Joseph Mattera: Should We Plant Churches or Disciples?

From josephmattera.org

Introduction

In the contemporary church, the dominant strategy for growth has been church planting. Networks, denominations, and movements invest enormous resources into launching congregations, gathering crowds, securing buildings, and sustaining programs. Yet despite sincere intentions, many church plants do not endure. Based on my own observation—especially in New York City—numerous churches planted since the early 2000s are no longer here.

One key reason for this fragility is that we have often been trained to start churches built on crowd-centered models, rather than on disciple-forming communities. The New Testament emphasis was never primarily on planting churches as institutions, but on forming communities of disciples who lived under the lordship of Jesus. When you plant communities of disciples, strong churches inevitably emerge. When you plant churches without disciples, you may gain attendance—but you may not gain endurance.

(A New Testament disciple is one who is under the direct tutelage of a mature believer who has committed themselves fully to the Lordship of Jesus Christ).

The book of Acts makes this unmistakably clear. In Acts 1, the followers of Jesus are already identified as disciples (Acts 1:15). This language flows directly from Jesus’ commission in Matthew 28:19, where He commands His followers to “make disciples of all nations.”

On the Day of Pentecost, about 3,000 people were converted (Acts 2:41). Yet Scripture does not immediately call them disciples. Instead, Acts shows us a process of formation. The term “disciples” becomes prominent again only later, once believers are grounded, shaped, and tested in community (Acts 6:1).

Acts 2:42 explains how this happened: “They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.” These converts were not rushed into leadership or counted as mature followers; they were immersed in doctrine, shared life, and spiritual practices. Only after this formation does Luke begin to emphasize the multiplication of disciples rather than simply converts.

Paul followed the same pattern. In Acts 14:21–23, after preaching the gospel, Paul and Barnabas “made many disciples” and then returned to strengthen them, exhorting them to continue in the faith. In Acts 19:1–10, when Paul entered Ephesus, his first action was to seek out disciples (Acts 19:1). He then taught daily in the Hall of Tyrannus for two years (Acts 19:9–10). The result was not merely a large gathering but a deeply formed community that confronted spiritual powers, challenged the cult of Artemis (Acts 19:23–27), and eventually gave rise to multiple churches—seven of which are addressed in Revelation 2–3.

History confirms this biblical pattern. The church in Iran today is growing faster than at any point in its history because it operates as a disciple-making movement, not a church-planting industry. Likewise, after 1949, when Western missionaries were expelled from China and church buildings were destroyed, the church grew exponentially. The focus shifted to small, committed communities of disciples—ordinary believers willing to suffer, lead, and multiply without dependence on Western professionals or structures.

Below are ten reasons why the church must refocus its energy on planting communities of disciples rather than merely planting churches.

1. Jesus Commanded Disciple-Making, Not Church-Planting

The Great Commission is explicit: “Go therefore and make disciples” (Matthew 28:19). Churches are the fruit of obedience to this command, but they are not a substitute for it.

2. The Early Church Counted Disciples, Not Churches

Acts 6:1 states, “The number of the disciples was multiplying.” Scripture measures growth by formed lives, not facilities ,crowds or programs.

3. Conversion Was Followed by Formation

After Pentecost, believers were immediately immersed in teaching and community (Acts 2:42–47). Discipleship preceded structure, leadership offices, and expansion.

4. Paul Strengthened Disciples Before Expanding Churches

Paul revisited cities “strengthening the souls of the disciples” (Acts 14:22). His priority was endurance, not momentum.

5. Disciple Communities Produce Resilient Churches

When persecution arose, disciples remained faithful (Acts 8:1–4). Movements survived because believers were formed, not merely gathered.

6. Disciple-Making Develops Indigenous Leaders

In Acts 20:17–28, Paul entrusts leadership to local elders formed through shared life and instruction, not imported professionals.

7. Discipleship Confronts Spiritual Powers

Paul’s disciple-making in Ephesus dismantled the economic and spiritual stronghold of Artemis (Acts 19:26–27). Depth, not spectacle, brought transformation.

8. Discipleship Communities Multiply Organically

“The word of God spread, and the number of the disciples multiplied greatly” (Acts 6:7). Multiplication flowed from formation.

9. Disciples Carry the Mission Everywhere

Scattered believers preached wherever they went (Acts 8:4). The mission advanced without buildings or centralized programs.

10. Churches Are the Fruit of Discipleship, Not the Foundation

Healthy churches emerged wherever disciples did life together (Acts 11:26). The church grew because disciples were first made.

Conclusion

I obviously believe in church planting and buildings, my point is they are not sufficient if disciple making is not the primary focus. Scripture, church history, and modern movements testify to the same truth: disciple-making is the engine of lasting gospel impact. Churches are essential, but they must arise from communities shaped by Jesus, not merely crowds gathered from smart branding.

If we want churches that endure, cities that are transformed, and movements that outlive their founders, we must return to the original mandate. The future of the church will not be secured by better branding or larger launches—but by communities of disciples who live, suffer, and multiply for the glory of Christ.