Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Study Leave Report: What a Joy to Grow!

I visited two churches of interest on Study Leave. Both were planted in the early 90’s. That is when they finished the first stage of their building. But they have around for some ten years prior to this accomplishment, meeting in homes, renting tore fronts and sharing space in other churches. Does this sound familiar? First Presbyterian in the Meadows has also held home meetings, shared space, and worshiped in non-traditional places.

Today these two churches are eighteen years out from the day they finished their first building campaign, and a good twenty-five years out from when they first gathered. That is seventeen to twenty-four years ahead of us.

My first observation is that we need to be patient and persistent. Growth is long and gradual. It does not happen simply because we build a building. So if anyone still holds that thought, it would be wise to discard it. In fact, this perspective leaves a church vulnerable to the biggest mistake it can make: thinking the accomplishment of one task means the work is done. What has marked these two churches’ continued success is their ability to adapt and mold their forms and structures so they can build and grow. Their defining mark has not been that they built a building, but that have been, and remain, willing and able to continue changing and adapting.

A growing church never ever stops. At Mountain View Presbyterian Church, even with 550 members and programs for all ages, they continue to build and grow because they continue to adapt. For about ten years their focus was towards a retirement community of Sun City. But as the church has begun to attract a broader spectrum of members, they have found themselves working at integrating children, families and youth where this was not an issue before. Pastor Linda Kelly clearly pointed out, “It is easy to relax in the familiar things that makes us comfortable and not struggle with the questions that make us change. For us now it is having to work at things like, ‘What do we do with children?’” What promotes the church’s growth is its willingness to let its comfort zone get a little lumpy if it means someone new to the fellowship finds comfort.

I remember a Sunday morning here at the Meadows when the church was full, the music was hitting every beat, and the sermon seemed to hook where people were at. There was a good spirit moving through the congregation. Afterwards a long-time inactive member who had come by to visit her old church stopped me in parking lot and said, “Well, it’s not my church.” It certainly is not. The church she left years ago has been alive at adapting to emerging needs and trends in order to grow and serve. We can't expect a stagnate perspective of a church life to grow a church.

We have challenges to address in the next two months as to how we will organize ourselves to enable us to be an effective presence in ministry and service.

Keep up the prayers. Share your ideas. Keep the discussion going. Be ready to move forward.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Study Leave Report: Experience In-house Marketing

Experience In-house Marketing
Many know that as your pastor I am constantly trying to figure out why there is such a low, low, low interest in non-worship spiritual building activities. When we have a church dinner, we all come out for the great fellowship, but when it comes to delving deeper into the bible, or taking time to join in a prayer group, the interest wanes dramatically.

I’m still looking for an answer as to what keep us from being part of these activities. Still,there is one thing I do know: there any things in our lives that beg for our attention, and despite our best intentions to be take part in the activities that deepen our walk with God, we are quickly distracted by all the other stuff we have to do.

What have I discovered today on my Study Leave that might help this? In-house marketing!

Simply put, what do we do that will remind us of the events of spiritual growth? We use the printed material for Sunday worship. The church I visited today used many opportunities to remind people what was happening. The front door had an announcement board right as you came in. Then, before you moved ten feet into the building, there was a welcome sign with a note to folks to check out the announcement board. At the coffee urn there were small cards with an upcoming event printed on it, and a note for people to bring a card to their friends. Even in the mens room (yes, right above the … excuse me … the urinal) there was a framed announcement board with the upcoming calendar. By the time you left the church, you had a pretty good idea of what was happening.

This is a good thought for advancing our next phase of ministry. Maybe we need more focus on in-house marketing that can remind us of spiritual opportunities around us. Any ideas? Does this interest you?

Study Leave Report: Encounter with the Lost

Encounter with the Lost:
Today I had an interesting conversation with a frustrated woman who has been looking for a church. Here is the verbatim story she told me, as best as I can recall…

"So I was wanting to go back to church since I hadn’t been there for a long time.. Something was just missing. My husband’s Episcopalian and I’m Catholic, so we thought we would look for something both of us could agree on, and we started looking around. We went to a church and I couldn’t believe what happened. We walked in and a man came over to welcome us, but instead of saying, “Hello,” or “It’s nice to meet you,” the first thing out of his mouth was, “You understand that if you are not a member of this Synod you cannot take communion.” I should have walked out then , but I thought it was so out of line that it had to be just this guy having a bad day or something. So we sat down and then the pastor came over. I thought this was nice for him to take the time to welcome someone he recognized as a visitor. You’d think so, right? Well you wouldn’t believe this. All he said was “I want you to know that you can’t take communion with us. “ I was thinking to myself, “To hell with you.” But it gets worth. We should have just gotten up and walked out, but we stayed around. After church? Someone else came over to greet us, and they handed us a membership card that wanted to know how much money we made. Have you ever heard of such a thing? I gave up looking for a church. Just look at all the crap that goes on, and they wonder why people don’t go to church? Shouldn’t they be living the virtue of the faith, and all they do is tell you you don’t mean anything to them but money and you have no business being there? It’s terrible.

"I left my last church because all they did was fight over one scandal after another. They would just get through with one problem and they would have to deal with another one. All anyone wanted to do there was fight about stupid stuff, and never do anything to help you find peace and virtue. It’s ridicules. I mean I’ve just stopped looking. It’s not worth the fight."

Three things I learn from this that all of us should take into account:
First, this woman made up her mind pretty much within the first 30 seconds of walking in the door. The man who greeted her had all the ability to set the tone for the visit. Think of it, the first person a visitor meets, maybe it’s you, has a great gift to extend the hospitality of our Lord, right then and there. This is not great program. You don’t have to be elected to an office to do this. We just need just a willingness to be a friend to the searching soul in the same way Jesus is a friend to sinners. After all, who of us is not searching for some sense of comfort and care on any Sunday when we also walk into worship.

Second, this woman was not interested in doctrinal barriers or church rules, but that is all her heard. She was looking for a place where the virtues of life would be exhibited and nurtured. How often does the religion, or the rules, or the doctrine (as important as they are) instead of being guidelines for being a church, become barriers to someone’s searching heart from finding God. Maybe it is a good idea to keep church business to the enclaves of committee debates, but when living the church, it is incumbent upon us to live with grace that welcomes, cares, comforts, nurtures and loves.

Third, the failures of this one church have hurt all churches. Simply because the experience was so offensive, this woman and her husband gave up all together on searching for a relationship with God through the church. That is a shame. It tells us that what we do and how we do it may have profound influences beyond the limitations of our walls.

In summary, whatever the program, whatever the denomination, whatever the rules and order, how ever we end up structuring the church for the next phase of our ministry and growth, the most critical component will be the warm and comforting heart of the parishioner who welcomes the lost and suffering soul into the fellowship of our Lord’s praise and glory.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Future of Ministry

Dear Friends:

Our finances and structure will change in June. And we need your help to do the correctly.

The manner in which we have been doing ministry for the past six years will not be sustainable beyond June 30, simply because the design we have been using is inappropriate for where we are and where we need to be going. The Session, the Treasurer, the Presbytery and I are keenly aware that if we continue using this structure we will suffocate.

Our mission strategy for the past six years was put in place in November 2004 specifically to secure a pastor-driven program for closing out the ministry in Holyoke, planting a new church and constructing a building in a new mission field. All of us were very successful at this. The ten year task was accomplished in five.

We now need to be equally successful at making our church’s ministry expansive in its comfort the sick and dying, care and feeding of the hungry, and the nurture of hurt and suffering souls if we are to continue to flourish. In many ways this is a grand opportunity. All the energy and resources we put into building a building, can now be directed to service, compassion, teaching, comforting, healing all in the name of Christ our Lord.

This week I will be exploring how to structure our church given our size and financial position so as to advise the Session. But I need your help in this. All of us need to be part of the discussion. Please begin by participating in our Session’s “Designing Our Next Phase of Ministry” questionnaire that was distributed on Easter and is available again this morning.

The questionnaire is asks only five questions. It’s short, but we need everyone’s input. We need to ourselves protect against making inaccurate assumptions from limited input. Answer the questions, drop it at the office, or mail it back.

You can download a PDF version from the website, www.PioneerPresbyterian.org.

Ideas can be shared also on FaceBook; search “Life in the Meadows,” or “First Presbyterian, Granby MA.”

Comments can also be posted on the Pastor Blog, at LifeSparkofFaith.blogspot.com, or Google search “Life Spark of Faith Blog.”

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

A Peronal Word from Haiti


Dear All,

It’s been two and a half months since our world changed. Since then, Rodney has made three trips back from Haiti, Nancy has just left my side for the very first time, dozens of visitors, hundreds of calls, and thousands of notes have inspired my soul and hastened my healing.

Yesterday afternoon I saw pictures of the rubble that was our apartment. Last night was a horrible night. The night before, we saw a re-enactment of the Last Supper. I cried -- not just for me and Haiti. The day before that was a breakthrough – I finally remembered how to get to the therapist’s without getting lost. Wow!! -- -- the flood of emotions that are triggered by the big events are reflections of countless ones that make up the moments of every day -- -- and night.
I am convinced there is no way to even try to thank each and every one of you personally. The emotional roller coaster would just be too great. I watched my husband cry as he put on a pair of shoes given to him by an old friend – and understood the depth of sorrow and meaning. I’ve seen Nancy strengthen by phone calls from new friends giving counsel on medicines, or doctors, or the horrible quagmire called insurance. How can one begin to say thanks for a line in an email that brings back hundreds of memories of good times or shared pains. The offers of help, a flower, a card, a chocolate Easter bunny, a visitor from a hundred or a thousand miles away or a borrowed car or home; how can I begin to say thanks.
Behind all the tangibles are the prayers which have gotten me to here – wherever ‘here’ is at this moment. Thank you each for the memories, and prayers you have so unselfishly shared.

Rodney is here in Florida with me for two weeks. Nancy will return when he leaves for Haiti. Friday I visit the spine doctor again and hope the back brace removal begins. Frustrations with not remembering, not being able to type or figure out the computer, blurry vision, or just the impossibility of doing everything expected is slowly turning to successful conquests., for the most part. Walking is a joy – small steps, not many, exhausting, and bracketed by a walker but still a joy.
Rather than looking toward a very confusing “ahead”, I find great comfort looking back each week to see how far I’ve come.

Sharyn

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Easter Morning!


The morning broke with gloom of an overcast sky: grey, damp, cold. “Se la vi,” for Easter. Life is what it is: riddled with gloomy mornings when your heart yearns for sunshine.

Gradually, while pouring the morning java, a diffused light bounced across the kitchen from the east door; not terribly bright, but enough to hint at the beaming glory hidden behind the clouds, a glory we often forget when the days are dull.

It’s now 8:00 am and the sky has yielded to a shining antithesis of morning gloom! I have to squint at the computer monitor to see what in heaven’s name I’m tapping out on the keyboard. A fitting climax to the Easter Vigil.

Enjoy the Easter day. However gloomy your skies may be, this is a day that reminds us the spirit has more power over darkness than we might think. Behind the gloom is a light waiting to shine in every corner.