I believe the most faithful
way to be the Church these days is to take the 4Ds seriously by leaning into any ministry that:
creates partnerships, encourages nimble action, reflects authentic diversity,
and re-enchants the Church. In fact, as we prepare to elect a Bishop of the New
Jersey Synod, I see that as an opportunity for a 6-year experiment for the sake
of the wider church; it would be six years intentionally wrestling, taming, and
coming to terms with: Disestablishment, Decentralization, Demographic Shift, and Disenchantment.
One
of the places the Synod can make a big difference, and encourage nimble
behaviors, is at the point of a congregation’s closure. The Synod would
encourage closing congregations to designate a local tithe and a vision tithe
to the Synod.
The local tithe would stay within the Cluster or
District to encourage grass root ministry exploration. This “walking around
money” would empower Cluster Counselors to lead new mission. As it stands, when
clusters meet to decide who will be the new Counselor it is a game of “not
it!”. If there was some economic power behind the office, the more missional
and innovative clergy would rise to the challenge, the title would no longer
elicit the gag reflex, but instead a hunger to share the Gospel.
The Vision Tithe would be money that would leave the local context and empower the larger whole. It would be spent based on the Synod Council’s top-down vision.
There
is a tension in staffing between geography and specialization. As I envision
things, when it comes to congregational care staffing would be geographic, but
when it comes to specialization Bishop’s Assistants would focus on one of the
4Ds.
There
would be a Bishop’s Assistant caring for Northeast Jersey, one for Southwest
Jersey, and one for the Jersey Core (Yes, Virginia, Central Jersey does exist).
District Deans and Cluster Counselors would regularly meet with said staff
members to coordinate, plot, and plan—a nimbleness that can make for good
trouble.
At
the same time, these Assistants would also have specializations. I envision these
specializations as acts of caring.
The Assistant to the Bishop focused on Demographic
Shift would be the A2B who Cares for Our Diversity, the Advocate for our
Edges. They would shepherd intergenerational and Multicultural ministries.
They would be a collector of Best Practices—not only contemporary but also
remembering what came before, both to honor the past and notice when present
situations rhyme with the historical.
The Assistant to the Bishop focused on Decentralization
would be the A2B who Cares for Relationships, the Experiment Encourager.
They would guide the internet ministries of the Synod and assist congregations
with their web presence. They would host regular Dinner Churches around the
Synod, as well as our fellowship events.
The
Assistant to the Bishop focused on Disestablishment would be the A2B who Cares
for our Partnerships, the Partner Liaison. They would be the Liaison for
the Synod with Partners for Sacred Places (or the developer of a similar
organization in the state). They would organize Synod wide service events, and be
in charge of stewardship grants.
The
Bishop would focus on Disenchantment. They would care for souls, and
shepherd the 4D vision, so it doesn’t get lost in the administrative conflagrations
that is: putting out fires, slurries of meetings, and untold amounts of travel.
They would organize and lead Bible Study and Prayer meetings throughout the
Synod. Additionally, they would listen to hear the indigenous wisdom of this Synod. This would include doing extensive group
retirement interviews to glean wisdom from retiring pastors, and in so doing
short circuit some retired-pastor bad behavior that often has the flavor of
Ecclesiastes sprinkled on it.
Speaking
of administrative conflagrations, the final piece of the puzzle as I see it is
a staff person, or persons, focused on Care of Institutions. A Master
Organizer watching over pulpit supply, candidacy, and first call
theological education.
Synod Wide Focuses for Each Year:
Each
year the Synod Office would encourage every congregation to take one step
together. The steps might seem fairly small, but there is a powerful
intentionality behind each one. Each step is either a step that is reflective
and internal or an action that is focused on the external. Actions inform
reflection and reflection in turn informs future actions. A clear sense of
congregational identity allows for healthy cooperation and connection making in
the neighborhood and community, which in turn reshapes the congregational
identity.
This type of intentional work would, in six years,
remake the identity of every congregation in the New Jersey Synod, and just as
all the parts and players are different, so too the Synod itself.
The Six Years
Year 1 (Reflection):
The
Bishop would lead the year one step; this would increase their exposure to the
less Synod aware members. The Synod would encourage and equip every
congregation to clean their rolls and hold internal conversations about the
faith.
Year 2 (Action):
The
Assistant to the Bishop for Our Edges would lead the year two step. The Synod would
encourage and equip every congregation to have 135 God Conversations with their neighbors.
Year 3 (Reflection):
The
Assistant to the Bishop for Partnership would lead the year three step. The
Synod would encourage and equip every congregation to write, renew or review
their mission statement.
Year 4 (Action):
The
Assistant to the Bishop for Experimentation would lead the year four step. The
Synod would encourage and equip every congregation to perform one Holy
Experiment.
Year 5 (Reflection):
The
Bishop would lead the year five step. The Synod would encourage and equip every
congregation to look back on their last five years and share and celebrate the
highlights with each other, their community, and the Synod.
Year 6 (Action):
The
entire Bishop’s staff would work on its final year—it would be an all hands on
deck year. The staff would comb through congregational highlights and help to
seed and share, repeat and reproduce success stories throughout the Synod.
Roving Synod Events:
With
the assumption that decentralized gatherings ought to be encouraged, the Synod would
regularly host Fellowship Gatherings, Dinner Church, Prayer Gatherings, Bible
Studies, and Service Events throughout the state. There would also be a yearly remembrance
of Ordination vows.
2 comments:
Wow, Chris, you are THINKING this through!
Someone needed to!
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