Thursday, June 2, 2011

Philosophy Of Ministry

Teaching A pastors/Leaders
retreat in Singapore




Philosophy Of Ministry


Many time in ordination councils and in congregational search committees when they are looking for a pastor its not unusual to ask about the persons philosophy of ministry. These are the bedrock principles that guide the leader in how he or she functions within the ministry context. Having seen many attempts at it where the key principles are not clearly articulated it is no surprise that many leaders fail to get traction in leading their churches. 
I wrote this and hopefully will begin your thinking on this foundational issue.  Any person seeking to be an effective missional leader must know not only what needs done but must be grounded and understand why they do what they do.





Philosophy Of Ministry

  1. I believe we are co-laborers together with God. The important part of that partnership is that we get onto God’s agenda and stay there. For unless He builds the house they labor in vain who build.
  2. I believe that “big Christians” build great churches. There is no substitute for being grounded in and applying the word of God.
  3. I believe what God does in the life of leaders gets replicated and structured into the life of the church. As leaders, professional and lay, taking our own walk with God seriously and modeling the walk of a fully devoted follower is critical to developing a spiritually strong church. The church will not grow spiritually to a level above its leaders
  4. I believe Christians thrive in community and having every Christ-follower as part of a small group is an essential part of personal growth. It is in the context of this community that true life transformation happens.
  5. I believe the deployment of spiritual leaders multiples Kingdom impact. As a pastor a significant portion of my time will be invested in the development,discipling and deployment of leaders.
  6. I believe God has gifted and wired every individual differently and maximum kingdom growth occurs when we minister in the way God has wired us under a common purpose (mission) and shared vision
  7. I believe a Collegial Style of Leadership where the joint collaboration of Spiritual leaders, prayerfully discerning and doing the will of God is necessary for a church to thrive
  8. I believe the pastor is God’s “point person” and has a primary role to see that the vision God has given the church is accomplished. This is accomplished best by empowering people to find their place in the wonderful redemptive call of God.
  9. I believe the institutional church of the post war period must become a missional church in order to reach today’s culture with the gospel
  10. I believe the values about evangelism erode over time and it takes diligent hard work on the part of all those in leadership to keep the main thing the main thing.
  11. I believe our true values are seen in what we do. Honest evaluation of what we are doing and the results we achieve keep us focused on results not effort
  12. I believe the Vision is the what, and the Values are the why. The most common reason the vision doesn’t become a reality is because the deep seated values are incompatible with the vision. 
  13. I believe change is necessary for growth. I believe that the end goal of reaching and growing people is what should drive the change and is the only valid reason to consider change.
  14. Spiritual health and disease are a reality. Churches with an unholy sickness do not grow. Healthy churches grow.
  15. There is no limit to what God will do with people completely surrendered to Him.  We as individuals should be, and the church should be, those fully devoted followers and should be our and my heart passion.
  16. With my friend Karen Hurston one of
    the finest Christian Leaders in the World.
    In this picture she was helping a
     number of our students on
    a recent trip to Korea
  17. I believe any church can grow if
         o    It really wants to grow
         o    It will pay the price for growth
         o    It will be united in mission PSALM 133
         o    It will apply principles rather than be locked into methods
         o    Will persevere

Feel free to add your comments or even your personal Philosophy of Ministry or things you've learned about this issue in you time serving the Lord

Thursday, March 31, 2011

The Most Important Thing We Have To Do Before Its Too Late

Margaret and I with the pastors of a new
church in a Leper Colony
This poem from an unknown author has been a reminder to me that of all the things we should be doing while we sojourn here on earth nothing is more important than winning people to Christ.


Specifically, as we have been emphasizing in the last few posts, each of us has 6-15 people supernaturally and strategically placed in our lives by the Lord of the harvest and that place is called our "oikos" or our world. These are the folks that will hear and see the gospel though us, You or I may not always be the final link in that chain of events and encounters that finally brings a person to Christ but we must by what we do and say be the missing link for them at this time. Doing nothing if we believe in the value and benefits of being a Christian and the reality of hell is not an option. 
There is a video widely distributed on the internet that I am including in this post by Penn from Penn and Teller of Las Vegas show fame. He makes the point better than I ever could that if we really believe there is a hell and we don't tell the persons around us we really are expressing hate. We would never tell our friends to "go to hell" but our failure to tell them the good news has the same effect.


      A LETTER FROM HELL

My friend, I stand in Judgment now
And feel that you're to blame somehow.
While on this earth I walked you day by day,
And never did you point the way.

You knew the Lord in truth and Glory,
But, never did you ever tell the story,
My knowledge then was very dim,
You could lead me safe to him.

Though we lived-together here on earth,
You never told me of your second birth,
And now I stand this day condemned,
Because you failed to mention Him.
You taught me many things, that's true,
I called you Friend and trusted you.
But I learned, now that it's too late,
You could have kept me from this fate.
We walked by day and talked by night,
And yet you showed me not the light.
And you let me live, love, and die,
And all the while you know I'd never live on high,
Yes, I called you friend in life,
And trusted you in joy and strife.
And yet in coming to this end,
I see you really weren't my friend.

SCRIPTURE: Mat 28:18-20; Mark 16:15; Acts 1:8;  Romans 10:14, 15

As Ezekiel said God is looking for people to "stand in the gap," and the question to you and me is "Will I stand in the gap for those that God has brought into my world?"

Dr. Dale Salico, Dr. Larry Richards
and myself. These friends have been
instrumental in launching our
new Seminary


































































Charles Spurgeon put it this way; "If sinners be damned, at least let them leap to hell over our bodies. And if they will perish, let them perish with our arms about their knees, imploring them to stay.
If hell must be filled, at least let it be filled in the teeth of our exertions and let not one go there unwarned and unprayed for.



Dear Lord of the Harvest; Grant that we, your children and ambassadors may be found faithful, so that on that great resurrection day we will not enter heaven alone but bring with us those you have used us to reach. 
May your heart of compassion for the lost sheep of your pasture be burned deeply in our being so that we, each day, will be found faithful, May it be so for Your glory, Amen

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Deeper Thoughts On Oikos Evangelism


Dr. Thom Wolf
I first met Thom Wolf when I was working with Dr. Win Arn at the Institute for American Church Growth. Dr. Thom was the pastor of the Church on Brady an exciting church in East Los Angeles where he served 25 years as the Senior Pastor. The church today has become Mosaic one of the bright lights in contemporary American church life.
Seeing Thom’s ministry as this racially diverse and conflicted community in East Los Angeles was transformed by the gospel using this simple “oikos” principle was amazingly remarkable. So great was the impact of this church on the community in this the most unlikely of circumstances both he and it were featured in the film "...and THEY SAID IT COULDN'T BE DONE!"

Thom continues his ministry by continuing to develop leaders who will change their world as Thom has done with his


Dr. Thom Wolf is international president and professor of global studies of University Institute, New Delhi, India, an Asia-based learning group in, servicing South and East Asia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. He is an International Fellow of Canyon Institute of Advanced Studies, Phoenix. Arizona


OIKOS EVANGELISM
THE BIBLICAL PATTERN
By Dr. Thomas A. Wolf

Several fundamental insights from contemporary anthropology help us understand more clearly the biblical pattern of evangelism that flowed so freely, fearlessly and forcefully through the early church across the Mediterranean world.

Peter B. Hammond
Peter B. Hammond, professor of anthropology, Indiana University, observes; "in most cultures the social systems of greatest importance are based on kinship. Human beings everywhere are born into some sort of family. And almost always this family is important in giving them-literally and figuratively-a start in life: producing them, feeding, clothing, protecting, and educating them, and eventually establishing for them a 'place' in society...In most cultures the kin group plays an even more important role [than in America], lasting throughout life as the principal source of the individual's emotional, economic, social-and frequently supernatural-support, and providing the basis for community organization."

David G. Mandelbaum
David G. Mandelbaum, professor of anthropology. University of California, summarizes his findings: "Whatever diversity there may be among social groupings the world over, there are at least two types which are found in every human society. The family is one of them—In every land, among every people; the child is ordinarily raised and nurtured within a family. The other type of group universal to humanity...is the local community. Just as no person normally lives all his life alone, devoid of any family, so does no family normally live entirely alone, apart from any local group...of neighbors."2 Mandelbaum goes on to point out a third group-the clan-which is also a cultural universal, if one allows for its evolution in the contemporary Western setting. The clan has developed into "...the social units which are extensions of the local group...voluntary associations based on common interests...ranging from trade unions and medical associations to bridge clubs and parent-teacher associations. Each of these groupings is held together by a common interest, an interest arising from mutual participation in the same trades, the mutual enjoyment of a game, or mutual problems in relation to a set of children."

The three universal units of societies worldwide, according to anthropological research, are social systems based on
Dr. Thom Wolf
1) Common kinship,
2) Common community and
3) Common interests.
Now let us go one step further. Since this trinity of social systems is a part of present-day human life, would we be so surprised to discover the same central characteristics in the human matrix of social life in the times of the New Testament? In fact, that is exactly what we find. For this phenomenon is not only transcultural, it is trans-historical, reaching across centuries.

The apostolic church used the interlocking social systems of common
kinship/community/interest as the backbone for communicating the Gospel. The basic thrust of the New Testament evangelism was not individual evangelism, it was not mass evangelism; and it was definitely not child evangelism. The normative pattern of evangelism in the early church was OIKOS EVANGELISM.

"Oikos Evangelism" What is it? Oikos is the Greek word most often translated house or household evangelism. But be careful. Don't just assume you know what those words mean. Of course, we know their basic meaning in English. But what was their original connotation?

Under the old Attic law, oikos was the whole estate, while oikia was the physical dwelling only. However, that precise distinction was lost in later Greek. In the New Testament there are several places where oikia actually means the inhabitants of a house (Mt. 12.25; Jn 4.53; I Cor. 16.15; Phil. 4.22)

Oikos means a house. Specifically, it means an inhabited house in contrast to domos, the mere building itself. Thus, one can understand the significance of a house being a dwelling. Oikos was sometimes used to specify a certain kind of inhabited building such as a temple, a palace, or even a grave. 2

It was common in Egypt to call a temple the oikos of the deity. The papyri refer to "the oikos of Ammon" in the main temple of Hephaestus. The anthropological literature records the basic animistic practice of consecrating an image or shrine to a spirit and inviting the spirit to come and indwell the shrine. Such is the significance of Micah's oikos/shrine for the spirits during the times of the Judges (Judges 17.5)

The oikos of the Lord of Israel was the chosen place for His presence (Judges 18.31; 2Sam. 12.20), though there was continual clarification that the Lord of all the earth does not dwell in buildings made by man (Is. 66.1 -2; I Kings 8:12-21, 27-30; Jer. 7.1 -11; Acts 7:46-50).

Jesus spoke of His Father's oikos, sometimes meaning the earthly temple (Jn. 2.16) and sometimes the heavenly dwelling (Jn. 14.2). Spiritually, the body becomes the real oikos/dwelling place of God (I Cor. 3.16; 2 Cor. 6.16). Even demons will claim men's bodies as an oikos to inhabit when conditions are appropriate (Mt. 12:44; Lk. 11:24) I Timothy 3.15 makes it clear that the Oikos of God "is the church of the living God, the pillar and support of the truth."

In a broader sense, oikos referred to one's entire estate, people and property forming one family, a household, as the usage of oikos applied to the church would imply in Israel, the oikos included not only wife and children, but also servants and resident aliens. Thus, the command of Deuteronomy 12.7, "You shall eat before the Lord your God, and you shall rejoice, you and your household", is explained by 12.12, "You shall rejoice before the Lord your God, you and your sons and daughters, your menservants and your maidservants." (See also Deut. 14.26)

Dr. Thom Wolf
This same concept of oikos was just as basic in Graeco-Roman society and thought. Acts 10 has a casually given, though faithful, definition of oikos. It says that "Cornelius feared God with all his oikos/household" (10.2). An angel of God instructed Cornelius to send for Peter, saying "He will declare to you a message by which you will be saved, you and all your oikos" (11.14) When Peter arrived, "Cornelius was expecting them and had called together his kinsmen and close friends " (10:24,27).

An oikos is a social system composed of those relate to each other through common ties and tasks. The New Testament oikos included members of the nuclear family, but extended to dependents, slaves and employees. Oikos members often lived together, but always sensed a close association with each other. And note this carefully, the oikos constituted the basic social unit by which the early church grew, spreading the Good News of Jesus Christ, the risen Lord.

Michael Green, Evangelism in the Early Church,3 confirms that "the (oikos) family understood in this broad way, as consisting of blood relations, slaves, clients and friends, was one of the bastions of Graeco-Roman society. Christian missionaries made a deliberate point of gaining whatever households they could as lighthouses, so to speak, from which the Gospel could illuminate the surrounding darkness. [We are, then,] quite right in stressing the centrality of the loikosi household to Christian advance."
Michael Green
By thus cleaning the lenses of our socio-historical spectacles, we can see what an Oikos meant to the early church. An oikos was the fundamental and natural unit of society, and consisted of one's sphere of influence-his family, friends, and associates. And equally important, the early church spread through oikoses-circles of influence and association. With only a moment of reflection, we begin to realize a significant difference of thrust, tone, and tenor between much contemporary evangelism and early church outreach. The first church does not appear to have had a fanfare of mass campaigns for evangelism. They would have considered it foolishness to organize camel caravans for growth, bringing kids to Timothy's Children's Church with the promise of Bithynia Burgers after the services. (Tell me now; can you honestly imagine Silas and Titus as camel captains vying for the grand prize going to the camel team averaging the most children at the 1st Ecclesia of Ephesus??) But, joy of joys, the early church was not encumbered with the wholly unnatural (unnatural then and unnatural now) experience of forced evangelism; going reluctantly, flinchingly and embarrassingly door to door to encounter people they did not know, to explain a message which the first time often did not make sense, to an audience totally uninterested or unfriendly.

As Michael Green reminds us, an oikos for the New Testament church consisted of "blood relations, slaves, clients, and friends. Christian missionaries made a deliberate point of gaining whatever loikos] households they could as lighthouses, so to speak, from which the gospel could illuminate the surrounding darkness." 4  An oikos corresponds to what contemporary anthropologists define as the three universal social systems of common kinship, common community, and common interests.

OIKOS EVANGELISM is the God-given and God-ordained means for naturally sharing our supernatural message. The early church spread through oikos evangelism-evangelizing family members who saw the old sinner become the new saint; sharing with the neighbor who questioned how such a difference had come over his old friend, and reaching the guys in the local trade union or the oikos that played tennis together.

It is here, also, that we catch an eye-burning hint of the key to oikos evangelism:

Life transformation. If oikos evangelism is God's key to the natural and rapid spread of the Good News, the life transformation is the key to oikos penetration and persuasion. Life transformation. Maybe that is why some adults are forced into evangelizing only children. Could it be that the children do not yet see what the adult peer groups so clearly perceive-that one has become religious without becoming radiant? And could this also be a clue to why, all too often, the persons who are so gung-ho on doorbell evangelism seem.-.er, uh, well, not to offend anyone, they just seem a little strange? Now, don't get me wrong. They are sincere, unquestionably so. And they are enthusiastic, embarrassingly so. And yet, so help me, I've met a lot of them, and well...Could it be that some of us in the contemporary church who are so bold to evangelize "out there" fall fruitless "right here" in our own oikos? In the early church, it was the restoration of balance, the restitution of wrongs, and the fragrance of an enchanting new life that drew so many to the fledgling oikos of God.

"Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved, you and your oikos." (Acts 16:31) That is the apostolic answer to .the question, "What must I do to be saved."

The spread of the faith is included in the reception of the faith. Oikos evangelism is God's natural means to spread the Good News, for everyone who has ever, or will ever receive Christ. And the key that opens every oikos is life transformation through the indwelling of the living God.




FOOTNOTES
  1. Hammond, Peter. Cultural & Social Anthropology: Selected Readings. 1964:145-46. MacMillan: New York. 
  2. Mandelbaum, David. "Social Groupings" in Hammond M Cultural & Social Anthropology (see above).
  3. Green, Michael. Evangelism in The Early Church. 1970:210. Eerdmans: Grand Rapids
  4. (For additional Comments see pp. 207-223.)

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

The Silver Bullet for Disciple Making

In my last post I wrote an article on the "oikos" principle and its role in the growth of the church. Dr. Charles Arn, his father the late Dr. Win Arn and myself had the privilege of leading seminars to help churches intentionalize this principle. This week Dr. Charles Arn sent me this article, as he thought and I agree it would make a great post for all the readers and followers of this blog.



My self and Dr. Larry Richards on the
 Frank Pastore Radio Show
As you read this article let me give you a simple suggestion of something you can do as a pastor. In a Sunday service ask people this question; " If you would say that the primary reason you are a Christian today is a result of the influence of a friend or relative please stand." You will find that  85%-95% of the persons in attendance will be standing. This will be true whether your church has grown in the past years or not. This makes a wonderful way to introduce the 'oikos" principle to your church.


You could follow this up in a number of ways;

  1. Preach a message or series of messages on this subject
  2. Continually encourage and facilitate people taking time to develop relationship with their oikos.
  3. Have your leaders study either of the books listed in the previous post
  4. Plan special activities especially designed to allow people to bring their oikos to a church event that has been designed with the oikos in mind.
  5. Have Dr. Charles Arn come to your church for a weekend seminar to train your people and help light the fire that will see your church explode with new life and vitality. email him at chiparn@aol.com

The Silver Bullet for Disciple Making (Charles Arn)
Silver bullet”— Any straightforward solution perceived to have extreme effectiveness; a phrase that typically appears with an expectation that a particular practice will cure a major prevailing problem.[i]
Dr. Charles Arn
Based on my 30+ years in studying the process of evangelism and church growth, I can confidently say there is a “silver bullet” for fulfilling Christ’s command to go and make disciples.  Here it is:
The most effective evangelism—by far—occurs through meaningful relationships between Christians and non-Christians.
Did you know that over twice as many non-Christians come to Christ through relationships with Christian friends or relatives than all other reasons combined?
Many times in his ministry Jesus talked about and modeled this “disciple-making silver bullet.”  To the demon-possessed man (Mark 5:19) he said, “go home to your friends and tell them what wonderful things God has done for you…”  When Zacchaeus believed, Christ told him that salvation had also come to his friends and family (Luke 19:9).  After Jesus healed the son of a royal official we learn that the Centurion, and all of his family and friends, believed (Mark 2:14-15).  Jesus was teaching about sharing God’s love with the people we already know.  It is the way the Gospel travels!
In your next devotion time look up that word “household”.  You will find it not only in the references above, but in many other verses, as well.  In the original Greek, the word is oikos, and it has a fascinating meaning.  Oikos referred to the people in a person’s social network. It included a person’s immediate family (father, brother, wife, etc.).  It included a person’s extended family (cousin, brother-in-law, grandparent, nephew, etc.).  Oikos referred to the servants that stayed in the living compound of the first century home.  It referred to the servants’ families who also lived there.  The word oikos referred to a person’s close friends, as well as their work associates.  When the tremendous earthquake caused the Philippian jailer to desperately cry out: “What must I do to be saved?” Paul responded, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved…you and your oikos” (Acts 16:31).  Michael Green observes, “The early Christians knew that when the message of faith was heard and demonstrated by friends and family who were known and trusted…receptivity to the Gospel increased tremendously.”[ii]
A Problem with Shooting the Silver Bullet
"Chip" Leading A Seminar
But, there is one essential requirement for reaching friends and neighbors: we must be close enough to unbelievers for Christ to be observed and experienced through us. And there’s the rub.  The problem is that the longer we are in the church, the more friends we have who are also in the church…and the fewer friends we have outside the church.  Let me repeat this important problem-statement, because it is one of the major obstacles to the spread of the Christian Gospel today:  Most Christians have very few close friends who are non-Christian. Without such relationships, it is impossible to be Christ-like.
One reason that 85+% of today’s churches are not growing is that the social networks of people in these churches are almost entirely within the church.  Worse yet, churches frequently program to encourage this relational isolation.  Church activities are geared toward existing members.  “Successful” church events are when a high percentage of members attend.  Small groups are formed primarily for church attenders.  As a result, not only do church members have few non-Christian people with whom they associate…non-Christian people in the community have few or no close friends in the church!
The Solution…
So, how do we enter into a non-Christian’s world to be Christ-like (incarnational) if we don’t really know any non-Christians?  The answer is easy.  We need to become more like Jesus—we need friends who are “…tax collectors and sinners!” (Matt. 11:19)  Or, if you prefer Eugene Peterson’s version, Jesus was spoken of as “…a friend of the riffraff.”
The Oikos Principle is that lever
long enough to change our world
From Christ’s point of view, I think having no non-Christian friends is a serious problem. How can Christ’s missional task be accomplished if His people are not in the world?  “My prayer,” said Jesus to His Father, “is not that you take them [Christ’s followers] out of the world, but that you protect them from the evil one” (John 17:15).  In fact, Christians are supposed to be in the world, just not of the world. Paul knew that he needed to connect with “the riffraff” before he could communicate with them:
“I didn’t take on their way of life.  I kept my bearings in Christ.  But I entered their world and tried to experience things from their point of view.  I’ve become just about every sort of servant there is in my attempts to lead those I meet into a God-saved life.  I did all this because of the Message.  I didn’t just want to talk about it; I wanted to be in on it!” (I Cor. 9:19-23 The Message)
We are to be the salt of the earth (Matt. 5:13).  And salt does not season itself.  So, let me encourage you, as seminarians who are spending time to be a better leader of Christ’s Church, to also spend time with the riffraff.  It is those lost people, after all, for whom Christ came to “seek and to save” (Luke 19:10).

[i] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_bullet
[ii] Michael Green.  Evangelism in the Early Church. Grand Rapids: Eerdmanns, 1970, p. 210.


Monday, February 14, 2011

How A Church Really Grows: The Oikos Phenomina

Oikos Evangelism

Introduction:
It would not be an exaggeration to say that the potential most churches and individuals have in terms of impacting their worlds with the gospel is far greater than the achievement. Program after program is launched but the results hardly ever come close to meeting the expectation. We still see almost 80% of churches either plasteaued or in decline.

There is a strategy however that has worked in every church, in every culture, and in every time frame. It is true in growing and non growing churches. The reason for its working is that each of us has a relational world and that relational world has been responsible for 90% of all the peoples who have become Christians and part of the church in their journey to faith.

How People Come To Christ and His Church
The Biblical Concept Of The Oikos

Oikos is a Greek word that is often translated "household" in the New Testament.  In English, "household" means the nuclear family.  In Greek, however, its usage was much broader and included family, neighbors, co-workers and friends and those with whom we come into regular contact.
Today it is called many things by the pastors and churches who are seeking to intentionalize this principle. It is your 8-15, your extended family, your fishing pool, your world, and sometimes simply by the Biblical world your
Oikos
                           
    Examples Abound Throughout The Scriptures:

    • Luke 8:39 The demoniac was told to return to his household and described the great things done for him
    • Luke 19:9 Zacchaeus was told salvation had come to his household
    • John 4:53 The centurion's whole household was saved following the healing of his son
    • Acts 10:2  This records that Cornelius was a righteous man who feared God with all his household.  When Peter arrived to preach the gospel, we see that Cornelius had a broader understanding of oikos than simply his relatives. 
    • Acts 10:24 When Peter arrived Cornealius had invited his relatives and close friends
    • Acts 18:8   Luke describes how Crispus, leader of the synagogue at Corinth, believed in the Lord with all his household
    • 1 Corinthians 1:16Paul baptized the household of Stephanas

    In addition to these direct usages of the term oikos the principle is taught throughout scripture


    • Mark 2:14-15 describes how Jesus called Matthew, the tax collector; and the scripture records that soon after many other tax collectors were following Jesus and dining with him
    • Luke 7:37-8:3 records how the prostitute came to Jesus, and soon after many other "sinful women" were following Christ
    • Luke 15  In the three parables about a lost coin, a lost sheep, and a lost son, all tell of the rejoicing when the lost was found.  In all three cases they told their friends and family.  The message of hope was passed on through the oikos
    • John 1:40-41 tells of Andrew bringing his brother to Christ
    • John 1:44-45 tells of Philip bringing his friend Nathanael to Christ

    In these and many other passages we can see how the natural webs of relationships, which comprised the oikos of the early Christians, became the primary means for the spread of the gospel.

    Michael Green, in the book, Evangelism In the Early Church, observes the New Testament Church rigorously adhered to the oikos principle as its primary strategy for the Christian advance.  The early Christians knew when the message of faith was heard and demonstrated by friends and family who were known, and trusted barriers to the gospel were removed and receptivity to the message increased tremendously

    Oikos Evangelism Definition
    Oikos evangelism is God's natural method for transmitting a supernatural message

    Pastor Tom Mercer Leads the
    High Desert Church one of
    the best examples of the
     oikos principle
    The Key To Oikos Penetration

    • Integrity. The person’s in our oikos will see any lack of integrity on our part as disproof of the life transforming power of the Gospel. 
    •  Life transformation: What we were is well known by our oikos. What we have become and are becoming is the testimony of Christ’s transforming power.  “If any man is in Christ he is a new creature. Old things pass away and all things become new.”  II Corinthians 5:17

    The Principle Today

    How People Come To Christ And The Church
          In the past 30 years I have asked over 100,000 Christians in over fifty denominations in 28 countries this question: "What factor has had the greatest influence in your decision to become a Christian and become part of the church?"  The answers have never wavered more than a point or two from the ranges shown.


    SPECIAL NEED                                                                          1 - 3%
    WALK IN                                                                                        2 - 4%
    PASTOR OR CHURCH STAFF                                                 0 - 3%
    VISITATION/TELE-MARKETING                                               1/2 - 1%
    SUNDAY SCHOOL/SMALL GROUP                                        4 - 6%
    EVANGELISTIC CRUSADE                                                       1/2- 1%
    All OTHER CHURCH PROGRAMS                                          2 - 4%
    FRIENDS AND/OR RELATIVES     (Oikos)                             75 - 90%

    It is interesting to note that these statistics were just as true in declining churches as well as growing congregations.  The statistics explained growth but did not cause it.  In growing congregations a greater percentage of Christians take seriously the reaching of their oikos.

    It is also interesting to note that the statistics tell why people come, not where or to what they come. The two most common places were the oikos member of a Christian first touches the church and its ministry is either through the worship service or a small group. My research shows that in those churches that are primarily cell based the oikos principle works by people inviting their oikos to the cell. In America it tends to be most often the worship service or a special church program. A Cell-Church oikos strategy goes from small to large while non cell based churches tend to go from large to small. Both however recognize the necessity of people being connected to the worshipping community and being a part of a cell/small group.

    Developing an Oikos strategy
    The four worlds of church members

    • Biological World — related to me by blood or marriage
    • Vocational World — work associates
    • Geographical World — immediate community, neighbors
    • Volitional World — the world of my choice, leisure activities, sports etc.

    The average Christian has between eight (8) and fifteen (15) people in their oikos who are:

    • Presently not Christians or active in any church, and
    • Live within a reasonable driving distance of the church of that member
                           
    New Christians have a few more contacts; older Christians a few less. Just for a moment consider our evangelistic potential; if we take our average attendance and multiply it by 8 we will see that our potential growth just from oikos contacts is 8 times larger than our present congregation. The Gallup organization, as well as George Barna,  and Tom Rainer have documented that more than 50% of people, if simply given an invitation by a Christian they knew, would attend a church service or small group activity.  The issue has never been a lack of opportunity.  Jesus was clear: the need is for laborers.

    Applying an oikos strategy

    When we look at not only why people come to Christ but when three additional facts become apparent we can fine tune our strategy.


    •  First, the majority of people who become Christians do so in the first 18 years of life. When developing your oikos strategy don’t neglect either the children or youth of your church and community. This means encouraging parents Sunday School teachers in the reaching of children during these formative years. The most important part of this phenomina is to note if you look at the oikos source it is primarily a family member God used when you look at the conversion of Children

    •  Second when you look at adult conversions the majority of these converts would point to a friend as being the bridge. As churches we often either keep people so busy in the church they do not have time to build these relationships across which the gospel can travel or we actually discourage people from having these relationships with the misguided fear that those persons will draw the Christian away from the Lord and his mission.

    • Third, Jesus told us to look at fields that are white unto harvest. Studies have proven that individuals who have become Christians most often do so in a time of stress or transition. As we apply this practical fact with the truth of scripture there are some simple things we can do to focus on the harvest. When Jesus sent us out into our world the place where we were to have a harvest He told us to look at the fields that were “white to harvest”. How do we tap into this principle of receptivity.

    DDIS is it. this is a simple way to think about receptivity as the persons in your oikos go through change or transition


    • Death of a family member or friend
    • Difficulty or problem that does not seem to have an easy solution
    • Illness
    • Situation change. Job, marriage, divorce, birth of a child etc.

    The times of receptivity

    • The calendar:  People tend to be more receptive at certain times of the year. Examples include: Christmas, Easter, beginning of the school year, anniversary of a loved ones death, etc,
    •  Relationship.  The stronger a relationship a Christian has with a non-Christian the greater the receptivity to the gospel becomes. One or two hours per week invested with someone in your oikos is part of the process of increasing their receptivity Gospel.

    The Holmes/Rahe Scale
    There is a stress test developed by two doctors that was given to 750 people.

    In the study two conclusions emerged.

    First, the more stress inducing things that a person had in their life in the previous six months the more receptive they were to the life transforming message of the Gospel. Persons who have accumulated 150 points of greater in the previous six months are most receptive. After six months has passed most people go back to their previous life patterns unless they are converted.

    Second, People in very stable situations are unlikely to make any change including their religious beliefs, 

    When you look at the persons in your oikos focus first on those persons you sense will be most responsive to the Gospel at this time based on what has been happening. Theologians call this the preveinent grace of God. God is working with us so is at work in our oikos seeking to bring them to a point of readiness and receptivity.

    The sovereign move of the Spirit of God
    At various time in the past 100 years we have seen God moving in miraculous ways to bring in the harvest. In the period from 1952- 1970 following the Korean war there was a mighty harvest resulting  in the city of Seoul alone two churches over 500, 000 in size each and 9 additional churches over 30,000 each. Less than 2% of the population was Christian then. Today it approaches 50%.
    God’s Spirit has been moving sovereignly in Africa as well. South  of the Sahara most countries have nearly 50% of their people saved.

    People who look at missions and ask where is God’s Spirit moving today  point to South America. There is presently a tremendousspiritual hunger for God and the churches that see the fields as white to harvest are seeing hundreds of persons becoming Christians. The number of churches in South America over 3000 seems to be increasing every year. A Church in Bogota has become the world’s 2nd largest church A church in Chile has over 80,000. A river village in the Amazon Basin of 19 households has seen 17 of them become Christians in the past 3 years. Everywhere you look there are signs of God’s moving to bring in the harvest.

    Seven Steps in Oikos Evangelism

    1.    Identify the persons in your oikos

    Biological
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    Vocational
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    Geographical
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    Volitional
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    2.    Learn as much as possible about your oikos contacts
    Knowing a person beyond simple biographical details is an essential part of effective disciple making. The more we know about their interests, hobbies, past experiences, etc. the more effective we will become in our effort to reach them


    3.    Pray regularly and specifically for your oikos
    ·      We have been commanded to pray
    ·      It stops the work of the enemy. We do have the authority to bind him
    ·      It gives us wisdom in our witness. If we lack wisdom God promises to give it
    ·      It protects the seed of the gospel. The parable of the sower says the enemy seek to steal the seed
    ·      It changes my character. God will reveal any obstacles in your life that are hindering the clear transmission of the message
    ·      It recognizes I am a co-laborer. Without us God won’t. Without God we can’t. We need his power and presence if our witness is to be effective.
                           
    4.    Focus your efforts
    ·      Different people are at different points of receptivity Focus on the most  receptive
    ·      I have limited time. We are stewards of our time. Investing the time we have where there is the greatest opportunity for a harvest is good stewardship.
    ·      God's prevenient grace is at work. God’s Spirit has been working. Be sensitive to it and look for it.
    ·      My relationships are a different stages. Those with whom I have had the longest relationship may be more receptive than those I have just recently met.
    ·      God's Spirit will lead me to the most receptive.
    ·      Our church can best support our witness to specific individuals. Look at your church. Does it have programs that relate to specific needs of persons in your oikos? Are there people in your church who would relate easily to the unreached needs and interests?

    5.    Develop a disciple-making plan

    Caring: link great commission and the great commandment. Jesus stated that people would know that we were His disciple by the way we love. Loving one another only is not enough we like God need to love those who are not yet part of His family.

    Strengthening of the relationship. Receptivity increases as the relationship grows.

    Involvement of other Christians. The more Christians a non-Christian knows the more complete their understanding of the Christian faith becomes.

    Providing a variety of exposures to the gospel. Most persons hear the gospel many different times and in a variety of ways. The evangelistic Bible studies, your personal testimony, church services, Gospel films, are just a few examples. The research provided by Flavil Yakley shows that 6-8 exposures to the gospel are normally required before a commitment will be made. It really is a process. Most of us know that our own conversion occurred after hearing the gospel a number of times and in a variety of ways.

    6.    Work the disciple-making plan

    ·      Attentive listening If we will listen our unreached friend will communicate to us so we can best communicate the Gospel to them.
    ·      Relate to needs. The door of entry to a persons real spiritual need is often through the door of their felt need.
    ·      Identify receptive moments.
    ·      Appropriate timing. Look for God to open the door. It may come through a question or comment your friend makes.
    ·      Sensitivity to the Holy Spirit. The scriptures teach that it is His responsibility to draw people to Christ.
    ·      Use understandable language. Most of our unreached oikos is not familiar with church or, religious language.
    ·      Be patient. Jesus used farming parables about seeds. They take time to grow. We need to nurture, and water the seed and wait for it to grow.
    ·       

    7.    Incorporate them into the church/group

    ·      Disciples, not decisions, is the goal
    ·      Unincorporated converts rarely stick. The advantage of reaching people through a small group is that they already belong and the decision they make is rarely if ever regretted.
    ·      Incorporation begins before conversion. We often think we need to reach people and then bring them into the life of the church. The reality is we need to bring them in love and accept them and in that environment they will come to faith.
     
     
    Resources For Oikos Evangelism

    My favorite books

     Oikos Your World Delivered Pastor Tom Mercer


    The Best Oikos Church To Visit And Learn From




    Contacts Re Oikos Help for Your Church Or Region