Monday, July 10, 2017

PREPARING FOR THE HARVEST

The Republic of Liberia struggled for many years due to civil unrest and war and faced many challenges. The post-war (almost 20 years of civil war) economy and infrastructure have been the greatest of these challenges to this point. The country continues to reel from the devastation of the Ebola virus that claimed over 5,000 lives in Liberia. Public education was very intermittent during the war years. This means that today there are many men and women who do not even have a high school education.

The Assemblies of God in Liberia feel that the church is the answer for the oppression that citizens of Liberia are facing. Yet even the church struggled during the war. Many pastors were among the one million people who fled the conflict, becoming refugees in other countries. Various rebel groups destroyed churches, Bible school facilities, and confiscated church property. But there remained a remnant that were able to continue the work. In 2012, there were about 350 to 400 A/G Churches spread across the country.

It was at this time the national church established a goal of planting 800 churches by the end of this decade: 2020. Since 2012, there have been between 100 and 150 new churches planted making a total of about 450 to 500 churches. In January 2016, the national church re-launched their 2012 church planting initiative of planting 800 churches by 2020, naming the project Vision 2020/4x1: 1) every church, 2) will plant at least one church, 3) send at least one student to the Church Planter School or Bible School, 4) within one year.

In strategic planning meetings, the national church leadership identified several problem areas to overcome if any traction would be made in planting 600 new churches (before 2016 there were 100 to 150 churches planted, thereby reducing the total number from the 800 projected in 2012). The leadership team realized that they must establish specific goals if the project would prove successful.

There were three immediate goals established during the strategic planning meetings:

  1. Establish an Assembly of God presence among the 5 unreached people groups and the 3 to 4 groups with very little attention in respect to the gospel
  2. Launch a campaign whereby each established church would plant one church and send at least one student for pastoral training within one year
  3. Establishment of national fundraising events to cover costs of this project

Even though the challenges were many, the national church determined to find a way to successfully navigate each of them and fulfill their vision of planting 600 new churches in Liberia by the year-end of 2020.

The existing Bible school, Liberia Assemblies of God Bible College, was not producing enough graduates to offer the number of trained people needed for this project. LAGBC offers a BA and a B. Th degree that would be more than adequate in training students for church planting, but, given the fact that either degree required at least 4 years of classroom training, there would not be a pool of qualified candidates to fill the needed positions before the year 2020.

There are many potential candidates within the AGL churches – Sunday School teachers, deacons and deaconesses, young people feeling a divine call to the ministry, and others who would recognize the need and make themselves available to the Lord for His work. But they would need training.

The leadership agreed that some type of program could be developed that would meet the present need. The team came up with the idea of the Church Planter School. Church Planter School would offer courses that would give students Biblical and practical knowledge that would enable him/her to launch a new church plant with the help of a sectional presbyter and the district leadership team. By design, the school would run for a short period, six to twelve months at most. Each new student enrolling would also be required to sign a pledge that he/she would plant a church within one year of graduation.

The graduate of the Church Planter School would receive training along with their own personal textbooks that would serve them in their first training and would allow them to build their own personal library for future use in the ministry. Upon graduation, the national church would award them with the basic level of credential. The leadership felt that being a credentialed minister with the Assemblies of God in Liberia would give the church planter validity in the eyes of those to whom they were ministering.

Over 150 students enrolled in the first offering of the Church Planter School. On Saturday, July 8, 2017, the first 58 graduates received their certificates of completion. Almost 100 more will graduate within the next few weeks. Six months ago, we were all wondering how it would be possible to train 650 workers for this project. Today, we realize that we not only can reach the goal, but with God’s help we can overcome every challenge!

Say not ye, There are yet four months, and then cometh harvest? behold, I say unto you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are white already to harvest. John 4:35 (KJV) 

GROUP

                 GROUP 4          REV GBELLY

                              DERMIE AND MESLEH        GRADUATES