American

Much ventured, much gained by Ariz. church planter

Copyright (c) 2016 Baptist Press. Reprinted from Baptist Press (www.baptistpress.com), news service of the Southern Baptist Convention.
The original story can be found at http://www.bpnews.net/47272/much-ventured-much-gained-by-ariz-church-planter

KINGMAN, Ariz. (BP) — The idea of starting over is ominous: driving off, developing new friends and breaking the barriers of the unknown, all with risk.

Meet Tommy Thomas, North American Mission Board church planting catalyst in northern Arizona. He has turned starting over into an art form.

Tommy Thomas drives 3,000 miles a month across northern Arizona “bringing life to the desert,” as the New River Baptist Association’s office answering machine puts it. Photo by Frank Thomas/Visual Concept Media Thomas repeatedly risks everything: reputation, safety, finances and the future. In remote rural life, there’s another risk — a stint in irrelevance if he fails.

In a nation where urban ministry leaders generally gain most of the limelight, this unpretentious servant-oriented leader in rural Arizona does not dominate the speakers’ tour. You’re not likely to see him touting his successes.

However, you are likely to see Thomas trekking through the sweltering sands, forested mountains and grassy meadows of the state finding new ways to start churches and establish creative ministries — surrendering himself over and over in a new community that needs Christ.

He became church planting missionary and director of evangelism/missions for the River Valley Baptist Association in 1994, where the Kingman office’s answering machine speaks of “bringing life to the desert.”

Tommy Thomas (right), North American Mission Board church planting catalyst in rural Arizona, talks with Michael Campbell who is planting a Native American church in Holbrook. Photo by Frank Thomas/Visual Concept Media Thomas’ pattern was to spend extensive time in a community where there was no church, gather a core and start a new work. After being the pastor for the first 6 to 12 months, he led the church to find a new shepherd. Later, he changed his method to gathering a core and calling a pastor before the church launched.

The region’s spiritual landscape has changed dramatically because of Thomas’ influence and the work of multiplying churches. There were 12 churches when he arrived. He spoke in every church that opened the door to him, consistently talking about Jesus’ passion for the bride of Christ and for the lost. The Lord called out and raised up new leaders along the way to start new works.

Finding strong sponsoring churches with the vision to reproduce became an integral part of the ministry. New churches soon started budding up in towns that even many Arizonans have never heard of: Meadview, Cedar Hills, Big River, Bouse, Yucca, Beaver Dam and many more.

Tommy Thomas, pictured with wife Laura, has been an innovative leader in starting churches through the North American Mission Board in northern Arizona. Photo by Frank Thomas/Visual Concept Media Since those early years, the River Valley Baptist Association kept growing and growing, now with 33 churches.

Critical to Thomas’ effectiveness has been his sense of timing and discernment in listening to the Spirit’s leadership to discover the open doors. As a proponent of the principle “find where God is working and join Him,” he has long sought where God was already working and laying new churches on the hearts of people. Five years of cultivation were important to create a “culture of church planting” in the association.

Thomas, who holds a newly-earned doctor of ministry degree from Gateway Seminary of the Southern Baptist Convention, has made a priority of tapping local leadership.

“Most of the leaders have come out of River Valley Association — at least half,” he says. “These guys know the area, the people and the culture. Anytime we can raise up local leadership, we’ll do it.”

In the last decade, Thomas has helped reach new Arizona people groups with cowboy churches, biker churches, Hispanic churches, apartment churches, churches in prison and Native American churches. He has influenced their members — from captives to campers, truckers to bikers — to keep pressing on.

To a church thinking about being innovative, Thomas remarks, “Be sure not to put church planting or missions or ministry in a box. That is, it’s never about you building a church. Jesus does that. It’s about being the church.”

Tommy Thomas (center) recently received the doctor of ministry degree from Gateway Baptist Theological of the SBC. Photo by Frank Thomas/Visual Concept Media His role changed again last year, expanding his church planting catalyst territory from the California border to the New Mexico border, working with five associations across northern Arizona.

Thomas’ wife Laura has been a support and prayer backbone for her husband’s ministry as well as a missions and women’s ministry advocate. And she has given him sacrificial encouragement for the 3,000 miles he travels around the state each month.

There’s an old saying, “Nothing ventured nothing gained.” In Tommy and Laura Thomas, the reverse can be said in Arizona. Much has been ventured, and much gained.

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