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Together for the City: How Collaborative Church Planting Leads to Citywide Movements

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We need a bigger vision for the city.

It's not enough to plant individual churches in isolation from each other. The spiritual need and opportunity of our cities is too big for any one church to meet alone. Pastors Neil Powell and John James contend that to truly transform a city, the gospel compels us to create localized, collaborative church planting movements. They share lessons learned and principles discovered from their experiences leading a successful citywide movement. The more willing we are to collaborate across denominations and networks, the more effectively we will reach our communities--whatever their size--for Jesus.

Come discover what God can do in our cities when we work together.

224 pages, Paperback

First published August 27, 2019

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133 people want to read

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Neil Powell

63 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for Josh Jackson.
12 reviews
September 10, 2019
I knew I was going to enjoy this book - because it’s about churches working together to plant more churches in Birmingham - but oh boy, I didn’t expect to love it quite this much! Not only is it insightful and inspiring, it’s also warm, full of wisdom, and superbly written.
Profile Image for Jonathan Thomas.
335 reviews18 followers
September 28, 2019
This book tells the story and theology behind 2020Birmingham. It is an amazing story of grace and growth. Some of the ‘box C’ stuff scares me, but the book helpfully explores it.
An important read for church planters and leaders alike.
I’d love to see something similar on a national level in Wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿
Profile Image for Matty Lavelle.
60 reviews4 followers
November 22, 2019
Such a joy to read all about what God has been doing in my city! And a really great challenge and encouragement to pursue unity and collaboration for His glory!
Profile Image for Savio Sebastian.
266 reviews8 followers
October 2, 2019
The gospel allows us to keep our personal differences aside and work collaboratively and sacrificially towards building the body of Christ and impacting more with the gospel. Being a part of a City to City Church, I have loved seeing how the gospel changes and calls people to repentance and how the church impacts the city.

I think I read this book at a good time when my church is thinking of becoming a church planting church so we can see the gospel have an impact in our city and the world at large.

One key point that I gleaned from the book: we are not building our own kingdoms, we are all working together in God's mission. So we don't have to fear working collaboratively and supporting and giving to a new church plant. We are to look at doing our work as servants of Christ and not working at building our own small kingdoms.
Profile Image for Samuel Kassing.
549 reviews13 followers
November 26, 2019
A humble plea for churches to collaborate. I appreciated the wisdom, practicality, common sense, and basic thought process.

I’d highly recommend this book if you are working in city and have a heart for planting churches.
Profile Image for Caleb.
336 reviews2 followers
May 21, 2019
Neil Powell and John James are ministers and church planters in Birmingham (England). They are heavily influenced by Timothy Keller, famed church planter in the United States. The book is written with the authors speaking as one, with occasional stories in each chapter told from their viewpoint (i.e. "One day, I (Neil) met with other ministers for coffee). They cover what church planting collaborative movements are, why you should care, and how to go about doing it, with an additional chapter where they interview 5 ministers in various cultures - Asian, Latin American, African, European, and North American - about how they have each gone about their church collaboration movements.
The book is extremely practical and deeply theological. It is clear neither Neil nor James would advocate a church technique or practice at the cost of neglecting Scripture or commitment to the gospel. They earnestly make a case for the urgency of church planting and the extreme benefits of collaborating outside one's denomination/tribe. The best question they raise, and one that all ministers should raise, is "What does it mean for me to be in Christ in the twenty-first century in this city?" (page 106). To any and all church leaders looking for ways to impact your city for Christ, this is a worthwhile read!
Profile Image for Tyler Brown.
343 reviews5 followers
August 10, 2022
This book summarized the story and methods behind a church planting movement called Birmingham 2020. What I love about this concept is that they explore an approach to church planting that is painfully local. They consider partnerships on three tiers. First we have those that are denominational. These share similar stories, theology, and culture, but they tend not to learn from the strengths of other traditions. Second, we have cross denominational global movements. These are more diverse, but some ideas don't translate from place to place. This leaves space for a third tier: a cross-denominational, but local partnership.

The authors comment on the need for a shared core (belief in the gospel), cause (shared vision for a city reached), and code (something like Tim Keller's concept of theological vision). In practice, I think drawing these boundaries are frustrating and arbitrary. It returns us to the debates where either everyone is an "evangelical" or no one is an "evangelical." And I'm not currently convinced that is a debate worth having.
Profile Image for Amma Addae .
4 reviews2 followers
January 18, 2022
This book has helped me see and appreciate God’s work across the globe. It was interesting to read the story of Birmingham and other cities. I would have given this a 5 star except that, I was eager to read some challenges the 2020Birmingham team faced or even failures. Unfortunately that wasn’t highlighted. I look forward to seeing a gospel collaboration for my own city in a few months!
Profile Image for Steve Cummings.
9 reviews
November 20, 2022
YES! We CAN all get along!

This book inspired my heart that we as Christians CAN cause Jesus’ prayer in John 17 to come alive. No matter our evangelical tribe - if we want to win the world for Christ, city by city, we must seek unity. There’s no other choice. Nothing else is working. Let’s be another Dunkirk!
Profile Image for Horace.
274 reviews
June 23, 2024
For those who are building, or hope to build, a collaborative church planting network in their area, this is an excellent resource. It gives both Why and How. Based on the work of the authors, who are pastors in Birmingham, UK.
Profile Image for Ben Connelly.
Author 8 books19 followers
December 29, 2019
Helpful & practical for questions we're asking as churches work together in Ft Worth. A few editing/layout bumps, but overall, thorough & needed.
108 reviews
February 20, 2020
Felt like this was more of a report of what 2020birmingham had done. Ok if that is what you enjoy reading, but I personally found it hard to read at times.
Profile Image for Ted Newell.
Author 4 books10 followers
March 29, 2020
Inspiring story of God at work from the small insignificant event of a shared cup of coffee. Gideon and co. live! 20 new works by 2020 was their prayer.
28 reviews1 follower
August 30, 2020
Great look at how collaborative work between Gospel-centered Christians can yeild new churches in a city. Very insightful and inspiring for those whom God has called to reaxh their city.
Profile Image for Amy Jacobsen.
343 reviews15 followers
October 16, 2023
Loved the vision and models provided in this book. Still wrestling with the application in my context
Profile Image for Phil Whittall.
423 reviews25 followers
November 12, 2024
A solid, straightforward but occasionally laborious case for local churches across denominational lines working together in a church planting partnership.
Profile Image for Tim Cox.
10 reviews5 followers
August 28, 2019
Holy moly this book is phenomenal. If you work at a church and read this you will be promoted immediately.

What a vision for churches working together for the good of cities everywhere.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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