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Joel Comiskey Group
Resourcing the Worldwide Cell Church 
March 2008 Newsletter

JCG NEWS

We had a great JCG board meeting last month.Check out what we covered.  

Click here to see a video of Joel Comiskey talking about the Cell Church in North America on the Harvest Show (aired on March 03, 2008)

Check out the COVER to Comiskey's new book, Planting Churches that Reproduce: Starting a Network of Simple Churches, which will  be available in October 2008.

Sign up now to get the JCG blog sent daily to your email inbox for free. Go to the blog site and place your email address in the box on the upper right side

Do you need coaching for your cell ministry? Check out our JCG coaching team.
 
Comiskey's 2008 speaking schedule

Special sales on Comiskey's books

Joel Comiskey is teaching 5-day in-depth course on Church Planting in Nyack, New York at Alliance Theological Seminary from May 5 through May 9, 2008. This is an official course at ATS, which can be taken for graduate level credit. You can also audit the entire course (if you are in full-time ministry the course may be audited for $50. If you are not in full-time ministry, it costs $300). We've also arranged special hotel rates for those of you traveling from outside the area. You even get a free book! By taking this course, you would get the entire Church Planting package. If you're interested, contact: Kevin Kriesel. . 

Find out more about how you can invest in JCG, a non-profit ministry

 

     

Reaching People Unlike Us

I'm a student of church growth, earning my doctorate degree under Peter Wagner, who took over the Fuller Chair of Church Growth from Donald McGavran, the founder of Church Growth. The homogenous principle is one of the cornerstones of the church growth movement. It states that people like to become Christians without crossing racial, linguistic, or class barriers. Donald McGavran, who first taught this principle, wrote, "It takes no great acumen to see that when marked differences of color, stature, income, cleanliness, and education are present, men understand the gospel better when expounded by their own kind of people. They prefer to join churches whose members look, talk, and act like themselves"(McGavran, Understanding Church Growth, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1980, p. 227).

Is it time to rethink this principle? Granted, most of us would agree that there's a lot of common sense in this princple. Yet, it's also been abused. Some have used it to claim that we should only reach people "like us" because this is the best way to grow Christ's church. Jesus seemed to contradict this principle in the parable in Matthew 22:8ff when he said 'The wedding banquet is ready, but those I invited did not deserve to come. Go to the street corners and invite to the banquet anyone you find.' So the servants went out into the streets and gathered all the people they could find, both good and bad, and the wedding hall was filled with guests." .

Let me get specific. Here in Moreno Valley, CA, where I'm planting a cell church, there is a mosaic of nationalities, income levels, education, and social status. Up to this point, we have naturally been reaching the white, middle class. Yet, we are also discovering that many in that homogenous group are not open to Christ. In obedience to Jesus, we've felt the need to go to the street corners and invite anyone (especially the needy) to come to the banquet of the King.

Admittedly, it can be uncomfortable for church members to receive people not like them. Yet, I believe that Christ calls us to go after the hungry ones, the ones willing to enter the banquet of King Jesus.

Look at the ministry of Jesus. In Matthew 21:12ff we read, Jesus entered the temple area and drove out all who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the benches of those selling doves. "It is written," he said to them, "'My house will be called a house of prayer,' but you are making it a 'den of robbers.'" The blind and the lame came to him at the temple, and he healed them. But when the chief priests and the teachers of the law saw the wonderful things he did and the children shouting in the temple area, "Hosanna to the Son of David," they were indignant.

In Moreno Valley, for example, we are seeing  God drawing English speaking Hispanic people to Himself. We at Wellspring feel a mandate to reach them because they are abundant in Moreno Valley, speak English, and hungry for Jesus. But they are not like us!

Even though HUP is a common sense principle, it should be thoroughly examined in the light of Scripture. And that same Scripture teaches that Jesus wants us to reach all those who respond to the gospel message.  

 

Joel Comiskey



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