GSHP: Thinking Big but Growing Small
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Beschrijving
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What if the most powerful thing your church could do this year had nothing to do with your building?In a culture that measures success by crowd size and campus square footage, GSHP: Thinking Big But Growing Small calls the Church back to the original strategy of Jesus: invest deeply in a few, release them into every neighborhood, and let the multiplication do what no building program ever could.Drawing on the biblical patterns of Jethro's counsel in Exodus 18, the synagogue movement, the New Testament house churches, and the apostolic networks of Paul, Bishop Osei Tweneboah Koduah demonstrates that decentralized, relational, reproducible ministry is not a modern innovation. It is the oldest model in the Church's history, and it is still the most fruitful.Across seventeen chapters, this book moves from biblical foundation to historical evidence to practical roadmap. It answers the hard questions every pastor and church leader must face: Why did Jesus invest in twelve rather than twelve thousand? What did the Moravians, John Wesley, and the Chinese house church movement all discover that the institutional Church keeps forgetting? How do you measure Kingdom success when attendance figures cannot capture what God is actually doing? And how do you begin the transition, faithfully, practically, and without fracturing what God has already built?This is not a book against the large church. It is a book for the multiplying church. For the pastor who senses that something is missing. For the elder who wants to see the neighborhood around the building actually transformed. For the believer who carries a burden for souls and is ready to be released. "Bishop Koduah writes not from theory but from the field. Every principle in these pages has been tested in the crucible of real ministry, real communities, and real transformation."
What if the most powerful thing your church could do this year had nothing to do with your building?In a culture that measures success by crowd size and campus square footage, GSHP: Thinking Big But Growing Small calls the Church back to the original strategy of Jesus: invest deeply in a few, release them into every neighborhood, and let the multiplication do what no building program ever could.Drawing on the biblical patterns of Jethro's counsel in Exodus 18, the synagogue movement, the New Testament house churches, and the apostolic networks of Paul, Bishop Osei Tweneboah Koduah demonstrates that decentralized, relational, reproducible ministry is not a modern innovation. It is the oldest model in the Church's history, and it is still the most fruitful.Across seventeen chapters, this book moves from biblical foundation to historical evidence to practical roadmap. It answers the hard questions every pastor and church leader must face: Why did Jesus invest in twelve rather than twelve thousand? What did the Moravians, John Wesley, and the Chinese house church movement all discover that the institutional Church keeps forgetting? How do you measure Kingdom success when attendance figures cannot capture what God is actually doing? And how do you begin the transition, faithfully, practically, and without fracturing what God has already built?This is not a book against the large church. It is a book for the multiplying church. For the pastor who senses that something is missing. For the elder who wants to see the neighborhood around the building actually transformed. For the believer who carries a burden for souls and is ready to be released. "Bishop Koduah writes not from theory but from the field. Every principle in these pages has been tested in the crucible of real ministry, real communities, and real transformation."
AmazonPagina's: 104, Paperback, Kingdom Truth Press
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