introductions to home cell groups
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home cellsTRANSCRIPT
Introductions to Home Cell groups
Subject: The Home Cell
Topic: Introduction to the Home Cell
Aim: To Help Watered Garden member fully appreciate the Importance of Home Cells as an integral part of Church growth Strategy
Main Texts: Acts 2:46, Acts 20:20
What is a Home Cell?
The Cell can be defined as the basic building block of the Church. Like bricks, the Home cell now becomes the fundamental material in building the Local Church. Home cells can be referred to as small group churches, "home groups, cell groups, house fellowships, Bible study groups, prayer groups, etc. Although most cells engage in bible studies, other cell activities may include evangelism, prayers, breaking bread and home visits to cell members. All in all, the core purpose of the home cell is to foster fellowship at the community level among members of the local church.
The Home Cell and the Local Church.
The Home Cells as the building blocks of the local church means that the home cells are sufficient in themselves but not the less are linked to the local church. The table below shows the contrast between the local church and the Home cells
Factor"Program Based" Churches
Home Cells
Main meeting location Church Members' homes
Organizational focusThe congregation and its programs
The cell groups
Main individual responsibility
Attend services Support others within the cell
Main activity Weekend servicesWeekly cell meetings; frequent contacts between meetings
Group size Dozens to thousandsUnder a defined limit (12 - 15 adults typical)
Heavy commitment accepted
By perhaps 5% of the congregation
By perhaps 95% of membership of each cell
Leadership Professional pastors Trained, lay members
Inter-personal intimacy Often low High
Membership accountability
Often low High
Commitment to evangelism
Often low High
Key Features of a Home Cell
All Home cells must have at least five established members of the local Church
A Cell leader and an Assistant shall be appointed at each location
Members of the Home Cell shall invite friends and relatives to join the lords sheepfold
Members of Each Home Cell shall set Quarterly dates for socialization and breaking of bread
Home Cell Meetings shall be weekly and shall span for a an hour.
Home Cell shall split for expansion at fifteen members, but only when theres a suitable and available meeting place.
Organizational Structure of the Home Cell.
A Home Cell will be lead by a Home cell leader and his assistant.
A Zonal Pastor overseas the activities of a number of Home cells
A Pastor overseas the entire local church.
Questions to Ponder:
How important is it for me as a member of watered Garden to belong to a Home cell?
What are my responsibilities to my home cell?
Importance and Benefits of Home Cell groups
Aim: To Help Watered Garden member fully appreciate the Importance of Home Cells as an integral part of Church growth Strategy
Main Texts: Acts 2:46, Acts 20:20, Romans 16:5
Acts 2:46“And they, continued daily with one accord in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart…”
Acts 5:42“Day after day, in the temple courts and from house to house, they never stopped
teaching and proclaiming the good news that Jesus is the Christ.”
Church home groups connect the unconnected. Home groups, cell groups, connect groups, small groups, care groups - whatever you call them - are vital to the health of the church. Learn how these church home groups work and how home groups benefit the church and individual members.
Church Home Groups - Shepherd Under Shepherd
In large churches, it's doubtful a senior pastor knows every person attending
service. It's also doubtful the senior pastor serves alone. He or she usually has a
staff of other ministers who share pastoral responsibilities. But even those pastoral
members might not know every person attending service or every need
represented in the church. This is where home groups help. Leaders of home
groups know their group members, and leaders minister as a shepherd under a
shepherd.
Church Home Groups - Connected and Accountable
Church home groups meet for the purpose of getting connected and staying
accountable. It's tough for church members to change churches or drop out of
church when there is a network that keeps them tied to the church. Church home
groups notice when members are not present. Church home groups notice when
mixture moves into a member's life. And church home groups notice when a
member is wounded, isolated from the group, or even ready to take on more
leadership.
Church Home Groups - Benefits
Church home groups offer a protected setting for members to use gifts and talents
and to share more intimate situations in life--since the groups are small in size.
Furthermore, church home groups allow for personal prayer and testimony.
Church home groups allow the groups to focus on particular ministry to its
members, to the church, or ministries outside the church. Church home groups
provide members with opportunity to assimilate pastoral messages and share in
Bible study. Church home groups create fellowship times of food and fun. And
finally, church home groups connect members from similar life situations, or they
simply connect members--so no one stands alone.
Church Home Groups - Ministry
Church home group members comfort one another when loved ones pass away.
They supply meals when life is disrupted. They help with food preparation and
serving at funerals or weddings. They help when a member moves or when a
senior member needs a house painted. Church home groups also open their arms
wide to visitors, to new members who need to find connection. And these small
group settings are known to take in the church-shy individual--one who may not
step foot inside a church building. But the person would check out a home
meeting.
Church Home Groups - Hospitality
One important fact about church home groups is that hospitality is required. Some
member has opened his or her home for the meeting and used his or her kitchen to
provide refreshments or a meal for group participants. He or she has made sure to
communicate meeting times and places to those in the group. Some church home
groups rotate from home to home, while others remain in the same home. Some
church home groups meet weekly, while others meet once or twice per month. And
the person who provides the home may or may not be the one who leads the group.
In any case, hospitality is a big part of how small groups operate and thrive.
Church Home Groups - Division
At some point in time, a healthy church home group grows to a point where
intimacy is less likely to happen. It may grow so large that member's homes are
not large enough to accommodate the entire group. When this happens, a new
leader emerges and the group becomes two. This is church growth in action.
Church Home Groups - Information Flow
One final benefit of church home groups is that home group leaders flow
information back to the pastor. This way, the pastor learns about the spiritual
growth of members, of needs or hurts, of home group concerns, and of gift
ministries represented in the home group. This also allows the pastor to have his
or her hand on the pulse of the church and to know when problems arise or when
pastoral intervention is needed. Church home groups do more than allow
information to flow down from the pastor. They also allow information to flow up to
the pastor.
Church Home Groups - Church Growth
Care groups, home groups, cell groups or small church groups grow churches. Just
look at Dr. Yonggi Cho's church in Seoul, with several hundred thousand in
attendance. His church is built on the cell group or home group principle. Church
growth studies show the minimum for church growth is seven smaller groups per
hundred people in attendance at Sunday worship. This means a church of 200
members should be operating at least 14 home groups for optimum growth and
ministry.
Church home groups are important to the life and functioning of the local church.
Church home groups are important to the care and ministry of group members.
Finally, church home groups provide an important means of spreading the gospel
message. Why not consider implementing home groups in your church?