Shaping Ministry for the 21st Century
Throughout history, the way the church organized and structured
itself has shifted with cultural changes. The church's effectiveness
in a given culture has always been directly tied to its ability
to reconceptualize true Christianity and minister in meaningful
ways to the people. Jesus was culturally appropriate in His ministry
and in how He organized His disciples. That is why the Jewish leaders
sought to kill Him. He changed how, where, and to whom ministry
happened. Jewish leaders saw this change as compromising truth,
but He had become flesh to fulfill God's plan. Through Jesus truth
became known, and people found life and hope.
Jesus established a new way of spreading truth by organizing the
disciples and making them His partners in the founding of the Christian
church. Instead of a hierarchical system, His way was to make disciples
and carry on the church as a body, as God's family. Today's church
can learn much from His method of establishing the earthly church.
The information age is shifting nearly every aspect of life. Cultural
analysts say our culture (dress, language, values, lifestyle, work)
shifts every 3 to 4 years. The pace of change brings with it great
challenges to the church. Society shapes the way people live, think
and what they expect. As we move into the 21st century, the church
must understand the social changes and the subsequent effect on
people's lives and expectations. This means we must constantly consider
how to organize the church and do Christian ministry.
Let's look at ten key principles of the information age that will
influence what the church can do to be most effective in 21st century
ministry. Keep in mind that I am only dealing with the organizational
principles. Ministry must always be done in the power and anointing
of the Holy Spirit.
10 Information Age Principles
1. Team ministry principle: Teams provide the primary structure
in which ministry takes place. Teams are formed by leaders who provide
vision and opportunities for people to make a difference. The attraction
is to the vision, to significance and to opportunity for people
to grow and develop. This vision attracts people who are willing
to make genuine commitment and devote themselves to making the ministry
more effective.
This will be a shift from the hierarchy model in which some church
organizations are structured: Pastor over program directors, and
program directors over ministry workers. Teamwork makes for better
motivation, because members share ownership and responsibility.
In a team there is generally greater commitment to goals and values.
Teams provide a more appropriate response to cultural changes and
to the needs of those to whom they minister. Problem solving is
more likely to become proactive, innovative, and effective. The
drawback to teams is that they require time to develop and to produce
results. However, the effectiveness of the team and the personal
growth of its members more than make up for this disadvantage.
2. Ministry coordination principle: Ministry activities
are made purposeful and efficient through extensive flows of information
that help to correct problems and make wise decisions. Ministry
teams are encouraged to problem-solve and manage their areas of
ministry in accordance with the organization's vision and values.
This shifts the decision-making process to those who are actually
closest to the issues and situations and moves away from centralization
of decision-making by those who may have limited information and
involvement with the specific ministries.
Shaping Ministry
for the 21st Century
- Recruit
the right people to the right positions. These people must
be trustworthy, quality-oriented, self-starters, and flexible.
Don't ask for general volunteers.
- Place ministry
decisions in the hands of those who are actually doing the
ministry.
- Organize
around purposes (worship, instruction, fellowship, evangelism,
service) and/or constituencies (children, youth, adult,
singles, seniors, divorced).
- Don't just
turn your hierarchy upside down. Think in terms of ministry
teams.
- Treat the
entire congregation as a partnership. Each person is accountable
and responsible as a partner for the planning, working,
success, and morale of the organization.
(Adapted from
Managing the Congregation; Norman Shawchuck & Roger Heuser;
(Nashville: Abingdon, 1996), 167-204.)
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3. Leadership function principle: In the information age the
primary function of the pastor and the other equipping leaders is
to clarify and coordinate the church's vision. This involves leading
the church to identify its mission, vision and values. The leader
must communicate the vision articulately, visually and passionately.
Another primary function of leadership is to equip and mobilize believers
to use their gifts in ministry. The leader plays a central role in
developing members in ministry and in developing ministry teams to
fulfill the mission and vision of the church.
4. Ministry orientation principle: The ministry orientation
of the church is serving people's needs versus perpetuating programs
and activities. The church ministers with the conviction that people
are the primary focus of ministry. Success is not measured by how
many faithfully attend activities and events but by how many are
becoming fully devoted, obedient followers of Christ. The objective
is not to provide service and ministries but to build people who
reflect the character, commitment, values and lifestyle of Christ.
5. Resource allocation principle: Resource allocation decisions
are made in real time instead of on the fiscal year cycle. The allocations
are made in keeping with the vision and values of the church but
can be done when the need and context demands it. Often great opportunities
to minister are missed simply because it wasn't projected in the
budget. The pace of societal change is so fast that it requires
the flexibility to allocate resources when they are needed.
6. Priesthood of all believers principle: All ministry team
members are treated as a uniclass of partners in ministry. There
is no two-class system of clergy and laity or leaders and ministers.
The distinction is in role and function, not in value. All are ministers.
Equipping leaders (pastors and staff) equip believers to be effective
in ministry and leadership. Then all work together, using their
gifts to meet the needs of people and advance the Kingdom of God.
7. Information principle: All ministry team members have
open access to all pertinent information. Ministry team members
are considered partners in ministry, and leaders must be absolutely
honest in all of their conversations and reporting, because all
partners have equal right to all information. Traditional information
flow follows the chain of command. As partners, ministry team members
must all have the same information.
8. Communication principle: Communication is swift, spontaneous,
and point-to-point, as paper-based forms and communication are increasingly
less efficient as compared with new technologies. Leaders and ministers
take advantage of e-mail, and Internet, linking all members for
real time interaction and decision making. Video and voice conferencing
via the Internet will become more common because of time and space
costs.
9. Purpose-driven principle: Ministry is coordinated around
the key purposes of the church, i.e., worship, discipleship, fellowship,
evangelism, service and then organized into ministry teams and ministry
projects. The ministry is carried out by team members whose passion
and giftedness, expertise and experiences are best suited to accomplish
the ministry team's goals. Everything the church does is centered
on the key purposes of the church. The purposes are intentionally
built into the life and ministry of the church in balance through
the leading and power of the Holy Spirit. The church guards against
becoming unbalanced (overemphasizing one or more of the purposes
of the church). Each ministry is measured by how it fits into the
total ministry purposes of the church and how well it advances those
purposes.
10. Partnership principle: Everyone is fully responsible
for the successes, failures, morale, and outcomes of the group.
No person or group of persons can demand rights and privileges for
themselves that they will not fully grant to all others. Security
comes from being accountable for the quality of participation. We
cannot expect emotional or job security, service, or recognition
without personally working for it. There are no status symbols or
perks. Status symbols and perks are the language of power in hierarchical
organizations and have no place in a true partnership. Work and
planning process are choosing to be compliant or dependent.
Your church's effectiveness is directly tied to its ability to
minister in meaningful ways to the people today. Just as Jesus called
and organized His disciples in ways appropriate for His purposes,
so must we. He effectively represented God's purposes to the people
of His day. We must organize ourselves and do ministry to represent
Him in our time and place, so truth will be known and people will
find life and hope.
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