Friday, September 28, 2012

Young Clergy Perspective

A well informed quick read. I think it was implied, but it is worth being more specific...this is not just a commentary on clergy but includes other young leaders who are holding back on their passionate ministry because it will be misunderstood by others or worse yet, unaccepted. I also think that older pastors who are concerned with leaving a legacy of growth rather than decline are caught up in these same issues.

What Young Clergy Want You To Know

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

More Voices from the Wilderness: Ideas for Presbyteries

Here is another blogger offering up some interesting ideas for Presbytery meetings.
Experience the examination of candidates for professional ministry to be a teaching moment during which they teach us.
Check out the 3 things that you would change about Presbytery Assembly Meetings

Theresa Eungyong Cho has a wonderful blog where she opens conversations about many different aspects of our faith and work together.
I began my moderator year for the Presbytery of San Francisco January of this year. My focus for this year is to change the way we meet during our Presbytery meetings. Like most presbyteries, we sit in pews for 5-7 hours listening to reports and voting on important issues. What is clear is that people are tired of meeting this way and often times hate going to presbytery meetings. More and more presbyteries are looking at alternative ways to do business and Presbytery of San Francisco is one of them.
Check out Teresa's blog post on different ways to do Presbytery meetings.


Embracing Your "Onlys"



This past weekend I worshipped in a community with a small youth group. As I was leaving, the Sunday School teacher expressed her concerns about having such a small group. “It is a nice youth group, but we only have a few kids.” I’ve used those same words. When my husband and I were volunteering for a program over a decade ago we were working with a vibrant youth ministry that boasted 24 junior highers on Wednesday nights. These kids were devoted to the program, coming every week, and bringing friends. But Sunday mornings were a whole other story. We were lucky on some mornings to get five kids. Usually it was three.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Where Two or More are Gathered...

Paul Moore, organizing pastor at the Chain of Lakes Church in Blaine, wrote an accurate account of the Presbytery meeting I attended the other night. It was the first Presbytery meeting I’ve been to in awhile. On several occasions throughout the meeting, the gathered body made references to trying to include more people in their 20s and 30s, but I was hard pressed to envision a room full of 20 and 30 year olds abiding the length and structure of a meeting that lasted nearly six hours not including the pre-Presbytery event.


It’s not that 20 and 30 year olds don’t care or aren’t willing to devote time and energy to something. It would be a mistake to attribute that sentiment to a group of folks who have already bucked the generational trend to leave the church altogether. But, six hours of sitting in a pew listening to reports doesn’t work for us. Based on the number of people still at the meeting at 9:30pm on Tuesday night, it’s not working for a lot of other people as well.