“Practical Project Management for Church Planting Endeavors”

CPS Process

Overview

CPS is structured along six phases of church planting. These phases correspond to the phases found in most contemporary church planting models. Although it is robust enough to be used as a stand-alone process, it is not necessary to replace an existing process with the six-phased process of CPS. It can be readily adapted to align with an existing church planting process. Likewise, the terminology used in CPS can be restated in the terms already in use by and familiar to church planting teams or organizations. The six phases of the CPS process are Concept, Feasibility, Planning, Start Up, Formation, and Transition. While the terms may vary, these phases follow the typical stages of development found in contemporary church planting models (e.g., the Concept stage is equivalent to what is called Visioning in some models). Each phase of the CPS process represents the resources and effort necessary to achieve a specific outcome that indicates the successful completion of a stage of development for a church plant.
Church Planting Stewardship
Click on the pentagon to explore a phase of the CPS process
PROFESSIONAL
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CPS Process

Overview

CPS is structured along six phases of church planting. These phases correspond to the phases found in most contemporary church planting models. Although it is robust enough to be used as a stand-alone process, it is not necessary to replace an existing process with the six-phased process of CPS. It can be readily adapted to align with an existing church planting process. Likewise, the terminology used in CPS can be restated in the terms already in use by and familiar to church planting teams or organizations. The six phases of the CPS process are Concept, Feasibility, Planning, Start Up, Formation, and Transition. While the terms may vary, these phases follow the typical stages of development found in contemporary church planting models (e.g., the Concept stage is equivalent to what is called Visioning in some models). Each phase of the CPS process represents the resources and effort necessary to achieve a specific outcome that indicates the successful completion of a stage of development for a church plant.