How Do I Implement the Groups of 12 (G12)
Model?
by Joel Comiskey
The G-12 strategy has become a powerful tool for
refining the cell church worldwide. The amazing growth of International
Charismatic Mission (ICM) in Bogota, Colombia has generated a great deal
of excitement because of the simple yet powerful strategy God gave them.
If and when this excitement moves a church to respond, that church
typically follows one of two paths.
Follow the entire G-12 model.
Current examples of this approach are Harvest Assembly in Virginia
Beach, Virginia, the Christian Center in Guayaquil, Ecuador, Kensington
Temple Church in England, and Bethany World Prayer Center in Baker,
Louisiana. These churches follow the G-12 model in its entirety, exactly
like ICM does.
Apply the guiding G-12 principles.
Examples abound of churches that have chosen to follow G-12 principles,
rather than to adopt the entire model. In my book Groups of 12, I
dedicated two chapters to highlighting twelve case-study churches. Of
those twelve, ten adapted the G-12 strategy to their particular
situations, applying the underlying principles rather than the entire
model. Two examples I did not include in my previous book are Cypress
Creek Church in Wimberley, Texas and Liverpool Christian Life Centre in
Liverpool, Australia.
The Model Approach
Some churches have chosen to follow the entire ICM model. Bethany World
Prayer Center has felt the Lord's leading to align themselves with ICM
and follow its exact configuration, training track, emphasis on twelve
as God's chosen number, and care structure. God is blessing Bethany in
an amazing way and helping them to reap the harvest like never before.
Harvest Assembly in Virginia Beach, Virginia is
another church that has followed the G-12 model in its entirety. One of
the staff members said, "We understand that we must accept the
whole package, that we cannot pick and choose." Mike Osborn, the
youth pastor, has made over thirteen trips to ICM, vacationed personally
with Pastor Castellanos, and received step-by-step counsel on how to
proceed. Harvest Assembly uses the exact same Encounter Retreats, School
of Leadership, and follow-up system as ICM.
Those churches who choose to follow this approach
usually:
 | Establish a covenant relationship with ICM to
follow the G-12 system in its entirety. More recently, ICM has asked
people to sign a written agreement to follow ICM's system exactly.
This written agreement allows churches to use ICM's material.
 | Follow the exact same training track, which
includes-
- Pre-encounter
- Encounter Retreat
- Post-encounter
- School of Leaders
 | Promote the number twelve as God's special number.
 | Become part of the ICM network of churches, which
normally requires multiple trips to Bogota each year. |
| | |
Some churches will follow the ICM model in its
entirety and do it successfully. These churches are sold on the G-12
vision, and believe that God has anointed ICM in a special way and thus
willingly submit to ICM's covering.
If you choose to follow this path, you may want to
visit an ICM-model G-12 church and read the literature that promotes
this approach (e.g., Rocky Malloy's The Jesus System: Groups of
Twelve, Pastor César Castellanos' books Leadership of Success
through the Group of 12 and The Ladder of Success, and the
first six chapters of my book Groups of Twelve.)
The Principle-Oriented Approach
I teach cell seminars around the world and impart G-12 principles under
the cell church strategy. My ongoing burden is to find cell church
principles that apply in any culture, so I am eager to accept the best
G-12 principles within the cell church strategy. The whole cell church
philosophy has united the body of Christ across different cultures and
denominations. We have been able to network with one another, encourage
one another, and learn from one another.
Most cell churches that admire the G-12 model take the
best G-12 principles and apply them to their individual settings. Those
churches following G-12 principles-as opposed to the entire model-are
too numerous to name. They have each discovered fresh ways to fine-tune
their cell-based churches by using G-12 principles and values. Churches
that follow the principle-oriented approach are primarily concerned with
becoming better cell churches and are excited about how certain
principles or values of the G-12 approach can make this work.
The dictionary describes a principle as "an
important underlying law or assumption required in a system of
thought." The cell church movement, for example, believes the
principle that the cell is just as important as the celebration and that
both of them must be equally emphasized. This principle comes from the
New Testament church. The early church celebrated together in large
temple gatherings and then met from house to house (Acts 2:42-46; 5:42;
20:20). Later, due to persecution, this pattern became nearly impossible
and the house church movement became the standard (Acts 12:12; Romans
16: 3-5; 1 Corinthians 16:19; Colossians 4:15; Philemon 2). Although we
do not have many specific details about how the New Testament cell
approach looked, the principle of cell-celebration guides our thinking.
We must humbly admit that none of the current cell
church models are perfect. I would not state that Pastor Cho (Seoul,
Korea), Pastor Neighbour (Houston, TX), Pastor Vega (San Salvador, El
Salvador), Pastor Stockstill (Baker, LA), Pastor Robert (Abidjan, Ivory
Coast), Pastor Daugherty (Tulsa, OK), or Pastor Castellanos (Bogota,
Colombia) uses the only true, biblical cell church model. The pattern,
or principle, is cell-celebration. The application of the cell church
for today is varied and changes from culture to culture and church to
church.
You are reading this article because you want to know
how to do cell church better. My advice is to follow the common patterns
or principles of the major cell churches. In my book Reap the Harvest,
I catalogued common principles and patterns found in all of the fastest
growing worldwide cell churches.
These principles include:
 | Dependence on Jesus Christ through prayer.
 | Senior pastor giving strong, visionary leadership
to the cell ministry.
 | Cell ministry promoted as the backbone of the
church.
 | A clear definition of a cell group (weekly, outside
the church building, evangelistic, pastoral care/discipleship, clear
goal of multiplication.)
 | The passion behind cell ministry is evangelism and
church growth.
 | Reproduction (multiplication) is the major goal of
each cell group.
 | Cell and celebration attendance expected of
everyone attending the church.
 | Clearly established leadership requirements for
those entering cell ministry.
 | Required cell leadership training for all potential
cell group leaders.
 | Cell leadership developed from within the church
itself, at all levels.
 | A supervisory care structure for each level of
leadership (G-12, 5x5, or something else.)
 | Cell leadership promoted to higher leadership
positions based on past success.
 | Follow-up system of visitors and new converts
administered through cell groups.
 | Cell lessons based on pastor's teaching to promote
continuity between cell and celebration (although flexibility might
be given to meet specific homogeneous groups.) |
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
Crucial G-12 principles include:
 | Everyone can become a cell leader.
 | Every leader can disciple and supervise other
leaders.
 | People need to be set free (liberated from
strongholds) in order to serve as harvest workers.
 | A clear training track must immediately follow the
Encounter Retreat.
 | There must be fervent prayer and total commitment
to Jesus Christ. |
| | | |
It is upon these principles that I base the G-12.3
structure. The key is not found in the specific structure that a church
adopts, but in the principles that drive that structure. Without a clear
understanding of basic cell church principles, the structure will only
be a lifeless skeleton. The cell church strategy will constantly need
refinement and adaptation to improve its overall quality and
effectiveness. G-12 principles help us refine the cell church
strategy-not replace it.
My book Groups of 12 not only provides
information on how the International Charismatic Mission does the G-12
structure, but it also identifies and explains the principles beneath
this structure. In my book From 12 to 3, I show how the G-12.3
structure is built upon G-12 principles and provide details about how it
works.
** This article
is an abbreviated version of Chapter 1 of Joel Comiskey's book From 12
to 3. |