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There are Church Planters in Your Church
I’m convinced there are people within your church, right now, who could become church planters. You just need help recognizing them. You need a church planter scouting guide. Download one here.

It All Starts with an Invitation
Multiply Project helps churches call, equip, and send church planters from within their congregation. Yes, that means there is a church planter in your church. You’re thinking, “You don’t know my church. We can’t find enough people to spend an hour with kids on Sunday morning. How could someone possibly be willing to plant a church?” Have you asked?God sometimes calls people in extraordinary ways. Moses saw a burning bush. Saul saw a light so bright it blinded him. Compare that to Jesus’ invitation to his disciples, “Come, follow me.” That’s how it began. No burning bush. No bright lights from heaven. Just a simple invitation.I wonder, has anyone ever invited you to start a church? That’s how church planting started for me. I was having lunch with a mentor. I was a typical frustrated young leader. I told him I thought I could be doing more. Our church could be doing more. God could be doing more. He listened patiently and then invited me to start a church.On the flip side, have you ever invited someone to start a church? I do it often. Most recently over coffee with a friend. Not everyone says yes. Truthfully, most don’t. That’s ok. My role is to invite. Convincing is up to God.Here are three keys to inviting people in your church to plant churches. First, you must talk about it publicly. When does an idea in your church become a reality? When it comes up in a meeting? When a decision is made to do it? or when you talk about it on Sunday? If you don’t cast a vision in your church’s primary gathering for people from within your church being sent to start churches, people won’t believe it’s possible.Then you must also invite people individually. We call it an “I see in you” conversation. It’s an invitation with an explanation. There is something powerful and incredibly affirming when you hear someone describe the skills, talents, gifts, and abilities they’ve seen in you. They’ll thank you even if they don’t say yes to church planting Most of all, you must do this constantly. Once isn’t enough. Once a year isn’t enough. Once every time they are around you until they are sick of hearing it and tell you – that’s enough. That’s when you know they’ve heard.Somewhere in there, someone will say yes. It all starts with an invitation.

The Church has a Leadership Crisis – It’s time for a Farm System
What do German football and the church have in common? The need to develop the next generation of talent.In 2000, Germany was one of 16 countries that sent teams to the Euro 2000 soccer tournament. Those teams played round-robin in groups of 4 to qualify for the knockout round. The German national team failed to qualify. In their first round-robin match, they tied Romania 1-1. In the second match, they lost to England 1-0. In the third match, they lost to Portugal 3-0. They played 3 matches, gave up 5 goals, and only scored 1. You don’t need to know much about soccer to know that’s bad.In February 2001, the German Bundesliga (think NFL) made it mandatory for all 18 top-flight professional teams to run a youth academy — essentially a school for promising soccer players, with teams and coaches going all the way down to the under-12-year-old level. Later, academies became mandatory for all 36 professional teams in the top two German divisions. Between 2001 and 2011 professional teams in Germany spent ~€500 million on youth soccer development. By the 2011-12 season, more than half of all professional Bundesliga players were part of the German academy system at one time.In 2014, the German national team won the World Cup.The church in America has reached a similar crisis moment. There is a need to start thousands of new churches to replace those that are closing and reach a growing and increasingly diverse population. The number of churches being started is decreasing rapidly because there are not enough well-equipped leaders to start them. You don’t need to know much about church multiplication to know this is bad.It’s not that long ago the number of new churches was increasing. Young leaders went to Bible colleges and seminaries, became youth pastors, and after gaining some experience, started new churches. I was one of them. I’ve helped hundreds of people like me follow the same path. Today that pathway is broken. That pipeline is empty. The American church (likely the church in the West) has arrived at a crisis moment. Just like German soccer, the talent needed to accomplish the mission just isn’t there. It’s time for a paradigm shift.It’s time for the epicenter of developing leaders to shift from the college and university to the local church. Like the German soccer league, every church needs to invest in developing the next generation of new-church leaders. The church needs a holistic church-based training system that develops the calling, character, competency, and capacity needed to start faithful, fruitful, multiplying churches.The church needs a farm system.Let’s build one together.