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Joel Comiskey Group
Resourcing the Worldwide Cell Church 
June 2009 Newsletter

JCG NEWS

New book: I'm working on The Relational Disciple:How God Uses Community to Shape Followers of Jesus, which will come out in October 2009 (cover here).

Bookstore: check out the JCG bookstore for special deals

June ministry

June 17-21 in Monterrey, Mexico. This is the Cell Church Mission Network gathering of key pastors and leaders throughout Latin America. One of the key goals is to promote missions. Contact person: Noe Salinas at noe.salinas@cmoracion.org 

June 22-26: the cell symposium, a historic cell church gathering, will meet in Waco, Texas. Some of the most well-known cell church pastors in the world will be speaking. I will be giving workshops as well.

June 27-July 02
: Ralph Neighbour and I will co-teach a D.Min course in Waco, Texas on cell church ministry through
Golden Gate Baptist Seminary. Contact person: Ralph Neighbour at:
rneighbour@comcast.net

Twitter and Blogging: I'm now twittering at JCG. Check out the JCG home page, and you'll notice the right hand column  of up-to-date micro-blogs .

  

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More than Fellowship

Community or fellowship is an essential part of any cell group. My next book, The Relational Disciple, is all about how God uses community to shape followers of Jesus. Yet, the cell group is not only about community.

The greatest difference, in fact, between cell groups and other "small groups" is the emphasis on evangelism and multiplication in the cell. This emphasis doesn't neglect community (fellowship), it just gives the community forward momentum. The vision in the cell is to get those outside the cell to experience God's rich community, and thus the need to start additional cells. And of course, all elements of the cell (evangelism, community, spiritual growth, and multiplication) must take place under the power of Jesus Christ.

Why am I saying all this? Every two months I drive 20 minutes to a large Christian bookstore in Redlands, CA, buy a book, and then sit in one of their soft chairs and read all the major Christian magazines. I was reading Leadership Journal a few weeks ago and saw an excerpt (several paragraphs) from Larry Osborne's recent book Sticky Church (Osborne is a megachurch pastor in California).Osborne strongly criticized the cell church's emphasis on cell multiplication, claimed multiplication doesn't work, and then concluded that the reason for small groups is fellowship.

I was reminded once again of how normal it is for churches like the one Osborne pastors to focus on the large celebration as the primary means of church growth, but then to use cells more like "holding pens" for people to get to know each other. Is there anything wrong with fellowship? No. It's an important aspect of cell life.

In the cell church, however, we see the cell as the church (just like the celebration service). We believe that members need to exercise their muscles and reach out to their neighbors-not just depend on the "preacher" to do the evangelizing. There are way too few Larry Osbornes in the world, and if we depend on them, we will continue to lose the overall battle between population growth and church growth. In the cell church, members are seen as the ministers and encouraged to start their own cell.

Is this emphasis difficult in secular places like the U.S.? Yes. Is it easier to just ask the members to focus on their own needs (fellowship)? Oh yes! Some places in the world are far more receptive to cell growth. You might be ministering in one of those places. Other places are more difficult and see less cell results (the western world). Regardless of where you live, it's best to emphasize HOLISTIC small groups, which turn your members into ministers by asking them to exercise their spiritual muscles through evangelism and leadership development. I believe it's unhealthy to solely focus on personal needs in the name of fellowship. But what do you think? If you'd like to comment, please CLICK HERE 


Joel Comiskey

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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