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title: "Introduction: Before the First Public Service"
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# Introduction: Before the First Public Service

<a id="introduction-before-the-first-public-service"></a>

On a folding table in a borrowed room sit a Bible, a roll of name tags, three background-check forms, a half-finished budget, a cup of cold coffee, and a key that must be returned by noon. Someone is testing a microphone. Someone else is asking where children will go if the small room fills. A planter is trying to remember whether the landlord approved candles.

Nothing on that table is the Church. Every item may still matter.

Jesus Christ gives his Church. The Holy Spirit gathers people through the apostolic gospel into worship, baptism, the Lord's Table, prayer, holiness, shared life, ordered ministry, mercy, mission, and resurrection hope. A planter does not manufacture that life. A planter receives it with other Christians and gives its local forms honest, accountable shape.

The Church is the body and bride of Christ and the temple of the Holy Spirit. A launch cannot create that identity. It can, however, make promises about how this local body will worship, teach, protect children, handle money, recognize authority, receive complaints, care for people, and tell the truth when a plan fails. Those promises need names, schedules, records, limits, and people who can be questioned. Structure serves the life Christ gives; it never becomes the source of that life.

The Divine Design Framework governs the Systems Theology in this manual. It helps a team compare confession with operating reality: what reaches people, through whom, by what repeated path, with what fruit, and with what openings for corruption. DDF does not turn a team's preferences into divine design. It helps expose the moment when a church says Christ is Head while its calendar, budget, complaint path, or founder tells another story.

No manual can produce a church. Nor can one book settle every local question of polity, sacramental discipline, law, employment, property, insurance, and culture. This manual asks a team to finish the decisions that vague good intentions usually postpone: who carries the responsibility, who may review it, what the church will keep in writing, and what would make the team delay or stop.

Field rule. Do not ask first, "How do we launch?" Ask, "What life has Christ given his Church, and what local forms will let us receive that life without lying about our readiness?"

<a id="use-this-book-with-a-team"></a>

## Use This Book With a Team

This manual belongs in the hands of a planting team and the church, network, denomination, or governing body that will answer for the plant. It can also help an existing congregation repair systems that grew without clear ownership.

Do this work around a table, not in the planter's private files. Invite the people who will carry teaching, money, children, facilities, care, and records; members who will live under the decisions; and people who understand disability and access. Someone in the room must also be free to name what the founder, board, or specialist would prefer not to hear.

Read the first two parts with Scripture open before choosing a launch date. The middle of the book turns confession into governing, protection, worship, formation, care, mission, and weekly operations. The final part tests whether the church is ready to make its next promise in public. A failed test means delay, a narrower promise, outside help, or, at times, stopping the plant.

If an immediate safety concern, child or vulnerable-adult disclosure, domestic or sexual violence, credible threat, medical emergency, or possible suicide appears, stop the planning conversation. Use qualified local emergency and safeguarding paths. Do not process danger as team conflict, spiritual weakness, or a reason to protect the launch.

<a id="what-governs-the-work"></a>

## What Governs the Work

Original-language Scripture is the governing source and final norm. Ancient textual witnesses matter where wording is disputed. Apostolic and ante-Nicene Christian witness tests continuity with the early Church's confession, worship, catechesis, discipline, and rule of faith. DDF governs the Systems Theology synthesis and the scope of this book.

Legal, clinical, financial, accessibility, organizational, and safeguarding sources answer the field questions for which they are competent. They do not settle doctrine, and doctrine cannot erase an actual reporting duty, make a false financial claim true, or turn an unsafe practice into care. A church responsible for children must know what screening can and cannot detect. Love does not authorize one person to receive, record, approve, and reconcile the same money. A congregation that calls itself one body must notice the step, form, language, sound system, or social cue that keeps some members outside.

Treat prudential recommendations as judgments to test locally. Before adapting one, name its theological purpose, the facts on the ground, the people who carry the risk, and the evidence that would require another change.
