Reread summer of 2024 w/ RoG elders.
Review:
This is the most realistic and refreshing resource on church planting that I’ve read!
In my experience, there is a huge difference between the expectations set by most church planting resources and the actual experience of church planters. Conferences, podcasts, and books on planting talk about big vision, multiplication movements, and entrepreneurial excellence. However, big ego often lurks behind big vision. Instead of multiplication, most new churches struggle to stay alive, and many close in the first 5 years. Entrepreneurialism can be an asset, but is often emphasized over biblical character qualifications (see. 1 Timothy 3, Titus 1 and 1 Peter 5.) to the detriment of the pastor, the church, and the public witness to Christ’s glory in the community.
When aspiring planters drink in the prevailing, Western “wisdom” on church planting and find their experience to fall way short of their expectations, they often become cynical and burnout. Some even leave the faith or lose their families. The “Honest Guide to Church Planting” examines those false expectations, dismantles them, and replaces them with realistic, yet, hopeful expectations that are focused on God’s work more than ours. This book makes me want to plant even more and in a far more humble and happy way. Bennardo writes with clarity and helpful examples and illustrations. You don’t have to agree with all his conclusions to benefit deeply from his book. If you are planting, know a planter, or are on a team starting a new church, this book will serve you.
Takeaways:
(there are so many more takeaways. I listened to the audiobook but plan to get a hard copy to mark up)
•”God’s Slow is slower than your slow.” Some examples of God’s deliberate slowness: 400 years in Egypt, 40 years in the wilderness, 70 years in exile, Joseph’s two years in prison for a false accusation, Moses’ 40 years as a shepherd, the coming of the messiah after centuries of expectation.
•Planters need to stop using “Narcicistic exegesis”. We are not Moses.
• “For every Moses in God’s plan, there were 100,000 guys named Ralph or George who served God faithfully, sacrificed to obey his ways, led their families well, labored and worshipped and lived and died without seeing a movement start…”
•Many planters try to prove their worth through hard work. This is a huge battle for me. Ch. 9 is a lifeline for those who struggle to rest in the Father’s love.