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Xenos Adult Education




















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Servanthood
1
Understanding
Ministry
Structure and Strategy in the Local Church
Other "wineskins"
Each local church
has significant differences in both the fields they are reaching and the
resources they possess. For this reason, it should not be surprising that
there are many different "wineskins" which are effective in
church growth. It is important to realize this, since the natural tendency
is to think that our present "wineskin," if it is effective,
is the best way of doing things.
Below are examples
of churches which have all enjoyed significant growth, but which have
employed a wide variety of "wineskins."
- New Hope Community
Church. Started by Dale Galloway in Portland; focuses on people
with "felt needs" as opportunity for outreach; utilizes hundreds
of small groups for evangelism; utilizes large meetings for worship.
Willow Creek.
Started by Bill Hybels in suburban Chicago; focuses on corporate male
25-45; utilizes large seeker-sensitive meetings in an impressive, non-churchy
building; strong emphasis on friendship evangelism; developed NETWORK
to facilitate mobilization of people into suitable ministry; is presently
developing home groups for both koinonia and outreach.
- Fellowship
Bible Churches. Started by Gene Getz in Dallas; somewhat contemporary
worship services centered around solid Bible teaching; strong emphasis
on fellowship facilitated by home groups; has successfully utilized
Dallas Seminary graduates (where Getz taught) to start several new churches;
growth may be largely assimilating Christians, since evangelism is not
strongly emphasized.
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- Elmbrook.
Led by Stuart Briscoe in suburban Milwaukee; traditional worship services
with excellent expository preaching; strong line of courses offered,
including a branch of TEDS; Briscoe and wife have regular TV show; have
successfully daughtered four churches in the Milwaukee area; strong
emphasis on foreign missions.
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- Bear Valley.
Formerly led by Frank Tillapaugh and Paul Borden in Denver; emphasized
facilitating laymen starting new ministries; against building larger
facility, instead using same facility to house different ethnic congregations.
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- Calvary Chapel.
Started in Costa Mesa by Chuck Smith who was a key figure in providing
acceptance of hippies and direction for the Jesus Movement; moderate
charismatic with solid Bible teaching; strong emphasis on domestic church
planting. Over 800 churches planted in the U.S.
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- Vineyard.
Broke off from Calvary Chapel; John Wimber has emphasized "power
evangelism"--relying on Spirit-led encounters rather than persuasion;
moderate charismatic large-group worship services and home "kinship"
groups for koinonia; Vineyard is a new denomination, starting new churches
or assimilating existing groups nationwide.
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