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February 25, 2010
(Lillian Kwon, Christian Post): Amid decreasing
church attendance in Western Europe, multi-site churches
have still managed to take root and spread, according to
one mission group.
Leadership Network has released a brief report providing
snapshots of the various kinds of multi-site churches
growing in Europe.
"While some people have questioned whether the
multi-site model works in the more post-Christendom
context of Europe, there are European churches, who
organise themselves as multi-site churches," states the
report by Joanne Appleton of the European Church
Planting Network – a project of Dallas-based Leadership
Network.
In the United States – which some say has also entered a
post-Christian era – multi-site churches have already
spread to nearly every major city and state. Almost one
in 10 Protestant worshippers attend a multi-site church
in the United States or Canada, according to A
Multi-Site Church Road Trip.
The report notes a growing interest across Europe in
multi-site church. Providing an initial picture of the
movement overseas, the report follows three western
European churches that have gone multi-site and explores
their rationale and unique practices.
Holy Trinity Brompton is a London-based church that has
adopted the multi-site strategy. The church draws about
4,500 people weekly.
Miles Toulmin, executive pastor of HTB, went multi-site
with a vision for the "re-evangelisation of the UK and
the transformation of society", according to the report.
"We worked out how big we would need to be to resource
the vision, and decided that going multi-site would be
the best way to help us expand the base for church
planting," Toulmin stated.
Toumlin explained that they were holding five services
in one building and four of them were completely full.
With "nowhere to grow", the HTB pastor said they "wanted
to do something that would grow the base, but keep
alignment with our core DNA – which was more likely in a
multi-site situation".
HTB still currently conducts four services at each of
its two sites, but that is partly due to the lack of
affordable and available buildings in central London, he
said.
The church utilises video teaching but has campus
pastors and live worship at each site. And while the
Brompton location offers a more traditional church
experience, the second site at St Paul's Onslow Square
offers a more informal style with everyone sitting on
bean bags and sipping coffee.
Also using the multi-site model is International
Christian Fellowship Movement, which began in Zurich,
Switzerland in 1996. The non-denominational church had
40 church plants across nine countries when one of its
churches decided to take the multi-site route in 2007
and launch a location in Rapperswill near Zurich.
"We drew a circle around a 30 minute travel distance
from our central meeting place, and asked what would
happen if we drew another 30 minute distance around the
outside of that," says ND Strupler, coach for ICF Team
and Start-Up's, in the report.
"Zurich is the biggest city in Switzerland, with not
even 400,000 people, but if we plant seven campuses each
30 minutes travel distance from the centre we could
reach a population of around 1.5 million people.”
ICF Zurich originally had live preaching and worship at
all its sites but one of the campuses now has video feed
of the preaching alongside live worship. Strupler says
people were skeptical about the move to video at first
but the change developed into a success.
The church plans to expand to seven locations out of
Zurich.
AAVM, meanwhile, is engaged in the "mid-size
communities" movement with small clusters of people
connected to each of their church sites (which have a
maximum of around 150 people).
With each community and site developing, Keld Dahlmann,
senior pastor of AAVM, believes central teaching
services may eventually disappear and that the church
could become a network of church plants.
The key to AAVM's multi-site strategy, Dahlmann said, is
making each location "lightweight, volunteer-led and not
center driven".
The multi-site revolution in Europe is likely to have
more "angles" and "facets" as it spreads, the report
states, but the primary goal of the churches is clear:
"to multiply their effectiveness in reaching the women,
men and children of Europe for Christ."
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