In the next five to ten years,
what leadership issues will
you and your congregation be
considering? From her setting,
our author considers four
possibilities.
Our church is a big place. And it’s
diverse. In some regions of these
United States, Lutheranism is part of
the air you breathe; in other places that
air is too thin to fill a lung. In many
towns and states, the Lutheran church
is a church small in number. As the
post-modern age is lecturing us, there
is no “common”or one-size-fits-all experience.
Context matters.
I imagine myself sitting atop the
steep roof of my church building which
sits facing (can you believe this!)
Devine Street. Even up high, the view is
still limited. The locus of my current
context is Columbia, South Carolina.
Here the Lutheran church is ancient by
American standards (early 1700s) but
a minority church when compared to
Southern Baptists, Methodists, and
Presbyterians. Columbia is my hometown,
as it was the new home of my
Lutheran ancestors who came here in
those earliest years.
God’s call has taken me from this
place and returned me to it. I entered
the seminary in Philadelphia in 1978. I
have served in a rural parish, on
churchwide staff, and in two metropolitan
areas and am now in the heart of a
medium-sized city.
So here I sit, looking out from my
rooftop, able to see a little beyond my
context, but not all the way into yours. I
hope that these reflections into the future
will ring true for you or at least challenge
you to articulate your own visions for
leadership in the coming decade.
Context and Effectiveness
Over the next decade, I hope that we
will leave behind the one-size-fits-all
view of what a successful/healthy congregation
looks like. Many church leaders
have spent the last thirty years feeling
depressed about their ministry as
models of mega-churches were held
up as the ideal. We wearied quickly of
mailings to our congregation which
promised that if a congregation just followed
in the footsteps of a particular
church or program, we could supersize
our now struggling and ineffective
places of ministries. But who, may we
ask, defines ineffective?
Well, for one, the questions we are
asked to answer about ourselves each
year in parochial reports to the ELCA
do some of that defining. It pains us to
report that we lost three more members
than we gained in the past year.
We may feel shamed that we are
telling the church we didn’t have any
children enrolled in Sunday school
for grades 3-5.
Administratively, we know these
are essential facts that do say something
about our health and effectiveness.
Yet, we also know that a congregation
reporting a membership of
3,000 may be nearly torn apart by conflict,
while a congregation of 100 is
ministering in a very healthy way. As
we move forward in mission, we need
to evaluate our success/health/faithfulness
in light of our context instead
of measuring it against some unrealistic
model of success.
A few years ago, I attended a presentation
by Bishop Younan of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church of
Jerusalem (serving in Palestine, Jordan,
and Israel). The Lutheran community
in Palestine is very small and the entire
Christian community is a minority
community as well. Against these odds
and in the face of a deficit budget,
Bishop Younan proclaimed that they
would continue to operate their five
Lutheran schools. A person small in
stature himself, the Bishop raised his
voice and said to the crowd, “Our ministry
is bigger than our size!”
If we do believe that we are a body
with many members and that all members
have value, it’s essential that we
cease even kindly competing with each
other and focus on mutual support.
It will be essential to support each
other — pastors, diaconal ministers,
musicians, seminary professors, and
others — so that each of us is affirmed
and strengthened in the place where
we are planted.
A small inner-city congregation is
an important place of mission as is a
large suburban one. Anywhere we can
provide a ministry of presence is positively
wonderful. We need to talk with
each other about how we can move
from a culture of competition to one
of mutual support and discuss how
we can re-define effective ministry in
the ELCA.
Voice over Volume
In tandem with the concerns of context
and effectiveness is one that I refer
to as voice over volume. Having never
lived in a region of the country where
the Lutheran church was the majority
religious body in the community, I have
experiences only as a religious minority.
As minority communities of all kinds
have taught us, the only way to be
heard with the voices of those in the
majority is to lift up our own voice.
Following Bishop Younan’s wisdom,
Jesus’ mustard-seed lessons, and even Star Wars’ Yoda, size matters not.
This means that we need to better
develop our relationships within the
community. I believe that church leaders,
along with the congregations and
institutions in which they are
employed and to which they are
accountable, need to make partnerships
with the civic, ecumenical, and
interfaith communities a priority and less of a luxury. I know that pastors and
congregations especially struggle with
this. Congregations often believe the
pastor and other staff are called only to
the present membership of the congregation.
In fact, we are rostered leaders
of the whole church who are called to
be Christ’s presence in both the local
congregation and the local community.
Certainly I would not suggest that a
pastor attend a city council meeting
instead of visiting someone in the hospital,
but neither should we fail to serve
the community.
Over the next decade, church leaders
will need to consider defining
effective ministry as one of presence in
the community — not simply as how
many were present for worship. By so
doing, I believe we will increase our
voices in the community.
Communication Issues
To help lift our voices up, I believe we
will also need more training in the area
of communications and the media.
This includes making use of technology
as best fits our context, learning how
to be more comfortable with interacting
with local, public media, and being
willing to help engage in community
organizing.
Not all of us will have the specific
gifts for this kind of community outreach
and evangelistic presence. This is
another good reason why we need to
move away from a “Lone Ranger” ministry
model and work together with
each other. In our local clusters of congregations,
institutions, and agencies, at
least one person, rostered or lay, will
have the gift to work well with communications
and media. Let them be the
Lutheran face for you in your locale.
Race and Multiculturalism
And speaking of Lutheran faces in
America, there remains the concern of
who makes up this church. Back when
our predecessor parents — the LCA,
ALC, and AELC — were pregnant with
this child they came to name the
ELCA, they dreamed this child would
grow up to be a beautiful, strong, and
multicultural church. Our past church
leaders, many who honed their leadership
skills in the Civil Rights movement,
maintained the dream of one
people in church and society where
race didn’t matter.
But race continues to matter in
America for good and for ill. After all
these years we struggle to comprehend
why our teenagers sit mostly
with others of the same race in the
school cafeteria and why our congregations
do the same. Our denominational
baby didn’t grow up looking the
way we had hoped despite the efforts
we put into raising her!
In the coming decade, church
leaders, along with civic leaders, will
need to work together to ask what’s
next in the conversation on race in
America. We once witnessed separation
of ethnic groups as a tool of
oppression. In some places it still is, but
perhaps in this new day it is also a tool
of empowerment. Though this may
sound counter-intuitive or just wrong, I
have been tutored by colleagues and
friends in the African-American and
Jewish communities to understand
that while majority folks may desire for
us all to be together in one place, those
in the minority are suspicious of such
overtures for fear they will sink to the
bottom of some hegemonic hole, eventually
becoming culturally extinct. For
many, extinction isn’t a price they are
willing to pay for unity.
Our conversations must continue
on the subject of race even though
they are often painful and awkward.
One book to read is Why Are All The
Black Kids Sitting Together In The
Cafeteria? And Other Conversations
About Race: A Psychologist Explains the
Development of Racial Identity by
Beverly Daniel Tatum (Basic Books,
revised edition, 2003).
Interaction, conversation, and
shared experiences will be essential
among community and church leaders
to journey to the heart of these concerns
and dreams. Ecumenical and
interfaith groups must do more than
only plan a joint Thanksgiving service.
We need to get to know one another
better in the days ahead and work
more consistently at laying a foundation
of trust and understanding with
one another.
As I look into the future, I believe
leadership will be concerned with
issues involving faithful ministry done
in context, lifting up our voices
through cooperative ministries,
becoming more versatile with communication
technology and the media,
and dialoguing around issues of race
and multiculturalism.
Mary W. Anderson is pastor of
Incarnation Lutheran Church, Columbia,
South Carolina.
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