Recently, I prepared a review for the Fall 2013 issue of "Sharing the Practice", exploring a new book from Judson Press (the denominational imprint for the ABC/USA). As a minister concerned for churches in need of revitalization, I believe this book will be of benefit to congregations, lay leaders and pastors, marshaling missional creativity with author Joy Skjegstad's experience and wisdom. I invite you to read the review and consider this book in your church's mission. You might never be the same after reading it!
Skjegstad, Joy. 7 Creative Models for Community Ministry. Judson Press, Valley Forge, PA: 2013. $16.99. Available via www.judsonpress.org or your local independent bookstore!
Ron Carlson, Missional Church Strategist, for the American Baptist Home Mission Societies, is a long-time advocate for churches to become missional, yet he asserts some of the groundwork must be laid to get congregants into the right mind set. He refers to this effort as shaping a “mental model” for why missional differs from previous approaches to church ministry and mission. Rather than paternalism or institutional support, Carlson challenges churches to study what it means to be in the immediacy of a mission field: their own communities. Getting into the missional mindset starts reshaping the “givens” of how churches operate and function. In other words, the church has to think differently as it endeavors to act missionally.
Ron Carlson, Missional Church Strategist, for the American Baptist Home Mission Societies, is a long-time advocate for churches to become missional, yet he asserts some of the groundwork must be laid to get congregants into the right mind set. He refers to this effort as shaping a “mental model” for why missional differs from previous approaches to church ministry and mission. Rather than paternalism or institutional support, Carlson challenges churches to study what it means to be in the immediacy of a mission field: their own communities. Getting into the missional mindset starts reshaping the “givens” of how churches operate and function. In other words, the church has to think differently as it endeavors to act missionally.
While
certain missional church texts tend to engage the theory, 7 Creative Models for Community Ministry offers a very hands-on,
close to the ground approach. Consultant
Joy Skjegstad distills her years of experience journeying alongside client
clergy and churches into the seven models for churches to consider. Devoting a chapter to each, Skjegstad offers insight
into ways a church might enter into community ministry. These models include: donate goods or money, mobilize volunteers,
partner with other organizations, advocate around public policy, engage in
community organizing, develop a ministry program, and create a church-based
non-profit.
What I
admire most about Skjegstad’s approach is her advocacy for a very measured,
tethered to reality approach to any of these creative models. Before she fleshes out each model in the
book’s middle section, Skjegstad offers her opening chapters for churches who
do not wish to trip over their own feet, or worse, rush into poorly planned,
clumsily executed projects. She warns
against insular thinking where churches presume to know what is needed or best
yet wind up with the efforts fundamentally misguided at the outset. She offers basic principles for beginning a
community ministry project, built upon careful study and gathering consensus
from within and beyond the church that the effort is needed and feasible. She sends you off on journeys sometimes less
considered by congregations: sitting
down with community stakeholders, public/private/non-profit sector leaders and
experts, activists, etc. She encourages
churches to listen intentionally, knowing that it will be a humbling experience
for some, as they realize their understanding of a community’s needs may have
been outdated or misinformed. Such work
may be leavening for a congregation, aligning them more closely with their own
neighborhoods than ever before. Given
the depletion of federal and state resources for assistance programs, creative
community ministry projects are needed more than ever before.
She encourages churches to dream yet not to skirt laying a foundation with some attention to the project’s aims and purposes. For example, the first model involves donating goods or money. Skjegstad points out donations are often the first and only stop along the way to meeting those needs. By starting with the most familiar, Skjegstad skillfully reframes the untapped potential churches have to explore by reading onwards in her book and considering different models to approach community ministry. If they choose to do so, churches soon find themselves deepening the potential of their church’s efforts as a congregation, a missional team or collaborative partner. Instead of repeating old habits, churches begin seeing their efforts in a new light.
She encourages churches to dream yet not to skirt laying a foundation with some attention to the project’s aims and purposes. For example, the first model involves donating goods or money. Skjegstad points out donations are often the first and only stop along the way to meeting those needs. By starting with the most familiar, Skjegstad skillfully reframes the untapped potential churches have to explore by reading onwards in her book and considering different models to approach community ministry. If they choose to do so, churches soon find themselves deepening the potential of their church’s efforts as a congregation, a missional team or collaborative partner. Instead of repeating old habits, churches begin seeing their efforts in a new light.
Skjegstad
turns often to illumining narratives from the churches and pastors she has
served as a consultant, telling the stories of churches addressing poverty
challenges, helping expand the educational horizons of children and adult
learners and other ways of reaching out to help the marginalized or
disenfranchised. From these stories, readers
gain perspective for the possibilities of what a local church can do in
community ministry as well as no end of encouragement as they move from reading
this text and into the missional context where they live.
The
third section offers chapters on evaluation, seeking funding and keeping
projects in perspective when being carried out by small membership
congregations. Skjegstad reminds
frequently that congregations do not have to carry out projects on their own,
and they strengthen these efforts when they partner. She encourages frequent communication within
the congregation to affirm where projects are developing as well as celebrating
the milestones, great and small, along the way.
(Her thoughts on fundraising are covered in her prior book Winning Grants to Fund Your Ministry, published
by the Alban Institute in 2007).
Skjegstad
offers an optimistic yet realistic approach to community ministry. Following the first section’s wise advice to
dream yet be well informed when considering community needs, a church can
select a model for community ministry and take those first steps. When moving in the right direction, churches
will find new life and vitality from such missional endeavors. Indeed, Skjegstad encourages us to be aware
and attentive to the possibility that your community ministry project will beget
opportunities for “hybrids”. One project
can delve into a community need’s related issues (i.e. a food pantry ministry
leads a community ministry project to form around cooking skills courses or
efforts to help persons with limited or fixed income to learn personal finance
and budgeting principles, etc.). Her
suggestion about a non-profit organization starting up as part of a community
ministry project is presented with some basic non-profit governance concepts,
ensuring a careful reader will realize the extra complexity involved if this
avenue is pursued.
For a
brief book, 7 Creative Models serves
as a thought-proving, perspective reframing introductory text. In her approachable prose, she invites
churches to hear and see their communities anew. The book is best kept close at hand, consulted
frequently all along the way. The
testimony of community ministry-minded churches reminds us we are not alone in
such work. For congregations wishing to
embrace their communities more intentionally, the fruitfulness and dividends of
reading this text may be frankly immeasurable.
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