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Leadership

Church Planting

Week’s emphasis urges ministers to consider church-planting
careers

By Joe David Smith

NEW ORLEANS (BP)–“There are few things in our life that are
worth our life. The one thing that is worth our life is the
kingdom of God,” said a veteran church planter.

Scott Weatherford, pastor of Parkway Baptist Church, Victoria,
Texas, challenged students at New Orleans Baptist Theological
Seminary to be kingdom-minded, not career-focused, when planting
churches and seeking church growth.

Weatherford, an NOBTS alumnus whose church in southeastern Texas
has grown from 38 to 1,750 in six years, highlighted a week of
chapel services devoted to a church-planting emphasis.

One method Weatherford uses to facilitate church growth is cell
groups meeting in homes throughout the Victoria area. Currently
more than 700 people are meeting in some 50 groups during the
week.

Weatherford gave five traits of pastors of growing churches he
has observed during his 14 years in the ministry:

— Vision: “What you see is what you get, and what you see for
the church is what [that church] becomes,” Weatherford said.
“Every decision becomes a destination.”

— Risk-taking: The trademark of a minister, he said, is a
willingness to “put it all on the line” for the kingdom. “What we
need is common sense enough to realize that ‘if God is for us,
who can be against us,’ [so] there’s really no risk in [church
planting and church growth] at all.”

— Total dependence on God: “If we depend on a paycheck, on our
knowledge, on our ability or on our talent, then we’re not
depending on God,” Weatherford said. “God is a come-through God.
He wants us in a place where it’s Jesus or nothing.”

— Transparency: “You have got to be real,” Weatherford said.
“Your people have got to see that you love them.”

— Servant’s heart: “The days of dictatorial pastors are over,”
Weatherford said. “That attitude was never from the heart of
God.”

Also during the week, NOBTS assistant professor of evangelism
Will McRaney conducted live speaker-phone interviews in chapel
with NOBTS graduates and current church planters Jonathan Lee and
Shawn Lovejoy. Lee is a pastor in Maryland, targeting the
post-1960 generation. Lovejoy is in the process of lining up a
ministry partner to begin a new work in Atlanta, targeting young
couples.

“These guys have faith to follow God in what he has them doing,”
McRaney said. “Sometimes we have to take risks and move out of
very comfortable positions.”

[Baptist Press 23 April 1999]

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