Left Behind: The Apparent Absence of Fundamentalists in Resurgent Church Planting

While Fundamentalists often noisily do battle over issues important mostly to their sub-culture, there is a battlefield where Fundamentalists are conspicuous by their absence. There has been a resurgence in church planting in North America and few Fundamentalist churches have answered the call. The names of leaders in this resurgence are well-known and include Mark Driscoll, Tim Keller, Bob Roberts, and Ed Stetzer, to name a few. Whatever Fundamentalists think of these men, let there be no doubt that they are engaged in the most noble of tasks—the Great Commission—on a scale rarely seen and in cities which, with some notable exceptions, have been long abandoned by solid, Bible-believing churches. These leaders are not without their foibles, and controversy often surrounds or follows some of them. That said, it must be asked if there are any church planting movements in Fundamentalism with the depth and breadth of what is taking place in conservative evangelical circles.

Recently I attended a conference on church planting where several thousand active or prospective church planters and their wives were in attendance. Admittedly the presenters and attendees were from diverse evangelical backgrounds, a blessing in many ways in witnessing the diversity and unity of the body of Christ. Many in attendance could not plant churches together, a fact they recognized, due to doctrinal differences that are at the heart of one’s understanding of the nature the local church. One speaker, a prominent Southern Baptist leader, expressed his friendship with and admiration for Tim Keller, yet confessed that they could not plant a church together. There would be an immediate conflict over needing a bowl or a bathtub to baptize the first convert. Yet in spite of obvious differences and the inability to partner in church planting there was a laudable spirit of cooperation to help others plant churches by providing training, mentoring, and access to resources.

Why not?

We cannot partner with anyone or everyone to plant churches. But planting churches is not an option. It is a matter of obedience. If fundamental churches are lagging in this area they need to ask themselves why. The neglect of church planting is flagrant and perhaps nothing will hasten the demise of Fundamentalism more quickly than the inability or unwillingness of Fundamentalists to be engaged in this work. Alas, church planting requires cooperation and networking, rare commodities among many Fundamentalists, among whom the spirit of independence and individualism persists, and few churches have the resources to go it alone. In addition, churches must recognize that the churches they plant may not be a mirror image of the sending and supporting churches, an unacceptable condition and consequence for many churches.

Some of the reasons for the lack of church planting movements in Fundamentalism were addressed in an earlier article and won’t be repeated here. In this article I would like to expand on those earlier thoughts and raise some questions.

I will offer this opinion up front. Most traditional churches cannot reproduce themselves. There are exceptions to this generalization. For example there are pockets or regions, often surrounding Fundamentalist institutions of higher learning, where graduates stay on after completing their studies and where a constituency exists to plant churches with other graduates, faculty members, and support personnel. There are also clumps of believers who gravitate to certain areas where they are sure to find like-minded believers. New churches have also been planted with former members of other churches who fled the cities to find refuge and comfort in suburbia. These predominantly monochromatic churches are often racially and relationally segregated where Christians live in a bubble without realizing it since most people they know are in the same bubble.

There is nothing pernicious about planting affinity-based traditional churches, yet it must be admitted that these churches are mostly attractive to Christians who already share conservative values and fit in a cultural-Christianity mold which has sometimes been mistaken for the only valid expression of biblical Christianity. An artificial setting exists where there is little contact with unbelievers and where church programs cater mostly to insiders. Churches perpetuate this virtual isolation through the establishment of ministries designed to avoid contact with the world in order to protect believers from contamination. Few of these churches successfully reproduce themselves except occasionally when there’s the opportunity to support someone planting a new church that is like the supporting church—same music, same attire, same standards, same Bible version, same approved colleges and universities, and same loyalty to national leaders. This kind of church planting is often little more than the shuffling and reshuffling of those already committed to a certain vision of the church. A clone-like church is planted here and there, mostly in white suburban areas, but there are no church planting movements to speak of and few churches which reflect the diverse population of North American urban centers.

Toward solutions

So if most traditional churches cannot reproduce themselves what should we do? First of all, we should recognize the contribution that traditional churches make and have made to the work of God. They have a role in the outworking of God’s plans and should be appreciated. They have provided a legacy on which others build. It’s easy and mostly pointless to search for flaws in how they have done ministry and mistakes they have made. We should look on them with the same generosity and grace which we will want others to accord us in the future when they are looking back on what we have tried to accomplish. As one writer puts it, traditional believers and churches are like bricks on the understructure of a bridge. These bricks will not move to the other side of the bridge (i.e., they will not, need not leave their traditions) but they are necessary for the overall support of the structure, in this case God’s church (see The Tangible Kingdom by Hugh Halter and Matt Smay, pp. 33-36). They are not to be despised or belittled for holding to traditions which are an important part of their Christian identity as developed in their contexts.

Secondly, although most traditional churches cannot reproduce themselves, they can still reproduce, and here is the caveat: they must be willing to allow churches they plant to have their own identity in obedience to the Scriptures and develop their own traditions and style of ministry. Simply put, they should be narrow where the Word of God is narrow and grant freedom where the Word of God permits freedom. Of course traditional churches have every right to expect that the churches they help plant possess the same DNA, the same core theological commitments. But if churches demand that new churches in different contexts look the same, do church the same, be governed in exactly the same way, emphasize and engage the same issues, and follow the same leaders, then we should expect to see more men—young and old alike—leaving Fundamentalism to experience and enjoy God-given liberty to plant Christ-honoring churches without being held hostage to the extra-biblical sensitivities of others.

For those traditional churches which are ready to meet the church planting challenge, let me raise a few questions as suggestive of where liberty might be accorded to church planters. In saying this I’m imagining a church plant in an urban setting with a significant number of university students who are skeptical of, if not hostile to Christianity as they’ve known it. The community has pockets of immigrants who live alongside young professionals who are buying and renovating older homes and displacing long-term residents who can no longer afford skyrocketing rents. In planting a new inner-urban church, consider the following questions:

  • Do you have one pastor carrying the leadership and preaching burden alone or a leadership team where the lead pastor is “one among equals in decision-making; first among equals in vision and leadership?”
  • Do you organize traditional Sunday School, Sunday AM, PM and Wednesday prayer meeting services or develop gatherings according to patterns more appropriate to cultural patterns where the church is situated?
  • Do you create and multiply programs for different age or affinity groups to attract people to the church or does the church seek bridges of contact in the community for incarnational ministry?
  • Do you insist on the exclusive use of more formal, traditional hymns and outdated gospel choruses or do you seek a balance with music that is theologically sound, spiritually uplifting, and comprehensible and which includes contemporary forms?
  • Do you employ a church name that creates unnecessary barriers or choose a name which reflects an aspect of your ministry without denominational code words?
  • Do you utilize a website designed to attract Christians who move into your area while confusing unbelievers with Christian-speak language like “separatistic,” and “militant” and listing everything you believe about everything, or do you simplify your public presentation in order to catch and hold the attention of the unchurched as well?
  • Do you place the American flag and the Christian flag behind the podium and give the appearance of supporting a conservative political agenda (usually Republican) or do you urge your people to be good citizens regardless of their political views and affiliations and refuse to allow politics to highjack the cause of the gospel?
  • Do you give public invitations after each service singing “Just As I Am” or “I Surrender All” with a decisional emphasis or do you emphasize progressive and radical transformation through biblical discipleship and in relational community?

In asking these questions I realize that not all of the elements in the first part of the questions are found in all traditional churches and that such stark polarizations do not always exist. Neither am I saying that all of these elements are inappropriate in certain settings. I am saying that the first part elements will not be found in most urban settings, are not essential “as is” to being the church, and that we must allow for liberty in contextualizing ministry. In other words, there are functions and there are forms. The functions are those elements which are indispensable to be the church and they center on and around the Word. The forms can be adapted and modified and should not be considered normative.

At this point I have purposely not given answers to the above questions. The questions are only a small sample of what needs to be asked. I cannot provide normative answers since there is no one model for planting churches. What I would like to ask in closing is this: are there churches that are unable to reproduce themselves who are interested in reproducing gospel-centered, Christ-honoring, theologically-committed churches which can be effective in ways and in places where traditional churches may never be found or effective? Perhaps nothing will contribute more to the kind of future in store for Fundamentalism then how Fundamentalists respond to this question.


Dr. Stephen M. Davis is on the pastoral team at Grace Church, a new church plant in Philadelphia, and adjunct professor in missions at Calvary Baptist Theological Seminary (Lansdale, PA). He holds a B.A. from Bob Jones University, an M.A. in Theological Studies from Reformed Theological Seminary (Orlando, FL), an M.Div. from CBTS, and a D.Min. in Missiology from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (Deerfield, IL). Steve has been a church planter in Philadelphia, France, and Romania.

Discussion

[Steve D] they felt their church could not partner with us…it was the sensitivities of church members who would react to a church not using the same translation, the same music, the same polity, and the same name.
These are all non-trivial concerns, for reasons I’ve already posted about. People disagree on these issues and often quite strongly. Some would say “but these should not be so important to folks that they feel they can’t support a church plant.” Perhaps. But that’s an assertion that needs some support, needs substantiating.

In the case of translation, for example, I wonder how many would say “Shame on you who are KJVO for not supporting a church plant that doesn’t use KJV” but would think it was quite reasonable to refrain from supporting a KJVO church plant? This would be my inclination. But if the question is nontrivial, it remains non-trivial no matter how folks answer it. If I’d be reluctant to support a KJVO church plant, I can’t very well blame KJVOs for not supporting a multi-translational church plant.

The case is similar for music. I would not be enthusiastic about supporting a church plant that insists on only using Gregorian Chant (I don’t think there is such a thing, but wouldn’t that be an interesting development!?) But if the music question is non-trivial, can I turn around and say that those who are not eager to support a church plant that uses very contemporary music are elevating something beyond its importance? How can any question involving the direct corporate worship of the Most High be unimportant?

My point is that it might be a bit sad that more IFB churches aren’t quick to get on board in supporting “non traditional” church plants, it is inevitable and many of these issues are indeed weighty.

Polity.. .this is bigger than the other two in my opinion, depending on what differences we’re putting under that heading. Should a local church be under the governance of a regional bishop? Whole denominations have formed over that question. Within the loosely defined category of “congregationalism,” have deacons? elders? both? Again, people have strong beliefs about these things that they back with Scripture. They are not shoulder shrugger questions.

Are they important enough to warrant “less effectiveness” in church planting because we’re not putting enough resources there due to these differences? Well, that’s a debate worth having. Since the Great Commission includes “teaching them to observe all things,” it seems like churches would want to plant churches that share their beliefs on what the “all things” are that they should teach.

In the end, since no two churches are going to see eye to eye on every hot issue, individual churches have to decide what they believe is important enough to be a show stopper when it comes to supporting a church plant. But the positive side to that is that church planters have to think carefully about what issues are worth losing support for. In that sense, the accountability is a healthy thing. Though it may result in fewer churches planted, it is possible that those planted are better than they would be in a “we’ll support any church plant as long as it preaches the gospel and holds to core doctrines of the faith, no other questions asked” model.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

How many churches are we talking here? The Calvary Chapel movement can’t be THAT big, but the SBC and generally “evangelical” movement seems much bigger than the IFB movement. It would then be logical that these churches have the funds and manpower to start more churches—everywhere…not just in the inner city.

Does anyone have the numbers?

Could some of the problem of not planting churches in the city center simply be a problem primarily financial? It costs more to find a building to rent in the city center than “when you live”—since most IFB missionaries can’t afford to live in the city center.
On this issue, my suspicion is probably not. There are people doing it. And in fact, in some places, it can be pretty cheap. Right now, in Detroit, I think you can get some very cheap places to live and meet. Finding space in Manhattan can be very expensive, I am sure. I recently played golf with a young man who had been an investment banker on Wall Street in Manhattan. He hated it for a lot of interesting reasons, including cost of living. Finding space in downtown Detroit or the New Center or Fox District can be fairly expensive probably. Finding space in southwest Detroit or the west side or the far east side of Detroit is far cheaper, I imagine (and there’s a good market driven reason for that … One place is a decent place to be; the other, not so much).

The problem is actually elsewhere, IMO, which has to do with city culture, urbanization, fear, the proverbial American dream, etc. If you’re dream is a house with a big yard for the kids to play in you won’t find it in Urbania. If you are scared of people with their pants sagging to their knees, who walk with one hand texting on their phone and the other hand holding their pants up, you won’t like Urbania. If cars with loud music and spinners make you nervous, Urbania will not sit well with you. If people whose English is a little messed up (or almost non-existent in some cases), you won’t like it. But Suburbia has its own problems. Let’s not kid ourselves. But the impression is different.

I think we also need to recognize that there are different kinds of urban areas. Philly, Detroit, NYC, LA, etc are different types of communities in many ways. Urban areas are typically defined, at least popularly, by racial diversity and population density. It’s not really about income, per se (poor=urban; middle/upper class=suburban), though that may be a natural product of it). There are business districts, residential districts, projects, slums, owner-occupied, gentrification, etc. These all create different types of communities.

So there is probably no “one size fits all answer” to this.
Maybe that is one of the reasons that so many churches have been started in the suburbs. People found places to live, started inviting people over to their houses (as one person mentioned). Most could not afford to the inner city condos, and chose a cheaper place outside the center. Thus, the people who were drawn were from their area.
I tend to think not, but I have no data on that. I think people don’t plant churches in the city for the same reason there are suburbs … It is considered a better place to live. So you have people who will spend 2-3 hours a day commuting to an 8 hour a day job, for the benefits of Suburbia. Generally, suburbanites are considered a “higher class” of people, and I think that often affects it.

I think there is also an element of “people like me” syndrome. We all like to be around “people like me.” We are more comfortable that way, so we default to it. Given the option of hanging around “people like me” or “people not like me,” most of us will choose the “people like me.” Which means if you didn’t grow up in the city and don’t understand city/urban culture, you will be very uncomfortable there.

Problems in the city are typically of a different nature as well. You don’t have the tight buttoned up, good-looking problems like you do in Suburbia. I know, that’s oversimplified, but that’s the impression. Suburbanites, particularly in churches, are much more likely to hide behind a facade. And that makes it easier to pastor in some ways, or at least easier to pretend like you are pastoring.
I’m curious if there is a lot of prejudice in an inner city work. Will black people willingly come to a church pastored by a white person? Do THEY receive negative feedback from their friends and family for doing such a thing? Or is it that noone cares.
In my experience, yes, from both ways. We have had people in our church say, “I don’t know why they don’t go to their churches over there” (they being people who look differently than “we” do, and not in the way they dress). We have had people in our church whose family and friends have said, “Why do you go to that white church?” My desire is to overcome that. I am trying to lead our church to be a “multi-racial church of first generation Christians.” I would love to have some people committed to that. It’s a church culture that has to be created intentionally.

But I have talked to people who are “scared” of our community because of the impression of crime, drugs, and danger, I have never felt unsafe here. Maybe it’s just because I don’t think. I used to have a Rottweiler, and people would say, “That’s a great dog to have down there.” Not really. I remember about a year ago when there was a police shoot out a few blocks from a large church in our area in a “better neighborhood,” emailing a few friends and joking that “I am glad I don’t live in a dangerous area.”

But the reality is that we, for the sake of the gospel, must embrace some things that run contrary to what the American dream tells us to pursue. And we do it because Jesus said to do it. (We don’t do it on the model that Jesus left heaven to come to earth and therefore I should leave the suburbs to go to the city; I think that is a bad model based on a poor understanding of what Jesus actually did.)

All that to say, I think there is a complex of reasons. But strategic church planting is not only good, it’s necessary to the great commission, IMO. I would love to see church planting in Detroit. I think we could do it strategically and see ten churches planted in ten years, but we have to have people committed to being Detroit city people—moving, living, shopping, working, recreating, playing, and being in the city.

Enough rambling, eh?

Could some of the problem of not planting churches in the city center simply be a problem primarily financial? It costs more to find a building to rent in the city center than “when you live”—since most IFB missionaries can’t afford to live in the city center.
It all depends on where you are trying to plant your church. If you are trying to lease a storefront in my inner-city neighborhood in Grand Rapids, you will pay around 700 per month for about 2000 sq ft. However, if you decide to launch a church in a uppity, upscale yuppie neighborhood in Grand Rapids, you will pay at least 3000 per month for about the same amount of space. Even cities are different. For instance, in the south Bronx, leasing space for a church in an impoverished area is more expensive that leasing space in the upscale yuppie neighborhood of Grand Rapids.


Most could not afford to the inner city condos, and chose a cheaper place outside the center. Thus, the people who were drawn were from their area.
In the Midwest, its not affordability that keeps Baptist Fundys out of inner-city neighborhoods, it is the crime and poverty itself. Rarely have I seen fundamentalists that live in the crime-ridden, poverty-stricken neighborhoods where they are church planting or even pastoring. I have seen Jack Hyles influenced churches that send buses into those neighborhoods, but they mainly reach urban children (once the kids get to be about 12 years of age they stop going).

There are always exceptions, however. For example, I am excited about a Baptist Mid-Missions church plant in the South Bronx called Commonwealth Community Baptist Church. One of the church planting couples, Sam and Jen Lake (http://www.samandjenlake.com/ ) are at about 78% of their support have committed to living in an apartment within in the church once their support is raised. This will give them some great advantages in building bridges with many of the people in the community so that they can proclaim the gospel and disciple the urban poor in their neighborhood.

By the way, the ministry that I run (Urban Transformation Ministries or UTM) is currently partnering with a church plant that is being started by Calvary Church of Grand Rapids (a mega-church which happens to be IFCA). We are combining about 30-40 redeemed thugs (former gang members and drug dealers) in their early twenties (almost all African-American) that have been discipled through UTM with about 50 or so middle-class evangelistic white people (some of which who live near or in the target area) to form a multi-ethnic church called New City Church. There are some aspects of the mother church which will be passed on. There are some that will not for the reasons that Steve has pointed out. From observing many different threads and even this post, we Fundamentalists seem to be more sensitive towards not bringing our cultural baggage in our overseas cross-cultural church planting than cross-cultural church planting endeavors in North America….
‘m curious if there is a lot of prejudice in an inner city work. Will black people willingly come to a church pastored by a white person? Do THEY receive negative feedback from their friends and family for doing such a thing? Or is it that no one cares.
There may be a few more barriers to overcome, but I have seen it happen on several occasions. An evangelical church in Chicago named Lawndale Community Church is one example. It was started by a substitute teacher/football coach who discipled a group of teenagers/young adults in one of the poorest communities in America. Today the church runs about 500 people (mostly African-American) and the church planter (Wayne Gordon) is still the lead pastor. http://lawndalechurch.org/ However, Wayne Gordon spent a lot of time developing leadership from those he discipled, most of which are African-American.

And our lead pastor for New City Church is white. For the last 5 years he has preached and taught Bible studies with our students in different programs and our students (all of which are African-American and influenced by the hip-hop culture) have embraced him as their pastor.

[Joel Shaffer]
From observing many different threads and even this post, we Fundamentalists seem to be more sensitive towards not bringing our cultural baggage in our overseas cross-cultural church planting than cross-cultural church planting endeavors in North America….
Thanks so much for taking so much time to post.

I suppose that this is true…your comment about the baggage. One thing may be that people don’t set out to start a cross-cultural ministry, or even try. Some people are openly disdainful of trying to bring in hispanics or blacks into a home church. It is a bit frustrating! I wish every single IFB individually would get a burden for someone who is “not white” or “not American born” or “someone with an accent” and try to reach them.

I would esp. like to see more churches in the US try to reach foreign exchange college students or FE high school students, or who are in the US temporarily. Why doesn’t everyone work on a foreign language or work on reaching out to those who speak tentative English?

However, I was wondering about the “white church” thing and whether or not they would go to a church where they are in the minority. I know that a church I know in Greenville has tried to work on reaching the community where they are, but at least when we were there, most from the community didn’t feel comfortable there.

Before I say that everyone is unconcerned, I’d like to suggest that doing this is hard work—so, maybe IBF church members figure that they haven’t reached “all the easy people” yet, so they are still working on that. ;0

I also think that people are pretty busy in their daily lives with all the programs of the church and schooling, etc. and don’t have a lot of time for the kind of personal outreach/relational living that reaching a person who is unlike you would take. I’m not saying it is right—but I think it might be one of the problems.

Maybe churches need to be confronted more often about trying to reach people “unlike” the typical white, middle-to-upper-class suburbia.

I do think that really unchurched people come to church without a lot of expectations and presuppositions….about music, service order, even name, etc. (We sometimes expect them to—it’s transfers from other churches who have all those expectations.) They are like blank slates and can be taught (within reason) however you do things. That’s what we’ve found, anyway. It is easier to start with new believers, but you don’t have instant help with SS, etc.

As to the name…We WANTED to add Baptist to our name after people figured we were JWs when we just called it something like “Bible study” or whatever—I can’t remember now.

[Becky Petersen
One thing may be that people don’t set out to start a cross-cultural ministry, or even try. Some people are openly disdainful of trying to bring in hispanics or blacks into a home church. It is a bit frustrating! I wish every single IFB individually would get a burden for someone who is “not white” or “not American born” or “someone with an accent” and try to reach them.

I would esp. like to see more churches in the US try to reach foreign exchange college students or FE high school students, or who are in the US temporarily. Why doesn’t everyone work on a foreign language or work on reaching out to those who speak tentative English?

However, I was wondering about the “white church” thing and whether or not they would go to a church where they are in the minority. I know that a church I know in Greenville has tried to work on reaching the community where they are, but at least when we were there, most from the community didn’t feel comfortable there.

Maybe churches need to be confronted more often about trying to reach people “unlike” the typical white, middle-to-upper-class suburbia.Not all church plants can be cross-cultural (multi-ethnic) if there is not diversity in the community. It can’t be made to happen but there can be intentionality. It might start with the leadership team mix in a new church plant. Urban areas will usually present more opportunity for multi-ethnic and foreign student ministry. We recently met an Asian young lady, PhD visiting student at University of Penn, who became a believer here in the US. My wife does a Bible study with her to try to ground her before she returns to her country.

Urban churches will often see much transition and will have a gospel-growth mindset rather than church-growth (although church growth is good), that is reaching and grounding people where they are knowing they will be moving on. Our church plant has a number of African Americans, a few Asian families, some homeless, recovering addicts, a couple of PhDs, a great mix. From what I have learned from Afro-American pastors, it may be more difficult for Caucasians to attend Afro-American churches than vice-versa. Of course it depends on the church culture of different groups. We find that new converts, of whatever ethnicity, have less trouble being part of a diverse church.

Suburban churches that don’t have a diverse community can partner with city churches in a number of ways. We have people from white suburban churches help with some of our homeless outreach, particularly in helping with meals. This summer we asked our suburban sending church to ask the congregation for air conditioners no longer being used and were able to provide some to poor families who were suffering in the stifling heat. Partnership of suburban churches who share resources with city churches is key to urban church planting.