top of page

AS FEATURED IN

Moody Bible Institute PNG.png
Church Leaders Logo PNG.png
Hello Christian Logo - Non Transparent B
Exponential Logo.png
Call2All Logo.png
Prescott Pines Logo.png

ENDORSEMENTS

“Mark Alan Williams is one of the best Christian bloggers, especially on sensitive subjects”

-Jason Holland Director of Operations Joshua Nations

“Loving your biblical responses. So much counseling is a chasing after wind, yours offers such a scriptural bridge.”

-Mike Kellogg 

Former host of Music Thru the Night, Moody Radio network and National Religious Broadcasters

Hall of Fame Award winner

“I can’t tell you how much I have appreciated your posts on LinkedIn. Many of them have been quite timely and an answer to prayer. Keep up the good work!!!” 

-Dave Meyers President, ZimZam Global

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • RSS - Grey Circle
Intro
  • Writer: Mark Alan Williams
    Mark Alan Williams
  • Jan 17, 2014
  • 4 min read

The other day I was watching a local TV program which told about a unique park in San Diego, California. Like any other park, people go there and walk their dogs, play Frisbee, enjoy picnics and play on the playground. But all the while, they are running, playing and eating over the graves of nearly 4,000 people!


ree

Gravestone monument in Pioneer Park, San Diego


That’s right, the park is built over a cemetery which was closed after the last burial in 1960 and soon turned into Pioneer Park in 1968.


The physical remains of 4,000 souls are still in the ground. Most people using the park don’t realize what lies below.


The story gets even more interesting in that when it was made into a park, the gravestones were gathered and dumped into a ravine a few miles away. They lay there unnoticed for years. But when the San Diego trolley was built and people could see them from the trolley, they were placed into a mass grave. Only a few gravestones of the rich and famous were preserved.


That’s right; they made a mass grave of gravestones! Hard to believe, but true.


You can read more about the Pioneer Park story HERE and HERE and for an extensive website click HERE.


When I tell people about this strange park, the response has ranged from bewilderment to anger. “That’s against the law” someone said. Unfortunately it is not, and in fact it is the city of San Diego which made the decision to create this park over a cemetery.


📷

Most of Pioneer Park looks like any other park.


As I pondered this strange park-built-on-a-cemetery, I thought about one of my favorite verses in Scripture. Ecclesiastes, the biblical book of brutal honesty about the vanity of life, says in chapter 9 verse 10, “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might, for in the grave, where you are going, there is neither working nor planning nor knowledge nor wisdom.”


We get one shot at life, and it goes very quickly. We must do as this verse says—live life “with all my might” and make it count. (My eBook Don’t Miss Your Life is a book on life planning to help make sure you make your life count. Get it free when you sign up to receive my blog posts via email.)


I want to use my life to make as much positive impact as I can and to help others do the same.


It also makes me think about investing my efforts in what is eternally significant. God has allowed Christ-followers to invest our lives in building The Kingdom. This means helping populate heaven and depopulate hell.


For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may receive what is due for what he has done in the body, whether good or evil” (2 Corinthians 5:10 ESV).


My dear mother used to quote C. T. Studd who said,


“Only one life, ‘twill soon be past.

Only what’s done for Christ will last.”

Each of us has a unique calling.


My calling is to church planting. I really believe it is a “calling” that I did not choose—I was called by God. The calling began when I was young. My first memories of church are in the basement of a house where a church was being planted and we were having Sunday School class.


Soon after we were married, Carolyn and I were led to join a church plant for our first church home. It was meeting in a 7th Day Adventist Church and later in a Masonic Lodge.


After that, when I had graduated from seminary, rather than going to an established church, God led me to plant a new church in Vista, California, starting in 1981. I was only 26 years old and looked like a teenager!


Later God led me to start a second church. Then I began to help start Dynamic Church Planting International (DCPI) where I have served since March 1998. Through DCPI I get to help teach others how to more effectively plant churches and reach people for Christ. Our vision is to equip leaders to plant 5 million churches.


While I feel church planting was God’s call, not just my own decision, here’s why I think this calling is so significant:

There is nothing eternal on earth except the souls of men, women and children, plus the Word of God (the Bible). Everything else is temporary (see 2 Peter 3:10). Even gravestones and graveyards might not survive long!Church Planting has been called “the most effective evangelistic methodology under heaven.” I believe it is also the most biblical way to reach the world for Christ—the Acts of the Apostles tells how after receiving the Great Commission to spread the Gospel, the apostles went from town to town planting churches. See my article on “Four Reasons we MUST Start New Churches Now“The most effective way for me to invest my life is to equip others with the vision and skills to plant churches resulting in multiplication. Jesus invested his life in multiplying His disciples so that they could accomplish “greater works.” He said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, whoever believes in me will also do the works that I do; and greater works than these will he do, because I am going to the Father” (John 14:12 ESV).


Life on earth is very temporary. Even graves and graveyards can be short-lived. Are you investing your life in anything that is eternally significant?



I have authored, coauthored and contributed to four books on church planting which you can see and order by clicking HERE.


Here are some of my other articles on related topics you might find helpful:



 
 
  • Writer: Mark Alan Williams
    Mark Alan Williams
  • Aug 8, 2013
  • 3 min read

A few years ago I visited a house church in Mysore, India and was blessed to give the Sunday morning sermon. There were about 25 precious Indian Christians in attendance.


ree

That’s me speaking in that house church in India


When it came time for the offering I contemplated what to give. I wanted to be generous—the church didn’t have much. But how generous should I be? I decided to put two twenty U.S. dollar bills in the offering. Forty dollars seemed like a fair amount—much less than we give to our home church in the USA, but enough to help them along.


But was I ever in for an eye-opening.


On the train ride back to the city after the service, the pastor let me know what a big mistake I had made. “You created a problem today with your offering,” he explained. I was taken aback by his comment and wondered if he was joking. But he was quite serious. He continued to explain, “We have never received a gift so large before and probably never will again. Now the congregation will think I have wealthy donors in the USA who send money and that they will not need to give. Their tithes and offerings will seem small and unimportant compared to what you have given and they will be reluctant to practice stewardship.”


I was stunned.


I honestly thought I had given a modest amount that would be a blessing. I had no idea that I could be creating a problem.


Later I asked the pastor, “Who is the wealthiest person you know personally?” He said it was an Indian mission leader whom we both knew. When I asked why he considered this leader to be wealthy, he said it was because he owned an automobile. Well, I happened to know that the car he owned was an older vehicle that most Americans would consider a jalopy, and in fact at that moment it had broken down and was not even usable.


I now understand that the pastor was right; my giving helped create an expectation for dependence on “rich” Americans.


Since this incident I have studied and thought about dependency in missionary work and in other contexts. I have made it a point to be more thoughtful and careful about helping and giving in a way that might create dependency issues.


An unfortunate mistake turned into a good lesson learned.


There are other instances where we can create dependence.  For example:

When parents do their children’s homework or chores. The child might get an “A” on the assignment, but what has he learnedWhen the government hands out benefits to people who could earn their way but won’t work.When churches hand out assistance to able-bodied people who could work but instead are working the system.


Am I suggesting that there are never legitimate needs for help? Absolutely not, and we need to meet those needs.


However, I am suggesting that before helping people we must carefully consider how our gift could affect the recipient—like I should have done in Mysore.


To help evaluate what to do in order to avoid dependency, here are some questions to ask:


  • Am I convinced that I am giving to a person who is truly in need and not just lazy or working the system?

  • How might my giving negatively impact this person’s motivation?

  • Is this person truly needy or just seeking a better lifestyle?

  • How might my giving create dependency?

  • What are my own personal motivations for giving or helping? (To assuage my guilt, to get them off my back, to impress someone with my “generosity”?)

  • If I give now but don’t continue giving, what will happen? Have I given a fish or taught them how to fish?

I hope these questions help you to evaluate when to give and what to give. It can be tricky.



 
 
  • Writer: Mark Alan Williams
    Mark Alan Williams
  • Mar 3, 2013
  • 1 min read

Check out the message that I did for Global Church Planting Sunday. This message was given at our home church, New Song Church, Oceanside, CA. The video has an introduction by our Senior Pastor Dr. Hal Seed.


Global Church Planting Sunday, coordinated by DCPI, brings awareness and inspiration to encourage church planting around the world. Each year on the second Sunday in February churches around the world focus on church planting as the most effective way to reach the world for Christ.

Dr. Paul Eshleman of Cru said, “It is the biblical pattern that God uses local churches to help believers grow to maturity in Christ. Today, however, there are at least two million villages and neighborhoods throughout the world where there is no church. We are living in a time of great spiritual harvest. I believe that hundreds of millions of people will come into the Kingdom in the next decade. Global Church Planting Sunday will help us focus our resources toward this critical element of making disciples of all nations.”


To learn more about Global Church Planting Sunday visit the website HERE.


What will you do to further church planting?



 
 
Search
bottom of page