The first thing leaders have to settle on is the definition
of follow up. DON"T SKIP THIS STEP! See the paper, Home
Church Follow Up and consider carefully the difference between legitimate
biblical follow up and manipulation. Your task as a leader is to facilitate
good follow up, not to foster a manipulative social environment.
To facilitate good follow up, you will need to do the following:
- Monitor and assess the quality of follow up in the home
church
- Train members in successful follow up methods
- Motivate good follow up through your words and deeds
Monitoring and assessing follow up
A good way to understand your home church's success in follow
up is to compare the number of first time guests to the group with the number
of those guests returning for additional visits since the last time your church
planted. These returning guests are called "returning new" in the
graphs provided by the Xenos office. The comparison between first time guests
and returning new people is not a completely accurate measure of follow up success,
but experience shows that this ratio generally correlates well with successful
follow up efforts. Notice the following about this comparison:
- Your returning new people will not include those who may
have visited only two or three times before planting your current home church,
even though such guests are still the object of follow up efforts. Of course
as the home church moves further into it's cycle (and away from the time of
planting) this fact diminishes in importance. The main result is that the
follow up ratio is more accurate further into the the home cycle.
- Some of those shown as returning new people may not be won
in any sense. They may be non Christians, or completely uncommitted believers
who continue to visit on a tentative basis. This means again that the follow
up ratio is inaccurate, because you are counting all returning new as successes,
whereas usually some of them are still undecided. This again results in the
follow up ratio becoming more accurate over time, as the uncommitted eventually
lose interest.
- In spite of these anomalies, the follow up ratio is a helpful
measure because it is objective, easy to measure, and allows us to compare
results between home churches. Since the ratio is assessed comparatively,
the inaccuracy, especially in the early weeks of a home church, are unimportant.
Be prepared for your follow up ratio to decline after the first few weeks
of your current home church cycle.
- In general, adult groups should seek a follow up ratio no
worse than 4:1 (4 first time guests for each returning new person). However,
this goal could change depending on the group's outreach level. If the group
has low outreach, (first time guests equal to less than 10% of your total
attendance per month [i.e. 2 people per month in a home church of 20]) you
may want to seek an even better ratio, such as 3 or even 2 to 1. These levels
have been attained by adult churches with low outreach. On the other hand,
a home church with high outreach levels (more than 10% of the group in first
time guests per month) will likely fall below the 4:1 standard, even if their
follow up is good. Considering this model for a home group of 20, we see that
such a group could expect around 25 guests in a year, and that 6 of these
would still be attending. If original members have remained relatively steady
(less than 10% loss per year), such a group would have grown by 25% or more.
For an adult group, this would be considered good growth. Such a group would
double in just over 3 years.
- Student home churches should generally seek a follow up
ratio of 5:1. The rate is lower because student groups usually have higher
levels of outreach (typically 20% of their total attendance per month [i.e.
6 first-time guests per month for a home church of 30). With outreach levels
twice that of adult groups, such student groups will grow rapidly, even with
the lower follow up rate. For instance, a group of 30 with average outreach
would see about 80 first timers per year. Of those 16 would still be attending
if they attain a 5:1 ratio. While this seems like incredible growth, we should
remember, that old member stability is poorer with student groups (often 20%
per year departing), resulting in a loss in the same group of 6 people. The
resulting growth would still be rapid at over 30% (doubling in 2.5 years).
Again, the goals should be adjusted for differences in outreach rates--the
more first-time guests a group has, the lower their follow up will likely
be.
Training Members in Effective Follow Up Methods
The paper Home Church Follow Up has
been written to help leaders train committed members in follow up theory and
practice. Most of the issues you need to train on are contained in that paper,
and in the paper, Leading Home Church Evangelism.
Feel free to use these outlines for cell group studies. The main point is to
periodically have members thinking deeply about the issue of follow up, and
to speak passionately on the need for good follow up. Your members will be creative
about how to befriend guests, and how to persuade those who need it if you lead
the way in thinking and praying about this area.
The period we refer to as follow up often includes evangelism,
as people may well not make a decision for Christ until weeks or months after
they begin attending. To get a sense of your people's learning needs, it is
essential that you be present in person to watch interactions between your members
and guests. Try to get in position to listen to discussions after home church
meetings or at social events. Look for evidence of the typical extremes in your
people's follow up work:
- Impatience. Watch for argumentative conversations
or excessive pressure on guests. This is common in younger groups. Teach on
the decision continuum.
- Timidity. Is there evidence that your people never
actually call for a decision? Are they hoping others will simply join because
of social affinity? This is hard to discern, but we should teach that eventually
a strong call may be necessary. Suggest ways to bring the need for decision
to people's attention without being pushy.
- Omission. When you see a guest sitting or standing
by him or herself for any length of time (especially when regular members
stand nearby talking to each other), you are beholding a training need in
the home church. Teach your people to be watching guests and taking initiative
in discussion. If we think it's hard to initiate discussion with a guest,
just imagine how much more difficult it is for the new person!
- Self-centeredness. Lazy and flabby home churches
may be good at outreach, but they are consistently poor at follow up. Follow
up is not a ministry that can be advanced at our convenience. We must be alert
and ready to move into the world of our guests at their convenience. Connect
good follow up and commitment in the mind of your people.
Motivating Good Follow Up
Often the missing element in home church follow up is not information,
but motivation. When your assessment shows a problem with follow up, here are
some ideas:
- Training is motivational. Don't overlook training
like that mentioned above under the assumption that your people already know
how to do follow up. You may need to repeat a study series from the year before
because people have forgotten your points.
- Arrange for regular times and places for follow up.
Your home church should either go out together after the meeting (usually
typical of singles and student groups) or stay at the home for a time of social
interaction. If staying at the house, make sure there are treats and an environment
conducive to conversation. The time after Central Teaching could also be good
for follow up.
- Feedback. Share your assessment of the home church's
follow up work with your people. People may not be aware that follow up is
a problem in your home church even when your ratio is poor. The first part
of building motivation is acknowledging the problem. Share negative feedback
in a way that avoids defeatism. Be sure to reflect faith in God's power to
change the situation. Also, be sure to pick an appropriate venue for sharing
this information. Follow up is the concern of committed members, not the guests
themselves. Some groups schedule special workers' meetings for this purpose.
In other cases, cell groups or one-on-one discussion may be appropriate.
- Pursue change to the appropriate level of tension.
By regularly reminding the group that they are wasting time with their outreach
because their follow up is poor, you will create tension on this issue. Also
by regularly praying about the problem in cell groups or other believers'
meetings and regularly sharing additional feedback you will create tension.
A group needs to feel a certain level of tension before change is likely.
- Model good follow up. Unlike outreach, where younger
Christians often excel, older Christians are often more effective at follow
up. Here is an area where the leaders' knowledge and experience in dealing
with people are at a premium. Try to arrange situations where you can do follow
up work in person, and if possible, have younger Christians watch how you
interact. Nothing would be better for training and for motivation. Afterward,
talk to your disciples about what you were trying to accomplish and about
how exciting it was.
- Teach members of your home church how to take responsibility
for their own sphere. People should feel special
responsibility for those guests brought by members of their own cell group
or by members of a related cell group of the opposite sex. Although we should
all feel responsible to some extent for all guests, those in our own sphere
of ministry should carry a special burden.
- Teach your members to "respect the bringer."
People should not try to recruit a guest to a ministry sphere incompatible
with that of the one who brought the guest. When this happens, we threaten
the motivation level of the church, and may even cause tension between members
who feel wronged. You can learn more about ministry ethics in developing ministry
spheres in the paper, Managing Home Church Growth.
- Home churches with members seeking discipleship opportunities
usually have better follow up. If the younger committed Christians in
your group are actively looking for new Christians to disciple, they will
be motivated to work hard at follow up. Is this a vision that appeals to your
disciples?
- Discuss motivation with your supervisor. Your staff
supervisor may have additional thoughts on how you can bring more motivation
to your group in the area of follow up.
Bringing a home church into the position where their follow
up is good is one of the most difficult parts of home church leadership. When
you see improvement here, all other phases of ministry will benefit. Be sure
to share the encouragement for each success.
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