Bandits No More

August 26, 2010

Mission Field Appointments

Filed under: Ministry,Missions,Texas Annual Conference,United Methodism — rheyduck @ 2:48 am

The Texas Annual Conference is now implementing a policy of making “mission field appointments (document is a pdf).” Here’s a key part of the document:

In a series of conversations around the question “who is our
client,” the cabinet (center directors and superintendents) and bishop finally experienced one of those “a-ha” moments. We realized that our client was neither the pastor nor the congregation, but rather the mission field.

God was leading us to deploy pastors, not to make people
who were already living a life of faith happy, but rather to
reach persons living in our neighborhoods, communities and
cities that were not a part of a community of faith. God was
inviting us to appoint pastors who would lead congregations to reach out to people who had not yet heard the gospel, many of whom are young, of different racial/ethnic backgrounds, poor and/or underserved. Understanding the mission field as our primary client was a dramatic shift in our approach.

No one on the cabinet, including the bishop, knew how to make
appointments with the mission field as the primary client. The old mental frameworks in our heads and the expectations of pastors and congregations were major obstacles to change. We knew we needed to learn. Our reading, writing and conversation with outside people and groups intensified….

The mission field is understood as the overall context for ministry. It may be the setting within which a local church ministers. The mission field may be a population in and around
the local church’s community which is not being reached. It may be also be a population that does not have a United Methodist congregation in the vicinity. This perception challenges pastors and congregations to be outward focused, not inward. It encourages risktaking on behalf of mission.

Today an email from MissionInsite was forwarded to me (and to other church leaders around the district) from the district office. The Annual Conference signed up with this company that provides demographic research for churches last year. Today’s message told of their latest offerings. I’d gotten their basic demographic info for our area last year. One of the most potentially useful tools maps areas for lifestyle types (using Mosaic categories). Even more practically, they offered some ideas on how to use the Mosaic data.

So I ran a map of our county. No big surprises. Our area is considered primarily “Rugged Rural Style” and “Lower Income Essentials,” meaning most of the people in the county are counted in one of these two psychographic groups.

Curious how that compared with the rest of the Conference, I expanded the map view. Here’s a what a picture of most of the Conference (East Texas) looks like:

Perhaps you notice there is a lot of light blue areas. Those are where the “Rugged Rural Style” dominates. The yellow/gold color is also pretty common. That’s the “Hardy Rural Families.” From the description given by MissionInsite, these folks sound like a step up the economic ladder from the “Rugged Rural Style.” It’s in areas like this that “Cowboy Churches” seem to be thriving. “Simple Churches worshiping a mighty God in a simple way,” is the slogan of one of these churches in our area.

If we are doing Mission Field appointments within these fields, we face some challenges. First, it seems that a fair percentage of people now headed into ordained ministry are coming from other demographic groups. Many are coming out of the churches in larger cities and suburbia. Second, the normal route to ordination includes a pathway through academia the enculturates its inhabitants away from blue collar, rural living. Doing things rural style is real cross-cultural mission for many college educated, seminary educated pastors.

Are psychographics useful in shaping church ministry, leadership, and mission? Are they being taken into account in our identification of the mission field? Are pastors profiled along these lines?

June 10, 2010

NOT the meaning of life

Filed under: Texas Annual Conference,United Methodism,church growth — rheyduck @ 3:43 pm

Of my many experiences at the meeting of the Texas Annual Conference last week, perhaps that most striking was Bishop Huie’s mention that the West Ohio Annual Conference was losing 42 positions for Elders this year. She didn’t share anything of the context, so I don’t know how retirements, church closings, mergers, consolidations, etc., come into the picture. I know nothing how this compares with trends there over the past decade. But 42 – that’s huge!

When Bishop Huie arrived in our conference (about five years ago) she observed that fewer than 50% of our congregations showed a single profession of faith during the previous year. “Profession of Faith” is church-speak for “a person who was not a practicing Christian or a member of any church became one.” Yes, it’s hard to imagine, given Jesus’ attitude on the matter, that so many churches would not be winning a single person to faith in a year.

This year we learned that we have improved. Now something like 63% of our congregations have had at least one profession of faith. We cheered the good news. But it’s only a start. Nothing was said of the reality that so many of our churches are dominated by older generations. When over half of your active, dedicated members are over 70 years old, where does that put you in ten years – even if you manage to add a new person by profession of faith each year?

The Texas Conference is awesome! The Texas Conference is great! The Texas Conference is the largest in the country (not true, though I’ve heard it several times)! Bad things – like losing openings for Elders – might happen in places like Ohio, but never here. Or so we seem to believe. But demographics alone ought to lead us to action. I see three actions we need to take now.

First, we need to get on our faces before God and pray. We need to confess our apathy, complacency, our love for playing church games. We need a fresh outpouring of the Holy Spirit on all our people, all our congregations.

Second, we need to regain evangelistic passion. This will be hard, because it will be easily confused – by us an others – as stemming from a fear of institutional survival. “Our ship is sinking – come join us as we bail!” Not veyr attractive is it? As Leonard Sweet & Frank Viola urge, this will mean dealing with our JDD – Jesus Deficit Disorder.

Third, we need to plant churches. Here in the TAC we’ve been better at that these past five years. We’re still not at the Bishop’s goal of 10 new plants a year. She identified the two major impediments as a lack of people equipped to plant and a lack of churches who will “mother” the plants. Our congregation gets to mother a plant beginning this year, and I’m excited to be able to contribute. The harder barrier of church planting will be beginning to plant churches where “new churches aren’t needed,” that is, in locales where we “already have a United Methodist Church.” Sure, that church may not be growing our reaching anyone – though they did have one profession of faith last year – but if we only pour more money into it they will turn around, they will become a powerhouse for evangelism. I wish.

September 24, 2009

Kirbyjon Caldwell at the Gathering

Filed under: Texas Annual Conference,United Methodism — rheyduck @ 3:04 pm


This year’s Gathering (Texas Conference Pastors Retreat) began with a message from Kirbyjon Caldwell of Windsor Village UMC. Kirbyjon is always worth listening to. He began with a statistic about our current situation: The United Methodist Church is losing 73,000 worshipers each year. Considering a single institution in our church, one heavily weighted toward the older end of the age spectrum, he suggested in that in fourteen and a half years there would be no one left in UMW (United Methodist Women).

I don’t see how anyone could dispute this. Though my own congregation is doing better than some, when I see the high percentage of our highly committed and active folks are over 70, I’m forced to recognize that chances are against them being as active and committed in ten years.We have simply don an inadequate job reaching younger generations.

It’s time for United Methodists to wake up and change, he says. We’ve all heard it, “When you do what you’ve always done, you get what you’ve always got,” but we keep on doing what we’ve always done.

Our problem is that some of the things we’ve always done used to work. We keep doing them because they worked in our younger days. We grew attached to them. In many cases our actions declare that we’re more in love with our ways of following Jesus than we are with Jesus himself. In other cases we have identified key parts of our Christian identity as “things we’ve always done that no longer work” – preaching the bible, the doctrine of the Trinity, the resurrection of Jesus, evangelism, etc. While I understand the slogan, slogans do not make for well-finessed arguments.

Kirbyjon sees Bishop Huie’s leadership in the Texas Conference as one beacon of light in the denomination.

I agree with Kirbyjon, but I sometimes fear it might be too late. We have not yet broken the back of despair and resistance to change endemic to the system. The distrust that built up between pastors, churches and conference leadership over the years is still under the surface (ok, sometimes it’s under the surface, sometimes it’s way above the surface).

Kirbyjon turns to Jesus and John Wesley for some ideas for our future, seeing them as “masters at planting incremental changes in people which in turn lead to collective transformation.”

But they both used plenty of non-incremental change. When he cleansed the temple Jesus didn’t take out the pigeons one week, then after that change had been received come back for the lambs, and only later come back for the money changers. When Wesley began field preaching he didn’t make it there by inching away from the pulpit week by week.

From this beginning, Kirbyjon made two broad suggestions.

First, we need to change our Procedures and Practices to fit the needs of the community. John Wesley did this in the areas of education, health care and economic development. He noted that within our laity we have people who are experienced – more experienced than the clergy – in leading successful organizational transformation. We need to find ways to draw on their leadership, even, he suggested, find a way to bring them into episcopal leadership.

Our current system of guaranteed appointments – with their guaranteed pay checks encourage mediocrity.

The big question we need to ask: What changes must I make in my current ministry to turn things around?

We also need to work, secondly, on Preaching and Proclamation. Within this area of change we need to do a number of things.

First, someone needs to be accountable for the quality of our worship. When we’re accountable we will need to identify resistant leaders and “preach the hell out of them;” quit pitying their situations (Sure, church leadership in this age is tough. But it’s tough for everyone); and we need to “Set the table so that people want to come to church.”

Second, we need to be authentic. He told the story of Keith Kellow, one of the conference oldtimers who had hoped that the merger of the central conference in 1960 would have brought the energy and life of the black churches into the white churches. Instead he saw the black churches become too much like the often-dead white churches. He observed that while American culture will tolerate pornography, greed, lust, and the like, it won’t tolerate boring.

Third, we need to preach with authority. He quipped, “If you don’t preach well, then don’t preach long.” He also said we need to never preach a sermon with no Bible. John Wesley and Jesus were both scripture saturated – we must be also.

Fourth, we must cast a vision of the Christian life and the Gospel of Universal Redemption. We have tp preach hope to those with no hope.

April 3, 2009

Cult of Accountability

Filed under: Economics,Epistemology,Texas Annual Conference,church growth — rheyduck @ 4:39 pm

In his essay on the epistemological problems underlying the current economic crisis, Jerry Z. Miller refers to the “cult of accountability:”

The cult of “accountability” was linked to key innovations that turned out to have unanticipated undersides. One was the shibboleth of linking pay to performance, which put a premium on schemes that purported to measure performance. This tended to produce “hard” numbers that seemed reliable but were not. It created tremendous incentives for CEOs, executives, and traders to devote their creative energies to gaming the metrics, i.e. into coming up with schemes that purported to demonstrate productivity or profit by massaging the data, or by underinvesting in maintenance and human capital formation to boost quarterly earnings or their equivalents.

Accountability has been all the rage for the past decade, especially since the failure of Enron, Worldcom and their ilk. The thought is that if we can gain objectivity and accuracy by means of stricter and clearer accountability, we will avoid those problems of the past.

Business is not the only enterprise facing higher accountability. In at least my Annual Conference (of the United Methodist Church), we have had a greater emphasis on accountability over the past few years. As with Enron et al., the need (I admit that it is a need) for accountability arose from perceived failure. Our conference leadership saw that the churches of the conference were failing. While the population of the region was growing, the churches at best (and there were few at this level) were keeping even. Most of the churches in the conference were declining while the population grew. This failure was further evidenced by the lack of professions of faith in congregations. Half the churches in the conference were showing not a single profession of faith in a year. Speaking plainly, that means that as far as the official statistics show, not a single person had become a Christian through the ministry of that church that year. A key response to this crisis has been increased accountability, effected by weekly reporting of key statistics: Worship Attendance, Professions of Faith, People in “hands on ministry.”

All of these are good things. Having people come to worship, come to faith in Jesus, and join in Kingdom work – all of these are essential to church health. But are we missing something? Is it possible that just as the “cult of accountability” reflected faulty epistemological assumptions on the part of business and the economy, our own adaptation of that cult could reflect faulty assumptions as well?

March 2, 2009

Discipleship Goals #3

The Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations movement, as exemplified in our Texas Annual Conference, speaks of the practice of “Faith Forming Relationships.” I served on the conference committee tasked with this area after the reorganization. As far as I could tell, all the name meant in that context was “all the things we used to call Christian education and spiritual formation.” Since I’d heard conference leaders say that our reorganization was aiming at real change, I figured I must be missing something. Surely the purpose in reorganizing was more than just re-arranging deck chairs, more than merely shrinking a committee, cutting funding, and continuing to do what we’d done before.

In the first post I focused on elements of discipleship that, broadly speaking, refer to our relationship with God. My take on “faith forming relationships” is that here we’re working on our relationships with each other in the Body. In salvation God seeks to heal four dimensions of broken relationship: Our relation with God, with other people, with ourselves and with creation. All these elements are necessary parts of the biblical picture of salvation. If all I do is get right with God, I’m doing a good thing, but I’m missing out on important aspects of salvation. If all I do is join a church and get friendly with other church people,  I’m doing a good thing, but I’m missing out on important aspects of salvation. If all I do is receive inner healing, well, you get the idea.

The process of making disciples includes brining people into relation with the church. By “church” I mean more than simply getting their name on a roll. Church for us, here and now, always entails a particular group of people in a particular place and time. That’s why when I receive people into membership I speak of their loyalty to and support for this congregation of the United Methodist Church, not just the United Methodist Church. Only a few will ever relate to the abstraction we call the UMC. All ought to relate to this particular set of people that instantiate that abstraction.

Here are the characteristics I look for as I work to build a disciple’s relationship  with the church:

  1. Disciples understand clearly the basic convictions of the church. Being a Christian entails having a certain set of convictions. It is more than having convictions, but it is not less. It’s the same with being a United Methodist – and with being a member of a particular congregations. Disciples grow in their understanding of the basic convictions that differentiate our community from others. Understanding these convictions makes us neither ethnocentric, triumphalistic not exclusivistic. Some of the convictions we claim are at the heart of the faith. Some we recognize merely as “our” way of doing things.
  2. Disciples can articulate the basic convictions of the church. We understand things better when we articulate them, when we put them into words. These convictions are not our private possessions, but the shared property of the church, of the community of followers of Jesus.
  3. Disciples identify, support, and live the vision and mission of the church. The mission of the church is not just for the pastors and leaders. The mission of the church is too large for the whole body not to be involved. Part of being a Christian is recognizing Jesus as Lord over the whole of life, of taking up his agenda as our agenda.
  4. Disciples understand their membership in the biblical sense, with people as parts of the body of Christ. When I am a member of a church it means more than having my name on a roll, more than receiving a set of privileges. I am a part of the Body – connected with these particular folks through the shared gift of the Holy Spirit. While we share a common faith, that faith is not the ultimate source of our unity. The Holy Spirit is the ultimate source of unity.
  5. Disciples let love rule in all relationships within the church. We often find it easier to love people outside the church than people inside the church. We find that we know them too well. We’ve been hurt by them too many times. But if we’re going to be disciples, we’ll increasingly give in to love and let love have the last word.
  6. Disciples are learning and growing in their ability to be open with each other. Openness requires great trust. Great trust takes spending time with people. When we’re open we’re more able to receive grace from others. When we’re open, the work of God in our lives is more visible and accessible to the people around us.
  7. Disciples desire that forgiveness be real and abiding. We know we’re supposed to forgive each other. But 490 times? No – I don’t think Jesus meant his math to be taken literally (even if we take the reading that has 77). He meant don’t countdon’t keep a record of wrongs. That’s tough. Nearly impossible. In fact it is impossible without the grace of God.
  8. Disciples have a passion to see relationships restored and healed. We already have passionate worship. We’re also passionate about seeing relationships healed and restored. It matters to us. It bothers us to see people in the church who hate each other, who go to different services so they won’t have to see each other. That’s not what Jesus intends.
  9. Disciples make themselves available to God to use in the work of healing relationships. Sometimes God just strikes us with relational healing. More often God seems to work through other people. As we grow in Christ, we will increasingly allow God to use us in that healing work.
  10. Disciples are involved in a small group structure where they can be open and honest with each other and provoke one another to growth in relationship with Jesus. Many of our Sunday school classes settle for head knowledge or for fellowship (meant as drinking coffee, eating donuts, and talking friendly). Nothing wrong with that. But what we desperately need is face to face relationships where we can be open with each other, speaking – and hearing – the truth in love.

January 25, 2009

New Appointment Methodology

We (pastors and lay leaders from across the North District) met with Bishop Huie and a couple of cabinet members this morning in Ore City to hear about the new philosophy of appointing pastors to churches. They had intended to share the information in the Fall, but Ike ruined those plans.

My overall take is that if they do what they said they’re going to do, the new method will be much better than the old method.

The transparency of the process today was refreshing. They admitted that in the past appointments were based mostly on compensation and were largely determined by “relationships,” i.e., the Good Old Boy network. Euphemistically they explained that in the old way, “The superintendent represents his/her district preachers and churches, and expedites moves for preachers by ‘accentuating the positive.’” That’s a euphemism for “lying.”

Because DSes (as class) have a reputation for lying, there is still much to be done in the area of rebuilding trust. This trust must be built between pastors and the hierarchy, the hierarchy and the congregations, and between congregations and the pastors. While today’s meeting was an important step toward building trust, it would have helped if the lack of trust in the past (which I know lingers into the present) was openly acknowledged as a barrier to overcome.

A few questions remain:

At the beginning of the session they mentioned the vitality of early Methodism. In the days of Bishops Asbury & McKendree, circuit riders were appointed to mission fields, not to settled churches. As a results, the church grew tremendously as people came to faith in Christ. If we are going to look wistfully at this part of our past (and I think there is value in doing so), we will need to acknowledge a few barriers. First, those early circuit riders were mostly young single men. They rode hard and preached hard. They burned out fast, either locating (retiring from ministry) or dying. Their style of ministry was mostly imcompatible with healthy family life. (My own great-great-grandfather had to quit the ministry so he could support his ten children via farming. His father in law lasted longer in the ministry, even serving as a Presiding Elder at one time, but still physically crashed and burned.) Robert Wuthnow writes that one of the defining characteristics of the rising generation is a trend toward marrying later in life and waiting even longer to have children. While this might lead to fewer children for our children’s ministries, it could point to a source of new circuit riders. But this faces the second barrier – a long and difficult road to enter ministry. If a circuit rider style ministry, with its hard charging lifestyle is what we want, how long can we expect that life-style to be maintained? Do we need to require as many educational and institutional hoops to jump through? Third, I don’t see our current approach to faith inspiring the firey devotion I see in the early circuit riders. UMs are taught  to be open, tolerant and questioning. We’re to eschew fanaticism. The early circuit riders were fanatical – just read their journals or biographies. When we are fired up, it tends to be more for social amelioration that fits with a settled ministry than for snatching brands from the burning. Sure, some young folks come out of seminary or college all fired up. But soon they’re taught by their older peers that all that doesn’t work anymore. It’s just not the way to get a head – or to get along with your DS.

The new system is based, we were told repeatedly, on data, not merely relationships (being a Good Old Boy) and salary sheets. Data are good. They’re objective. They’re ready to hand. But they’re also infinite. Which data are we going to count? Well, we can easily track worship attendance, professions of faith, people in “hands on mission,” and payment of apportionments. But I have a couple of questions. First, how can these data sets for churches (and for pastors?) be compared from church to church and region to region? Do we assume that the graphs we get from plotting the data tell the whole story? Which story? Do they take into account the uniquenesses of each congregational setting? Data alone are not enough. Second, I fear that the emphasis on data lends an aura of objectivity that is not warranted by reality. Recent philosophy of science tells us that data are theory laden. No data sets are purely objective. Our theories tell us what data are relevant, how to order them, how to interpret them, and what to do with them. Because our cabinet knows this – and knows the challenges of my first data point, the personal element, the reality of actual relationships will never be superseded. While we can strive to work from data and to avoid going on relationships only, a transparency about the role of relationships and a commitment to love pastors and churches will help.

Finally – since I can’t go on all night – a comment about another image used in the presentation. They said they asked themselves, “Who is our client? Is it the pastors? The churches? The cabinet (trying to keep their cushy jobs)?” They decided that instead of any of these their client as the mission field. It is a great improvement to ask the question, “What is our mission field, what are its characteristics, what will it take to reach the people in this locale for Christ, and who is the best person to fulfill this mission?” We need to relearn thinking in missional terms.

Maybe I’ve read too much on Greco-Roman culture, but I have become uncomfortable with “client” language. When we speak of clients in that setting, talk of “patrons” is not far behind. If the mission field is the client, who is the patron, the one who has the power and resources before whom the client must bow and offer services? A key difference between current United Methodism and old time Methodism is the high level of education and experience among the vast majority of pastors. Many have earned doctorates – some professional degrees, some more academic. While power resides in the bishop and cabinet, it is not the case (as it may have been at times past) that expertise, information and knowledge resides there only.

A word that has been featured in United Methodist talk on appointment making was not much in evidence today. The Disicipline speaks of consultation as a key element of the appointment process. While we have an insitution now of regular meetings of pastors and superintendents (district, not general), we seem farther away from regular dialogical meetings between superintendents and congregations. The reduction of the number of districts in the Texas Conference, which was supposed to result in more time for superintendents to spend with pastors and churches has not come about. At least in this part of the world, that is partly due to the large number of churches a superintendent is responsible for. We have cluster charge conferences now (three years running). Few laity attend, and they are intended to be mostly inspirational. While inspiration has its place, there is no space for real dialogical consultation, real mutual assessment of the mission fields (and the data!). This is a round-about way of asking about power distribution in the conference. I fully believe our recent changes are in the right direction. I’m not so convinced that they go far enough. If all we end up with is a benevolent patron who, out of the kindness of her (or his heart) looks out for our good, that is better than a misanthropic patron. But do we need a patron? Are there any alternatives?

I recognize that at least three barriers stand in the way of considering alternatives (not counting the old stand by, “We’ve never done it that way!”). First, there is the reality of money. When there are large sums of money involved (and pastors tend to be the largest single line-item in most church’s budgets) there is a need for controls. Second, there is the broader issue of accountability. We want to make sure, as we pursue effectiveness/fruitfulness that that is always defined in terms of the Christian faith and our Methodist tradition. We’re not after, “And Everyone did what was right in his own eyes, because there was no king in Israel.” Third, there is the institutional complexity of a connectional church with congregations, agencies, missions, etc. None can be easily detached from the others.

One model that might be fruitful is the Open Source software model. In this model a programmer (or team of programmers) creates a s0ftware package (think Linux, Firefox, Open Office). The package is then released into the cyber-ecosystem where people use it. But they don’t just use it, they are free to adapt it and tinker with the programming. The community of programmers and the community of users (in theory) becomes co-extensive.

I minored in computer science – back in the old days. Most of what I learned is irrelevant now. I regularly use open source software, but contributing to the actual programing is beyond my skills. I can, however, report bugs. I can suggest improvements, tweaks and new features. I can do so without submitting a resume or cv. What might it take to start developing some institutions within the annual conference where real consultation on all areas of ministry – even appointment making! – could happen, not just with the cabinet, not just with pastors, but with all who are committed followers of Jesus and stake holders in our churches?

May 27, 2008

Singing with all your heart

Filed under: Texas Annual Conference,Worship,Youth Ministry — rheyduck @ 2:00 am

I could only understand a few of their words. Sure, part of my lack of understanding was that most of their songs were in French. But my poor hearing did the rest.

Though I could understand few of their words, I understood their message clearly, as they praised God and led us in worship. When I listen to and watch the Chorale d’Elite Internationale (of the United Methodist Church of Ivory Coast), I understand plainly why so many of our young people at church say our music is boring.

Many of our hymn aren’t boring. They have awesome theology – just listen to the words. But if you don’t understand the words – and I don’t think the lack of understanding comes from them not being in English or sung to English-speakers – the awesome theology is just gibberish. Even a Ralph Vaughn Williams tune won’t help with that crowd.

When we sing those songs with their awesome theology, we just stand there. No bodily movement. Some of us don’t even move our mouths. We just stand there like statues. I don’t know how people can understand what we sing and do nothing.

But I’m not talking about us. The Ivorians, they sing and they move. All of them so full of joy, not a speck of boredom anywhere. I sure wish my kids could be here for the experience – my own kids and my church kids. A CD or even a DVD would be no substitute for being there live.

June 30, 2007

Learning from Five Dysfunctions of a Team

I first heard Patrick Lencioni at the Willow Creek Leadership Summit a few years ago. He spoke then on the content of his book, The Five Dysfunctions of a Team. Well, I’ve finally read the book.

The heart of the book is illustrated in the diagram below.

5dysf

I see much in the book that my own church could profit from. We’re a diverse group, not only in our backgrounds, personalities, and interests, but also in the way we relate to the church. I’m appointed by the bishop. We have one staff person who is full time and a member/participant in another church, 3 people who are part-time paid staff, active in our congregation, and one person (new to the staff) who is unpaid (though she was at one time – years ago – paid staff), but has longer tenure in the church than any of us. She’s the only one to join the staff from within.

My main gifts are in teaching and preaching – not leadership. While teaching and preaching are essential to the health of a church, so is leadership. That’s why I continue to work on my leadership abilities.

In this post, however, I’d like to comment on Annual Conference issues. If you’ve been a reader of this blog for a while, you know the Texas Annual Conference is going through a transformation process. Big changes are afoot. Reading Lencioni makes me wonder if we’re not starting at the wrong end of the spectrum.

If Lencioni’s theory is correct, the starting point for developing a healthy team is building trust. The end goal is to focus on team results. We’re doing the latter elements – increasing accountability, setting goals, etc. But do we have trust?

Lencioni’s book is based on his “fable” about the leadership team of a tech company. The story shows their new CEO leading them up the pyramid – in theory and in action. Surely a company leadership team – composed of fewer than 10 people – is more like the staff of an individual church or the conference cabinet than it is like the conference as a whole. Can we take his theory any apply it to such a large organization? If so, what adaptations do we have to make?

For as long as I’ve been a part of the institution, the UMC has been a top-down hierarchy based organization. The folks at the top have the power, and the folks at the bottom are expected to do what they’re told. At least three factors are eroding this command and control structure.

1. Our culture as a whole has moved away from command and control structures. While still powerful, strong forces for freedom and autonomy have contended against these structures at least since the 1960s. While some of these new forces have been co-opted – i.e., have themselves taken up command and control strategies, the impetus for freedom and individual innovation remains.

2. Over the past few generations pastors have been required to have more and more education simply to enter the ministry. For some time now, it has been a requirement to have at least a graduate degree in divinity. It has not worked well to tell pastors (a) You need to spend a decade studying and tens of thousands of dollars, and (b) Even though you’re so highly educated, we still don’t respect you enough to let you get by without detailed orders from above. (Or, in plainer language, “We don’t trust you to be able to use the education we commanded you to get.” Surely they’re not saying, “Even though we required you to get this expensive education, it’s really not relevant to what you need to do?”)

3. The influx of more mature second career pastors with greater life experience has brought in people who are used to working in freer environments, or who have greater confidence in their own skills and wisdom.

If the traditional command and control structure is being eroded, what is the alternative? Here is where we can learn from Lencioni. The starting point is building trust. we have to do this on many levels. Pastors and congregations, pastors and DSs, churches and cabinets, need to learn to trust each other.

This trust is not just a happy smiley thing. Once real trust begins, then we can move to the next level – healthy conflict. I don’t know about other churches, but UMs are terrified of conflict. We think conflict is unChristian. We talk about wanting people to be “team players,” and by “team player” we mean someone who doesn’t rock the boat but simply (and happily) does what he or she is told to do. There are fewer and fewer people willing to operate that way (could this be why we have trouble getting and keeping younger pastors?).

Why doesn’t the Annual Conference learn from a model like Lencioni’s? My guess is that the main hindrance people would point to is the constraint of time. Some folks think (perhaps rightly) that the great Texas Conference is teetering on the precipice of calamitous decline. Desperate times call for desperate measures. While there are some that think that way, I think there is a another constraint we’re less willing to talk about. I’m referring to episcopal terms.

Building the trust and healthy conflict (so that we can reach greater commitment, accountability and results) in an organization as large as the TAC is a huge task. I doubt it can be done quickly. But BishopHuie is appointed as our episcopal leader for only 4 years at a time. Will she be back for another quadrennium? If she is, will she maintain her focus (some bishops do, some don’t)? If sheisn’t (or even if she is), what will the next bishop do? Will the transitions be affirmed – or jettisoned as too expensive or too painful? Perhaps some think that if we push hard enough we can make it to the point of no return before any changes at the top are made. (Yes, I realize that this is shaping up as an argument for longer episcopal tenure.)

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