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Lesson
Sixty Eight
A Cell Church
10 May, 2002 revision / SMTC
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Friends
of God, each other and the people around
See The Lessons
In Your Bible Read This
Acts 10, 22-48
Here Is Your Memory Verse
They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad
and sincere
hearts, praising God and enjoying the favour of all the people.
And the Lord
added to their number daily those who were being saved. Acts 2.46,47.
Afterwards Talk About
This
If persecution came to your district what would happen to
your church?
What can you do to safeguard the people?
Something To Do Before
Next Time
Organise one friendly cell style meeting with some food and
friendship
in one of your homes. Invite the people from the street and see
how many come.
Tell them that someone will speak for five minutes to explain how
he or she
came to know Christ. See how many come!
Written Diploma Work
Write a 2 page essay describing the long term effect upon the
church
when it became the official church in 321 AD
and inherited all those temples and robes.
Meditate Word By Word On
This Verse
1 Corinthians 14.26
- Spend
a Minute to Change the World
- Pray For Italy - 58,000,000
Southern European people
- Declining traditional
Roman Catholic heartland, 31,000 towns with no
evangelicals
-
- Be sure to
teach this lesson to others.
- Always pray
and prepare well adding your own verses and stories to
bring it to life.
An evangelist tells the story that his
campaigns in an African city were so blessed that the only way he
could handle the converts was to shout, "Christians in such
and such a district raise your hands. New believers, if you live
in this district, meet together next Sunday in the houses of
these people." And he went on shouting out names and
directing people. He said it was the only way of keeping such a
big harvest safe. What he did was to organise what we call the
Cell Church.
What would you do if crowds suddenly
decided to follow Jesus? Where would you find the money for
new buildings?
1. The Church In Acts
Was A Cell Church
The church did not have any buildings until
it became the official church of the Roman Empire in 321 AD. Then
it took over all the pagan temples and priestly robes, and has
had them ever since. Acts 2.46 tells us that the early church met
together every day in Jewish temple courts in Jerusalem to
worship God. They also broke bread in homes, and ate together
with glad hearts, praising God and enjoying the favour of the
people. The church was in the street with the people, not yet
hidden away inside religious buildings.
Why Cell Churches Do So Well
Cell church usually have 5 to 15 people.
This means that everyone is known and genuinely missed if
away.
Cell church means that every member has
a role like music, organising, teaching, leading prayer,
cooking, or looking after children. The joy of serving is not
just in the hands of a few chosen professional
clergy or leaders.
Cell church means that people should
never feel lonely in church as the community setting brings
them into the bosom of the family of God.
Cell church is a natural setting for
teaching with all the freedom and life of a small group.
Cell church meetings are a great place
for people to practice their spiritual gifts in the non-threatening
atmosphere of home with a friendly leader and the Christian
family to encourage and help.
Cell church means that neighbours who
would never go into a church building might discover Jesus
where He loves to be, among people. With cell church the
scope for different kinds of creative evangelism in the home
is unlimited.
Cell church allows the gifted ministers
to travel to help equip other believers.
In Cell church growth is fast and never
limited by lack of money for buildings. When a group grows
beyond say, 16 people, it multiplies into 2 homes or rented
rooms, each with its own leader. They will soon grow to 15
each and multiply again.
Cell church means more prayer, because
more people will pray in small groups, and they can meet
anytime. This is better than the weekly prayer in one place
which many never get to for work reasons.
Cell church means that sick or needy
people can be prayed for quickly without having wait for the
pastor.
2. Cells, Congregations
And Celebrations
A cell church has no central building that
it owns and pays for, or a big meeting every Sunday because the
cells are the church. No central records are kept, so in
persecution names cannot be found, buildings cannot be burned,
congregations cannot be found and killed en masse as happened in
Rwanda. The church is safer.
All the cells, leaders and people alike
should come together from time to time in a rented location
like a big hall or stadium, for a celebration, and all the
cells in a zone could meet as a congregation say once or
maybe twice a month. The oversight needs to meet with their
cell leaders on a regular basis, and the oversight should
visit each cell regularly.
3. What Do You Do In A
Cell Church?
The goal is to be friends of God through
the Acts 2.42 model of being devoted to the word of God, prayer,
breaking of bread and fellowship, then friends of each other,
then focused on being friends with the people in the street so
they discover that Gods love is not a million miles away.
- Remember To Embrace 4 Ws
- Welcome - you to me, me to you.
- Worship - us to God.
- Word - God released to us, through the
Bible, spiritual gifts, prayer and personal ministry to
each other.
- Witness - God through us to others.
4. Starting A Cell
Church
It is very easy for missionaries to
organise cell church simply by having the first meeting in a home
and growing in cells. It is more difficult to change an existing
traditional church structure because cell church empowers the
people to care and evangelise and this can be quite upsetting for
professional paid ministers. The change can be quite demanding
upon settled and comfortable people as well, but if God directs
the change it will be worth the effort.
5. How To Change To Cell
Church
There needs to be adequate lead-in time,
prayer, a plan, and agreement.
Choose cell leaders and assistants for
humility, servant heart and loyalty.
Train them beforehand in pastoral
skills, and how to run a small group.
They need to know the extent of their
authority and what to do in difficulty.
Divide the district into zones, each
one with a dedicated area leader.
Divide each zone into cells, each with
a chosen leader and people.
Select a time to meet, make a start.
Review progress frequently.
6. The G12 Vision
2001
This is the latest development of the Cell
Church vision that
is sweeping Latin America and being introduced into the UK, Spain
and Europe. The four principles are Win, Consolidate, Disciple
and Release and the plan is that each cell gives birth to 12 more
cells. For a full explanation of all that is required for G12
which should be incorportated into this lesson go to these pages:
http://www.mci12.com/ which is the church of
Pastor Cesar Castellanos en Colombia which has grown from 8
to 120,000 members and has a youth group of 30,000 through G12.
http://www.revivaltimes.org/content/g12.zxml comes from Kensington
Temple/London City Church which has adopted the vision for
London and is seeing remarkable growth in a very secular
environment.
- To Close Pray For The
- World's Most
Unreached Peoples By Name
-
- Taken from the Joshua Project
2000 Unreached Peoples List
- no cell, church or mission
has committed themselves
- to prayer, adoption or church
planting among this people.
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This page is modified
by SEAMIST from the original page
with permission
© Dr Les Norman | www.worldchristians.org,
UK
Permission is granted to provide copies at cost price for study purposes
but not for sale or
commercial purposes. Freely you have received, so please freely give.
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