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The G12 vision, also referred to as Groups of 12 or History
Cesar Castellanos developed the G12 strategy after visiting the In the year 2000 church leaders around the world seeking to increase their church size, travelled to Cesar's church to learn about the G12 vision. Subsequently, in the year 2001, Cesar formed an international group of 12, with leaders from different countries. . G12 philosophy
The idea of the G12 is to reach out and disciple every member and also hold every member to accountability. The main leader would disciple 12 people, they would instate Christian values, teachings, prayer and ministry on a weekly basis until their disciples were ready to lead their own groups. Each disciple would find 12 new disciples and repeat the same process until there were 144. In theory this process should continue and the church would grow exponentially, without losing the accountably due to the eventual size of the church. G12 methodology
The G12 structure is found in some evangelical, predominantly charismatic churches. This is broken up into 4 parts with the sole aim of leading people to follow Christ and increasing the size of the church.
This is when three disciples meet once a week and pray for three non-Christians each, nine in total for a period of a month, before inviting the people prayed for to evangelistic events called nets, with the hope that they will follow Christ. The prayer and invitations continued until those people eventually make a decision for Christ. Nets are crusades run weekly, where non Christians are invited to attend with the hope that Christ’s' message will touch them, and they will follow Christ. These are weekend retreats, usually set away from the city in a conference centre. Encounters generally last two-four days where there is basic Christian teaching, prayer and use of common symbolic acts to define the end of the old and beginning of the new. This is a nine month course split into three ten week sections, where all the fundamentals of the Christian faith are taught, as well as the principles of the G12 vision. It is usually coordinated and run by church members who have attended the school of teachers. Men, women, children and married couples are segregated while allocated to cells. The idea is to avoid distracting single men and women with one another; to encourage married couples to become closer; and to help youth to be nurtured with their peers. |
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