tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1134210226395342064.post-80782775245419223862007-05-03T11:58:00.000-07:002007-05-03T13:12:57.280-07:00STHS Considers Partners for Missional Church<span style="font-family:arial;"><strong><span style="font-size:130%;">Welcome to my new blog! This is a new adventure, so bear with me.<br />STHS has been invited by our bishop to become a part of PMC (Partnership for Missional Church). It is a 3-5 year process moving toward adaptive change. The Central States<br />Synod is one of four synods (among the 65 ELCA synods) asked to pioneer this project.<br />There is significant investment of leadership time and funding. Copied below is<br />the witness of a church in Pennsylvania that has participated in this process.<br />I'll be posting some examples of PMC to keep you informed<br /><br />From time to time I will share things with you. One of the initial principles of<br />blogging is to be brief. I am breaking that rule today. This is to help inform<br />in the decision-making process.<br /><br />God's Peace,<br />Pastor Tom<br /></span><br /></strong></span><br /><br />Marietta Community Chapel,<br />1125 River Road, Marietta, PA 17547<br /><br />Pastor Leonard Dow<br /><br />Missional Church in Practice - PMC Process Reveals Adaptive<br />Challenges at Oxford Circle Mennonite Church<br />By Tim Leaman<br /><br />At Oxford Circle Mennonite Church (OCMC), a diverse multi-ethnic congregation in<br />Philadelphia, we are over two years into the Partnership for Missional Church (PMC) journey,<br />in which we are participating with six other churches in our conference.<br />The recent Missional Engagement Team (MET) phase of the process has created<br />opportunities for two teams of lay leaders from our congregation to dig into some of the<br />most pressing challenges our congregation faces. As a congregation that has grown rapidly<br />in size and diversity over the last five years, we have become accustomed to seeing new<br />faces, all representing a range of life experiences, worshipping with us on Sundays.<br />However, after the initial Discovery phase of the PMC process, our Church Council and PMC<br />steering committee identified two major adaptive challenges to be addressed if we were to<br />grow into the fullness of God’s purposes for us.<br /><br />These challenges were:<br />1. How do we invite/engage people on the edge of our church, and new people coming<br />to our church, into deep relationships with Jesus and with others in our church<br />family?<br />2. As a church, how can we cultivate an individual and corporate excitement and desire<br />to pray, as a result of an increased dependence on and hunger for God, in a way that<br />allows us as a church to be co-workers with God in His activity rather than our own?<br />The individuals comprising the METs reflected the breadth of our congregation’s diversity,<br />including many individuals who had begun attending our congregation within the last two to<br />three years.<br /><br />The MET working on welcoming and including people arrived at several key observations in<br />their process of re-framing the assigned challenge. It noted that “the original wording<br />seemed to divide the church into US (established attenders) and THEM (new faces). We felt<br />that the challenge truly involves ALL OF US working together. The key to growing<br />Partnership for Missional Church- Congregational References<br />relationships is being OPEN and HONEST with one another about our struggles. We feel<br />there is a need for forums and opportunities for people to move toward doing this.” Out of<br />these observations, the team re-stated the challenge as:<br />“How do we as a church family, create an environment where all people can be<br />themselves—honest and open—and in this way, deepen our relationship with Jesus<br />in our growing community of believers?”<br /><br />Noting that OCMC does have a growing network of small groups and discipleship classes in<br />place, this team designed most of its action steps around creating forums to encourage<br />deeper interaction with those who have not yet had the opportunity to connect with others<br />beyond Sunday morning attendance. The action steps involve:<br /><br />1. “Coffee connection” time after morning worship<br />2. “Wake-up reminders”—periodic skits/announcements/congregational exercises within<br />our worship services that remind us of our calling to reach beyond our comfort zones<br />to vulnerably share ourselves with others<br />3. “Mystery-guest dinners”—opportunities to invite others into our homes for deeper<br />hospitality.<br /><br />The “prayer” MET also re-framed its challenge. Noting that the recognized need to foster<br />“prayer,” really speaks to a need to foster “relationship with God,” the re-stated vision is:<br />“We want to become a church that supports people in deepening their relationship<br />with God by creating motivation and desire for a deeper relationship with God, and<br />providing opportunities for people to try different forms and methods of prayer.”<br />The prayer MET identified that as OCMC grows, all members need to have an active voice in<br />shaping the church’s direction, not just relying on a few leaders to do so. For this to happen,<br />the church as a whole needs to be in prayer. This MET’s action steps include:<br /><br />1. Incorporating prayer into our worship service in a way that teaches and models<br />different forms of prayer and helps us break down the barriers we feel toward<br />prayer, and toward God;<br />2. Including time for prayer and retreats into the job description of our pastoral staff, to<br />help foster its relationship with God and to model the importance of this to our<br />congregation; and<br />3. To create accountability to sustain these commitments through a “prayer ministry”<br />team which would have representation in the church leadership structure.<br />We are excited to see where these action plans take us as we continue to grow in our<br />missional journey. We sense that the PMC process has arrived at an important time in<br />OCMC’s story. Its action-reflection structure has disciplined us to take time to pause from<br />the urgency of the needs we see around us and from our activities of outreach, in order to<br />discern and reflect together. In doing so, we have seen God speaking through new voices<br />and raising up new leaders. As these new leaders dream together and listen to God together<br />for the future of our congregation, we have seen the fruit of increased prayer and increased<br />vulnerability and openness bubbling into the life of the church, even before the action plans<br />were unveiled. We have seen the entire church body capturing a deeper ownership of how<br />God is calling us to be “His sent people” in the Oxford Circle community.<br />Tim Leaman is the Council Chairperson at Oxford Circle Mennonite Church.Pastor Tomhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18022653582846326096noreply@blogger.com