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A UMNS Report
By Heather Hahn*
4:00 P.M. EST Aug. 26, 2010
Many vital congregations offer both traditional and contemporary worship services.
A UMNS file photo by Ronny Perry.
View in Photo Gallery
Topical preaching, varied worship styles, effective lay leadership and small groups.
These are the things United Methodist congregations can do right now
to become more vital and strengthen the denomination, say members of the
Call to Action Steering Team.
The 16-member team, which includes clergy and laity, met Aug. 23-25
in Nashville, Tenn., to begin developing recommendations on how the
church can become more effective in making disciples and reverse decades
of declining U.S. membership.
The team based its discussions on the findings of two studies it
commissioned from independent researchers. The reports, released in
July, included an “Operational Assessment of the Connectional Church”
and a “Congregational Vitality” overview.
Illinois Area Bishop Gregory V. Palmer, a team leader, said the group
plans to present “robust recommendations” about the church’s operations
to the denomination’s Council of Bishops and Connectional Table in
November.
While the group irons out the details, team members stressed that
data shows local churches can take certain steps without any action from
the bishops or General Conference, the denomination’s top legislative
body.
“We know that that there are vital congregations, and we know it’s
possible to have more,” said Fred Miller, a consultant who has been
guiding the team’s process. Miller is the president of The Chatham Group
consulting firm and a member of First United Methodist Church in
Chatham, Mass.
Churches of all sizes
For the “Vital Congregations Research Project,” the consulting firm
Towers Watson measured vitality in terms of attendance, growth over five
years, professions of faith per member and annual giving per attendee.
The firm analyzed data from 32,228 United Methodist churches in North
America and classified 4,961 congregations, or 15 percent, as
“high-vital”congregations.
East Ohio Area Bishop John Hopkins, at left, and Tammy
Gaines, vice president of Abingdon Press, take part in
worship at the recent Call to Action meeting. A UMNS
Web-only photo by Heather Hahn.
View in Photo Gallery
While larger churches tended to be more vital than smaller churches,
the firm found “high-vital” congregations in all sizes, in all ethnic
groups, in every jurisdiction and in rural, urban and suburban settings.
In addition, the firm found “high-vital” congregations that are
theologically conservative and theologically liberal.
What these churches tend to share in common are what the study
identified as 16 “drivers” of vitality that fall under the broad
categories of pastoral effectiveness, worship, lay leadership and small
groups.
Pastoral effectiveness
According to the study, effective pastors are those that develop,
coach and mentor laity in leadership roles; influence the actions and
behaviors of others to accomplish change; work with congregations to
achieve significant goals and provide inspirational, topical preaching.
The research also showed pastoral tenure contributes to
congregational vitality. Whether a pastor is effective is usually
apparent by the third year. If a pastor is effective by then, this
success is likely to grow over time with the highest level at 10 or more
years.
Worship
Churches with contemporary and traditional worship services also tend
to be more vital. The research found that traditional worship services
should include topical preaching and contemporary worship services
should be multi-media.
The study also found that contemporary services work best when the
music echoes what people hear on pop radio. Such services can use
traditional hymns, but they had better have a backbeat.
Lay leadership
Effective lay leadership is also key to vital congregations. The most
vital churches had 25 percent to 50 percent of attendees in leadership
during the last five years.
Worshippers raise their hands at the United Church of Rogers Park in Chicago.
A UMNS file photo by Ronny Perry.
View in Photo Gallery
Churches also have rotating lay leadership with people sharing their
gifts in a variety of ways over time. People do not serve year after
year in the same position. Effective lay leaders also demonstrate vital
personal faith. They participate in disciplines such as regular prayer
and Bible study, attend weekly worship, give proportionally, join in
mission opportunities and share their faith with others.
Small groups and programs
Effective small groups can come in a variety of shapes, the research
found. They include Bible studies, women’s groups as well as groups
organized around missions or shared interests. Vital congregations also
tend to have separate programs for children and youth.
Moving forward
Judy Benson, team member and lay leader of the Oklahoma Annual
(regional) Conference, said she plans to incorporate the study’s
findings on effective lay leadership at church leaders’ workshops.
“We’re going to do a big emphasis on how to help a person who wants
to be a leader in a church be more creative,” she said. “And there’s no
reason more churches can’t do the same thing.”
Team members said just getting the church to focus on these factors would be a significant step forward.
“The primary responsibility of everybody in all parts of our system —
clergy, laity, general agencies, conferences — is to order our ministry
around the drivers of vitality,” Miller said. “Because if we are a more
vital church, we will make more disciples of Jesus Christ.”
*Hahn is a United Methodist News Service multimedia reporter.
News contact: Heather Hahn, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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