| | | What is God doing in your neighborhood?Â
|
|
Where is the church on a Tuesday afternoon?
âWeâre on a campaign to say that we think that God is reorganizing the church around the neighborhood. I think that [the pandemic] is going to accelerate that. ⦠How we pay attention to what God is up to in our actual places will be more important than ever.â - Tim Soerens |
|
Tim Soerens is encouraging congregations to develop a keen attentiveness to what God may be doing in their neighborhoods and then join in those efforts. In this interview with Faith & Leadership, Soerens describes how to do that and why he believes that "the parish is the unit of change."Â |
|
Sometimes the church needs to follow and partner with others |
|
Jonathan Brooks found himself living a hyperlocal life where he lived, worked, ministered and participated in one community. That commitment to place changed how he understood his own ministry and the ministry of his church. As he says, "Our church was meant to be not only loving our neighbors but loving our neighborhood."Â |
|
|
Resources to respond to the coronavirus. |
|
| John Perkins: Empowering communities |
|
The future leaders of America's poor communities are likely to be the people living in those communities, says civil rights advocate and pastor John Perkins. He should know. He's spent the last five decades identifying, supporting, and equipping those leaders. |
|
Flourishing in Ministry: How to Cultivate Clergy Well-Beingby Matt Bloom |
|
 Pastoral work can be stressful, tough, demanding, sometimes misunderstood, and often underappreciated and underpaid. Ministers devote themselves to caring for their congregations, often at the expense of caring for themselves. Studies consistently show that physical health among clergy is significantly worse than among adults who are not in ministry. Flourishing in Ministry offers clergy and those who support them practical advice for not just surviving this grueling profession, but thriving in it. Matt Bloom, director of The Flourishing in Ministry project, shares groundbreaking research from more than a decade of study. The Flourishing in Ministry project draws on more than five thousand surveys and three hundred in-depth interviews with clergy across denominations, ages, races, genders, and years of practice in ministry. It distills this deep research into easily understandable stages of flourishing that can be practiced at any stage in ministry or ministry formation. |
|
Several years ago, I worked with a group of congregational leaders who had made it a practice to begin their meetings by having each person offer a "God sighting," naming a place in their life or work where they had glimpsed the work of the Divine since they were last together. They found that beginning that way changed everything that followed. So what is God up to in your neighborhood? Perhaps you want to ask before your next leadership team, staff, or colleague group meeting. It might just change the meeting -- and your congregation. Until next week, peace! |
|
Managing Director, Alban at Duke Divinity |
|
|
|
| | alban.org // [email protected] |
|