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Determining Strengths & Assets of Small Congregations Warren M. Eshbach, D.Min. Adjunct Faculty, Congregational Ministry Lutheran Theological Seminary, Gettysburg
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Questions... Who was raised in a community of less than 5000? 10,000? 30,000? 100,000? Who had faith formation in a congregation less than 100? 200? 500? more than 1000? Who believes that small congregations are generally weak? Who believes that gospel sharing is harder in small congregations?
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Why does Koinonia congregation survive? Small, dedicated core group History of good leadership Good community relations – different ways in different eras
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Why is Koinonia strong and small? Aware of community surrounding them Painfully look at selves & surroundings Speak to relevant issues
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Common Characteristics of New Testament Churches (Russell) Households Sectarian Eschatological
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Four Futures for 21 st c. Congregations (Callahan) Small, strong Middle-sized Large, regional Mega “Weak or dying congregations are not about size, but about a way of thinking, planning and acting” (Callahan)
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Small Congregational Health Small/strong Small/weak Small/dying Each of the above is determined by a style of thinking, planning and acting. SMALL IS STRONG!
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Marks of small, strong congregations Team approach to leadership Mission & service to local community Compassion & shepherding Caring for others Worship that fosters hope Generous givers Self-reliance & self-suffering Wise use of space & facilities
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“The art is to grow the real strengths God gives you in ways that match with the community that God gives you. That takes wisdom.” Kennon Callahan
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The Church with Low Self-esteem Suffers from remorse Denies present realities Isolates self Angry Depressed
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The church with high self-esteem Knows its context Ministers to that context Mutual ministry of interdependence & partnership Visions translated into goals Vital & challenging worship Empowers people Guided by hope Inner & outer directed
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Congregational Life Cycle DNA of a Congregation... Energy Administration Program Inclusion
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Energy... Potency & potentiality
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Administration... Organization & structure
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Program... Programs & services to meet various needs
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Inclusion... Marketing, drawing, assimilating new people
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EpaI Infancy EPai Adolescence ePAI Maturity EPAI Prime epAI Aristocracy epAi Bureaucracy Epai Birth a Death The Cycle of a Congregation By Martin Saarinen
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Changing Congregational Culture Technical work Clearly defined problem Clearly defined solution Adaptive work Unclear problem Solution requires learning & change
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Adaptive leadership Asks questions re: direction Offers a critique of options Orients persons to new roles Deals with conflict Helps establish new group norms Changing Congregational Culture
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Characteristics of Alive & Growing Churches Passionate spirituality Empowered leadership Gift-oriented ministry Functional & fluid structures Inspiring, well-executed worship Wholistic small groups Need-oriented evangelism Loving, caring relationships
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SWOT Process... Strengths of congregation Weaknesses of congregation Opportunities for congregation Threats for congregation
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Further Resources... “Revitalizing Congregations” by William O. Avery, 2002, The Alban Institute “Small, Strong Congregations” by Kennon L. Callahan; 2000; Jossey-Bass “Leadership Without Easy Answers” by Ronald A. Heifetz;1999; Belknap/Harvard “Transforming Congregational Culture” by Anthony B. Robinson; 2003; Eerdmans “In Search of the Church” by Keith A. Russell; 1994; The Alban Institute “Take the Next Step” by Lovett H. Weems, Jr.; 2003; Abingdon
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