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A UMNS Feature
By Barbara Dunlap-Berg*
7:00 A.M. EDT August 8, 2011
Members of the Silent Witness Mime Troupe, based at Mount Zion United
Methodist Church, Bel Air, Md., perform a scene from the life of Christ. Photo
courtesy of Silent Witness Mime Troupe.
View in Photo Gallery
Bishop John R. Schol shepherds the Baltimore-Washington Annual (regional) Conference,
and he is always on the lookout for standout congregations. As team
leader of the Vital Congregations initiative, he rattles off the
description with ease.
A vital congregation, he explains, has five things:
- Inviting and inspiring worship
- Engaged disciples in mission and outreach
- Gifted, equipped and empowered lay leadership
- Effective, equipped and inspired clergy leadership
- Small groups and strong children’s programs and youth ministry
“While all congregations have some aspect of vitality,” he adds,
“highly vital congregations grow over time, engage more people in
ministry and are more generous in giving to mission.”
He offers four examples in his conference.
Foundry United Methodist Church
in Washington, D.C., has a significant young adult worshipping
community, one of the highest numbers of professions of faith in the
Baltimore-Washington Conference and one of the strongest mission
programs in United Methodism and is growing.
Another congregation in the U.S. capital — Brighter Day United Methodist Church
— engaged 228 disciples, more than half the congregation, in Bible
study. The congregation also has inspiring worship and engages in
significant mission in the community and in Africa.
Mount Carmel United Methodist Church in Frederick, Md., has doubled worship, recently baptized 12 youth and adults, and is engaged in mission.
Foundry United Methodist Church volunteers “cook
up a storm” for Damien Ministries during the Foundry
Great Day of Service in Washington, D.C. A UMNS
photo by Phil Carney.
View in Photo Gallery
And, in Bel Air, Md., Mount Zion United Methodist Church
has a significant small-group ministry, is working to end homelessness
in the county and grew from 35 to more than 700 in worship.
Status quo is not the answer
Turning “average congregations” into vital congregations cannot
happen overnight, Schol cautions. And he encourages United Methodists to
address what he terms “adaptive spiritual challenges.”
One challenge is “calling and developing more turnaround spiritual
leaders.” A turnaround leader, he notes, casts a meaningful vision for a
congregation and leads the congregation toward the vision. In the end,
“the congregation connects with the people in the community, increases
making new disciples and engaging them in mission and reverses decline
within the congregation.”
Developing greater trust at all levels of the church is yet another
challenge, along with embracing metrics, setting goals and being willing
to be accountable for faithfulness and fruitfulness.
And, making disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the
world does not mean maintaining the status quo, Schol contends. It
requires “retooling and learning how to connect with the nominally and
non-religious people in our communities and eliminating anything that
inhibits the flow of resources to congregations that are deeply
committed to becoming more vital.”
He admits there is no one way to overcome this challenge.
“In fact,” he says, “we are encouraging congregations to be
adventuresome and (to) experiment with ministries to reach people in
their communities.” The most popular types of ministries attracting
newcomers are mission projects and small-group ministries focused on
addictions.
“New people are also attracted to authenticity,” he says. “People
want real answers from real people, not platitudes from play-it-safe
congregations.”
Turn up the heat
Bishop John R. Schol preaches at the ordination
service during the 2007 Baltimore-Washington
Annual Conference meeting. A UMNS file photo
by Sarah Alsgaard.
View in Photo Gallery
Inspiring worship moves people to make a commitment to Christ or to
engage in ministry and mission. It can take many forms and styles.
“It leads people to a decision and invites people to make a decision,”
Schol says. “These worship services are bathed in prayer, (require)
thoughtful planning and focus on how to move someone’s heart.”
He offers examples. “A story can be inspiring, a testimony of a
changed life can be inspiring, a charismatic preacher can be inspiring,
(and) a worshipful song can be inspiring.”
There is no best way or one way to nurture effective lay or clergy leadership.
“Effective leaders,” says Schol, “are born out of great challenges
that test their souls and their leadership. These challenges have a way
of sifting average leaders and great leaders.
“Great leaders are not afraid of challenges or failing. They
recognize they will learn something and move on. Average leaders play it
safe.”
Turning up the heat is the best way to create more effective and great
leaders.
“Give them a challenge,” Schol advises. He acknowledges the church
will lose some average leaders who will buckle under the weight of a
significant or hard challenge.
“Today,” he says, “we serve in an urgent time that calls for great
leadership. We nurture leaders, not by taking the challenge away, but by
walking with people and letting them know it is OK to fail.”
Asked the most unusual small group he could recall and what made it
so, Schol cites Used to Be Cool Moms, a club for mothers of teens. He
also mentioned the Bible Fight Club, a Bible study in a Pittsburgh tattoo parlor.
“It is a no-holds-barred Bible study in which any question may be asked and any answer challenged.”
‘The greatest gift … is lessons learned’
Part of becoming a vital congregation is evaluating and assessing current church health. Schol anticipates some resistance.
Participants in the Bible Fight Club, a Bible-study group, gather in a
tattoo parlor. The Bible Fight Club is a ministry of the Hot Metal
Bridge Faith Community United Methodist Church, Pittsburgh, Pa. Photo
courtesy of Hot Metal Bridge.
View in Photo Gallery
The real question, however, is, “What will we learn and how will it shape our life together?”
“Resistance is neither bad nor good,” he says. “It is an expression
that two different ideas have difficulty living in the same space. Our
first response to resisters should be, ‘What do you want us to know?
What are we missing?’
“The church needs to take appropriate steps to address good questions
and normal behaviors of resistance to new ideas. But, it should never
stop moving forward. Change means taking risks and even getting it
wrong.” Schol says we should ask: “What have we learned from the change?
What will we continue doing? What will we stop doing? And what will we
modify?”
The greatest gift we can give to the future church is lessons we have learned, he says.
“We will also provide a gift to the future church of Jesus Christ if
we rekindle a spirit of saving souls, reaching the nominally and
non-religious with the gospel so that it captures their hearts and
imaginations.”
*Dunlap-Berg is internal content editor for United Methodist Communications.
News media contact: Barbara Dunlap-Berg, Nashville, Tenn., 615-742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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