
PARTNER & SUPPORT CHURCH PLANTS
CONGREGATIONAL PARTNERSHIP
DISCOVERING YOUR STRATEGIC ROLE
Every congregation within the Central Conference has a meaningful opportunity to participate in church planting ministry. Regardless of your church's size, age, or resources, there's a significant way for your community to join this kingdom-expanding movement.
BECOME A SPONSORING CHURCH
Assume a primary role in "birthing" a new congregation by providing multi-year financial investment, releasing core team members, and offering continuous mentorship and practical assistance.
SUPPORT THROUGH PRAYER AND RESOURCES
Embrace a church plant in your prayer life, incorporate church planting into your missions allocation, and provide targeted project assistance when plants encounter specific needs.
HOST EDUCATION EVENTS
Designate a "Church Planting Focus Sunday" to inform your congregation about this crucial ministry and motivate others to engage through financial support, volunteering, or exploring their own planting calling.


INDIVIDUAL PARTNERSHIP
ENGAGE IN STRATEGIC PRAYER
Join our Church Planting Prayer Team to receive regular updates and specific prayer requests for planters, their families, and developing churches. Prayer forms the bedrock of everything we accomplish.
INVEST IN THE MISSION
Contribute to the Central Conference Church Planting Initiative, where every donation directly supports evaluation, preparation, coaching, and launch expenses for new churches. Your investment produces eternal dividends.
SHARE YOUR EXPERTISE
Offer professional skills in areas like finance, marketing, graphic design, or website development. Contribute your gifts in worship, children's ministry, hospitality, or administration during those vital early months of a plant.
JOIN A LAUNCH TEAM
If God is moving in your heart, you might be called to help establish a church plant in your area by becoming part of the founding team of a new work.
Our Expanding Family of Communities
Throughout the Central Conference, God is establishing new faith communities that are creating tangible differences in their neighborhoods. From urban contexts reaching young professionals to suburban plants engaging growing families to rural churches serving agricultural communities, we're witnessing the gospel take root in innovative ways.
These new churches aren't merely surviving, they're prospering. They're baptizing new believers, developing leaders, serving their communities, and many are already discussing their own church planting aspirations. This represents true multiplication in action.
