History
Campus Church Networks started in 1998 on the campus of San Jose State
University. Jaeson Ma was then a college freshmen in his philosophy 101 class
when the professor asked, "Who here believes Jesus Christ is the Son of God?" In
that class of a hundred more Jaeson and one other friend were the only students
to raise their hands. After that day, Jaeson became distressed with the
realization that most of his college campus did not know the love of Jesus
Christ. He began to prayer walk the San Jose State campus asking God to save the
student body of more than 28,0000 students. Before he knew it, God began to open
doors for him to minister to the associated student body officers. God began to
grant Jaeson and his campus ministry team so much favor with the San Jose State
student government that they actually sponsored him to put on major evangelistic
rallies on campus. Through these major outreaches hundreds of students were
touched and saved. Yet, Jaeson realized many made decisions for Christ, but not
many were integrated into a healthy local church family. In fact, most of the
churches around the college campus did not have anything to offer college
students such as a college ministry or had no clue of what to do with college
students. Although, some of the Christians on campus could attend a campus
fellowship while in school, sooner or later they would graduate and find the
same problem of not fitting into traditional churches.
As Jaeson spoke to students at other universities up and down California he
realized the same problems were on virtually every college campus. The reality
was a majority of college students on most campuses did not have or care to have
a relationship with Jesus Christ. Many thought of Church as boring, irrelevant,
and hypocritical. At the same time Jaeson saw the emptiness, brokenness and pain
of so many students who were searching for real love through drugs, parties, sex
and getting good grades, yet these all left so many students depressed and some
even suicidal. This broke his heart because he knew the college students of
today were going to be the leaders of tomorrow. He knew if we could first reach
college students with the message of Gospel then these would be the future
leaders of society who would change and transform their communities, cities and
world for Christ.
Through these experiences Jaeson began to pray about how he could start churches
on campuses that would bring the church to the students instead of the students
to the church. After much study in missionary church planting models such as the
underground house churches in China, Jaeson was convinced that simple
relationship-based churches would meet the most practical needs of college
students, which is feeling cared for. In his studies he read how 18-year-old
Chinese girls were planting over 100 churches in China a year after only being a
born again Christian for a few years. Many were uneducated, but relied on the
power of the Holy Spirit and on-the-job training from other seasoned pastors.
The churches he studied in China were networks of small churches maybe 15-30
members meeting in homes or storefronts sharing life together day to day under
the Lordship of Christ.
This kind of simple relationship based church excited Jaeson so much he began to
wonder, "If an 18 year old Chinese girl can plant 100 churches in a year in
China, why can’t a college freshman plant a few churches on a college campus?"
He then realized that a church could be planted on a college campus if a trained
missionary could pray and win a student of peace or natural leader for Christ.
The missionary would then teach the student leader to win his network of friends
and from that network of friends start a small church. Once started, the
missionary would then model for and disciple the natural student leader of the
group on how to pastor the church with the goal of one day releasing him/her to
actually be the pastor and train him/her to raise up their own student leaders
to start other churches.
Jaeson realized student leaders would need to train other students to start more
churches on campus because one church on a campus would not be enough. Since,
there were so many different kinds of student clusters on campus no one church
could ever reach every student segment. There are sports students, engineering
students, international students, fraternity and sorority students, and the list
goes on. Jaeson began to look at each student segment like they were un-reached
people groups. The best way in his mind was to plant a unique church for each of
these un-reached student groups. So instead of just focusing on having one
campus church on campus, the goal would be to start as many campus churches to
reach every kind of student on campus.
Now these churches would normally be about 15-20 students meeting anywhere on or
near campus. Once the church on campus would outgrow its meeting place, instead
of going to look for a bigger meeting place to rent, the church would just
multiply and train up another student leader to start another church somewhere
else on campus! These relationship based churches would never be hindered in
getting started by needing to pay for a church building because they could meet
anywhere like a dorm, apartment, student union, classroom, business office or
even Starbucks! Pretty soon, the whole college community could be saturated with
churches and every student would be reached for Christ.
Jaeson became so excited with this new way of doing church he started one- where
else but San Jose State University. Since starting the first campus church his
team has sent out other missionaries to other university campuses to do the
same. Now the campus church planting movement is beginning to unfold. Jaeson and
the CCN team are continuing to reach out to the campuses with the dream to
one-day see every campus in all the world saturated with campus churches that
are engaging lost students, equipping students and empowering students to
fulfill the Great Commandment and the Great Commission in this generation!
Start a Revolution! Start a Campus Church!
How we change the 80/20 factor
in the American Church Today

(American Society for Church Growth (ASCG), "Enlarging our Borders," Report
presented to the Executive Presbytery, January 1999.)
In recent polls, young adults between the ages of 18-25 are the most unlikely
age group to attend a church. Barna research group shows a majority of all
students who attend church after high school do not return (Barna Research
Group). What we need are new churches for a new generation because the current
method of church is not working effectively in America. Below is statistics of
average attendance of twenty something year olds in the United States compared
to that of other age brackets by percentage. Twenty something’s are the least
likely to attend church. The study was conducted by Barna Research Group
9/23/2003 over five years.

Consider what Religion Today published in an article entitled, "Look Out, Here
Comes the Gen-X Church."
…Generation X Christians are radically changing the church. The generation of
18-35 year olds, less concerned about structure and hierarchy, are disconnected
from traditional churches and starting small, informal fellowships…The churches
meet in homes, coffee shops, warehouses, fast-food restaurants, industrial
complexes, parks, and other unconventional places. Relationships are the
key…Generations Xers are loyal to each other over and above anything else.
(Religion Today, Look Out, Here Comes the Gen-X Church)
The modern era’s intellectualization of faith is no longer valued by the culture
of today’s youth seeking spiritual answers to their problems. We are living in a
postmodern era where young people have no standards, believe all things, and are
desiring to experience God. This generation doesn’t want to sit on pews and
merely listen to a preacher convince them of Christ’s existence. Instead, this
generation wants to live out their faith by doing something about it. God’s
kingdom will not be extended in this generation unless we realize the methods
and traditions of the past modern era are no longer relevant to reach today’s
postmodern youth.
We must also understand in order to expand God’s kingdom in this generation we
have to focus on the young people. This is because today’s Gen X & Y is
tomorrow’s mainstream society. A youth pastor in Germany named Karsten Wolf
believes the youth culture churches of today will define the church of the
future. Consider that: