leadership

Adam is Joining Two Notch

Adam Gibson, the author of this post, is one of our pastors and serves on our vision team together with Allen Tipping. To find out more about our leadership, visit our Leadership page.

From the beginning, our church has had a passion to love and serve the city of Columbia. From the suburbs to the inner city, upper class to lower class, students, professionals, and families. When we say we care about our city, we mean everyone in our city.

A few years ago we began to put the pieces in place to plant a church in the inner-city Two Notch area of downtown Columbia. In January 2014, our Two Notch church began gathering weekly on Sunday afternoons to study the bible together, pray and share what God is up to in their LifeGroups throughout the week. Two Notch's Gatherings are often followed by a neighborhood block party, as a way of getting to know people and building relationships.

No One Should Have to Pay for the Gospel

An unfortunate reality is that in church world ministry often follows money, leaving the inner-city to fend for itself. This is one of the many reasons why I am so proud of our Two Notch church. To be honest, planting a church in a low-income area of our city is a bad business decision, but it’s a beautiful kingdom decision.

To help with this process, Midtown Fellowship became "a family of churches." Two Notch and our Downtown church continue to share as many resources as possible (business operations, website, Recovery ministry, LifeGroup resources, etc.), while remaining united in our vision of being Jesus-centered family on mission. Our hope in doing this is to have a sustainable way of assisting a very under-resourced area of our city.

Why I'm Joining Two Notch

As we operate as a family of churches, we not only get to share organizational resources, but people resources as well.

With that in mind, for the next four months or so I plan to help the leadership of Two Notch in whatever ways I can. I want to assist with leadership development and getting some systems in place that will allow the church to continue its ministry even more effectively. I will still fulfill my “city-wide” responsibilities, and my family and I will remain in our current LifeGroup and attend Downtown Gatherings on Sunday mornings. However, any preaching that I do will be with Two Notch, at the request of Ant Frederick, lead pastor of our Two Notch church.

I've always been blown away at the pastors God has raised up in our church family. Because of that, I'm happy to say that I won’t be missed at all Downtown.

I'd love it if you could join with me in praying that Jesus would make this a fruitful season as I serve and lead with Two Notch, and that God would use it to help more people in inner-city communities hear the gospel.

How to Become a Midtown Pastor


In Sunday's sermon, we mentioned that our leadership process starts with being a healthy Christian in a LifeGroup. We think it's crucial that a person be known in community before they lead a community, and lead a LifeGroup on mission before leading a church on mission.

For those interested in further information, we wanted to share our official leadership pipeline with you. The attached PDF gives you the rundown on how a person goes from group member to pastor.

Enjoy!

[button label="View our Leadership Pipeline" link="http://midtowncolumbia.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/LeadershipPipeline.pdf" shape="default"]

Leader Meeting | A Photo Essay

This past Thursday, we had a ton of fun at the Leader Meeting. At Leader Meetings, we get to coach, train, encourage, and love on our LifeGroup leaders, who are on the front lines of ministry in our church family. Those who got there early enjoyed a Bluegrass concert complete with Cracker Jacks, MoonPies, and glass-bottled sodas.

Here are a few photos from the event.

_DSC0672
_DSC0672
_DSC0678
_DSC0678
_DSC0681
_DSC0681
_DSC0685
_DSC0685
_DSC0691
_DSC0691
_DSC0694
_DSC0694
_DSC0704
_DSC0704
_DSC0712
_DSC0712
_DSC0719
_DSC0719
_DSC0734
_DSC0734
_DSC0749
_DSC0749
_DSC0757
_DSC0757
_DSC0762
_DSC0762
_DSC0766
_DSC0766
_DSC0769
_DSC0769
_DSC0772
_DSC0772
_DSC0776
_DSC0776
_DSC0787
_DSC0787
_DSC0791
_DSC0791
_DSC0796
_DSC0796

Why Doesn't Midtown Have a Lead Pastor?

If you've ever visited the leadership page on our website, you'll notice that there is no singular lead pastor listed. Since many churches in America do operate with a singular lead pastor, we thought it might be good to explain why we don't. Elders are the leaders of the church who in the Bible are also called pastors, bishops, and overseers (Acts 20:28; Ephesians 4:11; 1 Peter 5:2). Elders are to be men chosen for their ministry according to clear biblical requirements (1 Timothy 2:11-3:1-7; Titus 1:5-9) and a elder’s duties include ruling (1 Timothy 5:17) managing (1 Timothy 3:4-5), tending (1 Peter 5:2-5), giving account (Hebrews 13:17), living exemplary lives (Hebrews 13:7), using authority (Acts 20:28), teaching (Ephesians 4:11, 1 Timothy 3:2), preaching (1 Timothy 5:17), doctrinal instruction (Titus 1:9), and discipline (Matthew 18:15-17).

When the bible speaks of pastors/elders at the local church level, it speaks in plurality. From our best understanding of scripture, it was always the goal for local churches to have multiple qualified elders serving together as a safeguard for both the church and the elders. This protects the church from inappropriately being built around one person, often a charismatic leader. It also protects the pastors from being crushed under the weight of leading a church alone.

The Bible calls Jesus the Chief Shepherd, or senior leader, of the church (1 Peter 5:4). Within Midtown's leadership, we reserve the title of Senior Pastor for Jesus, and with him as our leader, we have worked hard to train up and empower qualified pastors and leadership. Our hope is that, by God’s grace and through a team dynamic, being a pastor of our church will be more of a joy than a burden, and though the weight is heavy it would never be crushing.