would impact significant numbers of new believers, and provide a platform for continued Evangelism and Christian growth for the 21st century in our country.
Will your church be a Springboard Church?  A Springboard is nothing more than a device which helps us go farther and longer than we could otherwise do on our own.  Just as a diving board launches a swimmer higher, so a Springboard Church network could move church planting from addition to multiplication. 
GO2 has already formed five partnerships to reach targeted areas in the United States, meaning we have only 1,760 to go! You will be hearing more in the coming weeks and months.  I hope you will join GO2 in reaching our Judea and Samaria in obedience to the command of our Lord Jesus Christ!

GO2 CHURCH PLANTING MINISTRIES ANNOUNCES KEY STAFFING UPDATES

Church Planting Agency Gears Up for Major Initiative


TELFORD, PA -- GO2 Church Planting Ministries announced the following staffing updates in preparation for the launch of their new Springboard Church Planting Strategy to be announced very soon.
Rev. Oscar Chavez, who until now has been the Western U.S. Church Planting Director for GO2 has been named the National Director of Hispanic Church Planting.  Rev. Chavez, also the Pastor of the La Cosecha Iglesia Cristiana in Lancaster, California,  has been with GO2 since 2007 and is working in Southern California to start an entire movement of Hispanic churches in that region.  With his new responsibilities he will be networking across the United States to oversee the Hispanic component of the Springboard Church Planting Strategy.  
Rev. Chavez replaces Rev. Jesus Munoz, who resigned his position with GO2 as Hispanic Church Planting Director in February, 2009 to pursue oversight of church planting ministries in the Tampa, Florida area in conjunction with the Florida District Missions Board of the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches.  Rev. Munoz is a long-time veteran of church planting in the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches. GO2 wishes him well in his new endeavors and praises God for his faithfulness and fruitfulness while serving with GO2.  Those who have been supporting Rev. Munoz should now send their support to Florida District of GBC, C.O. John Nest, 235 Seminary Circle, Maitland, FL 32751.

New to the GO2 team is Pastor Mike Silliman of Oxford, PA, who has been named Director of Coaching.  Pastor Silliman is the founding church planter of Elk Creek Church in Oxford, a vibrant church plant that enjoys the presence of about 100 people each Sunday for worship.  Pastor Silliman was inspired to pursue church planting by observing Pastor Dan O’Deens – himself a former church planter - and spent considerable time serving with Pastor O’Deens and the people of Gateway Grace Community Church in Parkesburg, PA.  In his new responsibilities Pastor Silliman will train and equip coaches to come alongside the church planter, providing greater accountability and instilling strategic thinking in the church planting process.
Rev. Kenn Cosgrove of Limerick, PA is assuming the role of Prayer Coordinator for GO2 after retiring from more than 35 years of Pastoral ministry in the United States in March, 2009.  Rev. Cosgrove pastored churches in Iowa, Pennsylvania, and Ohio before planting the Tri-County Grace Brethren Church in Trappe, PA where he served for more than 20 years.  Rev. Cosgrove will be overseeing the prayer ministry on behalf of church planters to create a nationwide awareness of prayer needs for the church planter as well as the overall needs of the lost in our country.
Mr. Rob Saunders joins the GO2 team as Director of Short-Term Trips.  A graduate of Grace College in Winona Lake, Indiana, Mr. Saunders has been actively involved in overseeing ministry teams in urban settings.  In his new position he will coordinate the research and development of short-term teams, exploring and observing church planting movements.  The first of GO2’s short-term trips will begin in 2010 focusing on the concepts of Spontaneous Expansion of the Church around the world, asking the whether the principles being observed in global urban centers might be transferred to the North American context.
Additional staff announcements will be made in the near future as Go2 expands its services to churches and church planters of the United States.

GO2 Corporate Meeting Announcement

This is an official announcement that the GO2 Annual Corporation meeting shall be held on Monday July 27, 2009 at 4:00 PM during the GO2 Church planting dinner in Columbus Ohio.  The location of the dinner is Grace Brethren Church of Columbus 6675 Worthington-Galena Road Worthington, Ohio 43085.  Special speaker for the dinner will be Rev. Michel Faulkner, Pastor of New Horizons Church in Harlem, New York City.  Pastor Faulkner is a former member of the New York Jets Pro football team, former vice-president of Liberty University and well known throughout the city of New York. He is planting a church in New York in partnership with GO2 and the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches.  To become a member of the  GO2 Corporation a person must contribute $500 in a single fiscal year to participate as a member during that year or receive a permanent membership for cumulative offerings totaling $2500. 

How to avoid spiritual burnout in church planting

I read this article at Expontentialconference.org written by Dr. Ed Stetzer. It addresses the issue of spiritual burnout that many planters will face if they are not careful. I would love to hear your thoughts on this article. 

Starting A Church Without Losing Your Soul

By: Dr. Ed Stetzer

Alan (not his real name) started a successful church in a large Northern California community. He worked hard, built up his core group and drew over 300 people to his launch service. By the end of his first year, Alan's church averaged over 200 in worship. By the end of his second year, his church averaged nearly 400. Alan became a hero to his local denominational leaders. Northern California is difficult soil and Alan's new church was their most successful start in over 20 years. His ministerial star was rising.
Then Alan resigned at the end of his third year. He was not leaving to lead another church. In fact, he was completely leaving professional ministry to enter the management trainee program with Taco Bell Corporation. People were shocked. 
His friends, colleagues, and even a few fans tried convincing Alan into giving ministry another chance. Their reasons were admirably motivated: God equips gifted people like him to advance the kingdom. Alan understood and appreciated their concerns. But he was not budging. The reasons he cited are all too familiar. The pressures to succeed made him miserable, the church increasingly demanded more time away from his family, and he felt spiritually barren. Furthermore, Alan did not like what he or the church had become. The church was like a spoiled child demanding their needs be met and giving nothing back. Alan drew a large crowd, but felt like he was doing it alone. He was seeing very little life change in an outwardly growing crowd on Sundays. Physically, emotionally and spiritually disillusioned, he had enough. He wanted out, so he quit.
Most, if not all, church planters wrestle with at least some of the issues Alan faced. Admittedly, most don't quit. But many limp along nearly broken under the pressures to succeed. Some church planters so singularly focus on the task of creating a congregation that they forget to build a church and guard their own spiritual lives. When this happens, both the planter and his church suffer. Let's look at two practices that can help planters avoid a spiritually dry and disillusioned ministry. 
Spiritual Renewal
I know this sounds basic, but many church planters neglect fundamental spiritual disciplines. An informal survey of Nehemiah Project church planters (North American Mission Board) revealed their greatest challenge was spending time with God. I talk to church planters all over the country from many denominations and I am amazed at how many find it difficult to maintain a quality relationship with God. They love God and trust him for the future of the church plant but for most it has become a long-distance relationship.
Church planting is a rigorous task that leaves planters physically, emotionally and spiritually drained. Church planters are busy and stressed. The inherent instability of church planting places constant pressure on these Alpha-leaders to excel. They feel that every sermon, every service, every advertisement, every contact, and every event must be exactly right for them to succeed. Performance pressure overwhelms their theological moorings as to who they are in Christ creating an incessant anxiety which drives them even further into the work that drains them. It's a vicious cycle..
Finding rest in the presence of God is the only answer. But rest rarely comes when the planter's mind is a vortex of what must be done next. "Next" becomes the enemy of God's work in their lives "now." Consequently, the planter's relationship with God gradually erodes over time leaving him spiritually dry and empty.
If you find yourself enslaved in the vicious cycle, there is only one answer-stop! Now, I don't mean push the "Pause" button on the church plant. But you need to put some of the responsibilities into the hands of others (even if they will not do it as good as you think you will) and give yourself more time for with God. Guarding your life with regular times of prayer, solitude, and Sabbath where you sit unhurried before God will ensure a rich and abundant reservoir of spiritual life and power. Planters who fail to keep their time with God a priority will invariably suffer in their personal walk and the church plant will feel the profound effects as well.
Theological Reflection
Eugene Peterson makes an interesting observation in his introduction to "Working the Angels." 
"The pastors of America have metamorphosed into a company of shopkeepers, and the shops they keep are churches. They are preoccupied with shopkeeper's concerns-how to keep the customers happy, how to lure customers away from competitors down the street, how to package the goods so that the customers will lay out more money." 1
Many pastors are feeling the pressure to attract spiritual customers, but at what price? Megachurch pastor Walt Kallestad reveals similar feelings in a recent Christianity Today article, "Showtime No More."
"On the surface, all was well. I was a megachurch pastor with invitations to speak at conferences, write books, and mingle with dignitaries. Our church had state of the art facilities next to a major freeway. But that was on the surface. Deep down inside, I was mortified at what we'd become. We had to change. We just couldn't keep going like this. Not anymore." 2
Obviously, church leaders feel a tension between numerically increasing their congregation and increasing biblical maturity among the members. The conflict has always existed-just read Paul's letter to the Corinthians. Planters in particular feel the pressure because new churches must grow to survive! 
By overemphasizing aggressive outreach, risk taking and innovative methods, planters can easily become preoccupied with numerical growth and fail to exegete everything from methods to culture. Having prepared for years to plant a church, their livelihood, personhood, reputation, hopes and dreams all ride on the success of the plant. Some church planters like Alan focus so much on outward success that they never personally reflect on God's work in the details of people's lives. Ultimately, they live in disappointment about themselves for not attaining every goal.
Planters must practice theological reflection to maintain biblical integrity in their perspective of ministry. Socrates said, "The unexamined life is not worth living."3 I wonder if the unexamined church is not worth starting. Integrating theological reflection into the vision and methods of a church plant will help both the leader and the people.
Ask questions like: What is the purpose and mission of the local church? What does it mean to be a Christian? What does a genuine disciple look like? What is authentic worship? What does Christ require of us, and what does faithfulness to Christ look like? How do we implement these biblical mandates successfully in our cultural context? 
These and other like questions form a biblical baseline for planters. Then the baseline becomes the goal rather than building up one's personal sense of fulfillment. Plus the baseline keeps the pressure off of the planter and on the vision to keep the church on course. 
One of the planter's most important roles is leadership. Wise leaders understand their role in shaping the vision and culture of the church. They also understand the need to remove oneself from the pressures of ministry and experience renewal and reflection. Planters who do this are personally and professionally healthier than planters who do not. And, they lead healthier, more biblical and more sustainable churches. 
Being tired is just part of planting a church. Burnout and disillusionment don't have to be. Put your spiritual life in order first and a fresh wind of leadership will follow.

1 - Eugene Peterson, "Working the Angels" Eardmans Publishing Company, 1987, P2.
2- Walt Kallestad, "Showtime No More" http://www.christianitytoday.com/le/2008/fall/13.39.html
3- Scorates - in Plato's "Dialogues"