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How to Start a House Church

How to Start a House Church

Five ideas to keep in mind when you're planting something new

 |  posted 11/03/2008

Topics:Connecting, Fellowship, House churches, Launching, Starting groups
Filters:Apprentice, Group Leader, House churches, New leader, Start
Purpose:Discipleship
References:Acts 2:42-47
Date Added:November 03, 2008

House churches are not organizations that require people with administrative skills or immense giftedness to coordinate and direct a group—they simply call for ordinary people who are in love with Jesus. Neil Cole, in Cultivating a Life for God, believes that simplicity is the key to fulfilling the Great Commission. He says, "The more complex the process, the greater the giftedness needed to keep it going.'"

The really good news is that, to start a house church, you can lay down the burdens of planning how to cope with buildings, programs, and outreach strategies. You don't have to be an impressive leader (though you probably will have some leadership gifts). To start a house church, you simply need to open your home to friends and neighbors and take things one step at a time.

Pray First!

The first step to starting a house church is to pray. House-church ministry must be birthed in prayer. Though it is a simple step, without prayer and God's leading, we invite trouble. Starting a house church cannot be just a good idea; it must be a God idea. If you feel that you are called to start a house church, gather a few like-minded people together and begin to pray so that you can receive a strategy from God. Many house churches have false starts that are directly linked to a lack of prayer.

Taking time to pray gives God the opportunity to work in our hearts and purify our motives. When house churches start up because of a reaction to something we don't like about the established church, the house church's identity is built from rebellion and discord. Healthy house churches, on the contrary, must begin with God's leading and a desire to reach those who don't know Jesus. What a person sows, the Bible teaches us, he also reaps. Therefore, if you begin a house church because of an offense toward an existing church or leader, you will sow the seeds of fault-finding and pride in the church you are creating.

Along with prayer, it is also important to look to the local Christian community's leaders for spiritual guidance and advice as you launch a new church. From day one of the Lancaster Micro-Church Network, we have cultivated relationships with established believers in our local community and beyond to answer questions and explain to them the concept of micro-church. A wise Bible teacher once said, "Lone rangers get shot out of the saddle." We agree. Healthy house-church movements are not exclusive groups who refuse to be accountable. Vibrant micro-church networks are spiritually connected to leadership in the Body of Christ.

Know Whom You Are Called to Reach

Every micro-church should know whom they are called to reach. Here's a great suggestion from Tony and Felicity Dale, who together started a successful network of house churches in Texas:

Draw together people from your circle of influence. We had a number of business associates who were not Christian, but whom we had come to know pretty well over a period of months or years. We asked a dozen of them to join us in a study of business principles while enjoying pizza in our home, using the book of proverbs as our textbook.
There were no rules to our discussion; everybody's opinion was valid and there was no such thing as a wrong answer. Gradually we introduced prayer and worship and over the course of a year, every one of them became a Christian. They formed the nucleus of our original house church.

When the first micro-church in the Lancaster Micro-Church Network started in our (Larry's) home a few years ago, we asked God for pre-Christians or new believers to join us—we also asked for laborers to help in the endeavor. However, we ran into some immediate problems. First of all, lots of believers wanted to come and check it out. Some of these Christians were looking for the latest Christian fad. They liked the idea that the micro-church met on a Wednesday, not a Sunday, and that it met in a living room, not a sanctuary.


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November 20, 2008 10:03 AM
Kelly Steffen   (Registered User)
Great starter article. More people who love the church and who love unreached people need to grab hold of this philosophy in their neighborhoods. There is no need to fracture what local churches are doing in the area but neither are we called to sit back and watch our unsaved neighbors perish. How about a neighborhood partnership with local churches. One exciting story I heard of, was a family who (with permission of their local church) began a house church Sunday mornings to gather their neighborhood who were sitting at home every Sunday morning. They made some fresh pancakes, invited their neighbors over and began a study of the Bible and prayed for their neighbors concerns (no strings attached). Within six months, they were discipling their neighbors and had a house church! Praise God for this article- now let's read the book.



November 08, 2008 4:48 AM
Anonymous
I do believe that house churches were only made in response to the persecution a church goes AKA underground. so I find little need for house churches in semi "tolerant" nations (the world still hates us) (although, China and Japan could use some, thousands.)



November 16, 2008 7:33 PM
Renee
Hear, hear! Larry and Floyd know what they are talking about. My husband and I have been leading a house church for almost two years, after leading a small group in a traditional church for over five years. Our house church is one congregation in a network that is elder-led and part of an established denomination. We are finally able to focus on reaching unbelievers. We believe that this model of church is closer to the biblical ideal. More articles from these authors please!



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