Synod
Theological Day
“From the
Field, For the Field”
April 9, 2015--Fargo, ND
RECOGNIZING AND RESPONDING TO NEW
OPPORTUNITIES
As I
prepared these remarks I took seriously the fact that the first word in the
assigned topic is "recognizing”….because
“new opportunities” may, at first glance, look like anything BUT new
opportunities. They may—rather—strike
us as really steep mountains, scary obstacles or huge piles of manure.
So the
question is: out of what sort of
orientation toward reality do we approach this world and life as we know
it? It’s easy as pie to operate out of
a default “problem orientation,” a way of looking at things that comes naturally
for upper Midwestern Lutherans. Such realism-run-amok can shoot down any fresh
idea, any new way of thinking—in an instant!
What
happens, though, when we look at things from the vantage point of the Empty
Tomb on Easter morning? What happens
when God opens us up to embrace a “promise orientation” that steps out of the
gloomy house of death into the sunshine of Christ’s resurrection, cracking open
God’s promised future in Christ?
“Recognizing
new opportunities” involves willingness to reframe just about everything that
comes our way—especially the “awful awfuls”—in the light of Christ the
crucified and living one. Such
reframing involves looking again at the problems that seem so self-evident, and
perceiving within them the possibilities God has tucked inside them.
I want to
share two examples from our life in the NW MN Synod over the last five
years—realities that seemed at first like anything but “new opportunities”
1. First, a nagging sense that we’re an
aging, declining church with an uncertain future.
2. Second, the loss of over 10% of our
congregations due to disaffiliation—effectively redrawing the very map of our
synod.
We could not
perceive “new opportunities” in these realities without first staring right at
them, taking them in, and wrestling with them—the way Jacob wrestled with God
(or was it a demon?) by the River Jabbok--wrestling until Jacob extracted a
blessing from his opponent.
So if all we
look at is “who shows up on Sunday mornings,” the narrative of aging and
declining seems readily apparent. But
when we actually delved into the demographics of our region, another story
emerged: in 17 of the 21 counties of our
synod, children and youth age 18 and younger outnumber senior adults age 65 and
over. And between 2008 and 2012
three-quarters of the counties in our synod showed population increases, not
population decreases.
Shored up by
this “second look” at our mission field; proud of our heritage as a
child-friendly, youth-loving synod; aware of our people’s hunger for an
alternative narrative to define us—late in 2010 we responded by surfacing and claiming a vision for our life
together that would fly right in the face of the story we’d been telling ourselves
about ourselves.
Lift up the Next Generation Vision—handout.
We have
found that this Next Generation vision “has legs.”
· When our synod downsized its staff in
2010, we sought out a way to sustain our long-standing commitment to bringing
together middle school youth and high school youth for faith-nurturing mass
gatherings that are integral to the youth ministries in many of our
congregations.
We retained our synod LYO board as
one of the ways we not only sustain these gatherings as youth-led faith
experiences, but also as one of the ways we train up younger leaders.
· We set forth the Next Generation
vision in a series of bishop’s Bible studies in 2011.
· Our spring 2013 EEEvents, a.k.a.
church council training events, featured breakout sessions on topics related to
the theme: “Living into the Next
Generation Vision.”
· And at last year’s synod assembly we agreed
to partner with Vibrant Faith.org to offer training and coaching for
congregations hungering to help homes and families reclaim their role as
primary arenas in which faith is formed.
Share brochure.
Regarding
the other problem we had—the loss of over 10% of our congregations since 2009
due to disaffiliation—a generative discussion began at a retreat for our ten
conference deans held in February of 2013.
We talked
first about the pain and disruption caused by losing 33 congregations to
disaffiliation--leaving one of our conferences a shadow of its former self, and
significantly altering the landscape in two other conferences. Clearly, we didn’t need to maintain our 25
year old ten-conference structure. Isn’t
it time to “redraw the lines” to come up with a smaller set of larger
conferences, giving each conference a critical mass of congregations to live
and work together as near neighbors?
But then the
deans shifted to a more basic question:
why have conferences at all? What are they good for? What is the purpose of the conference in our
way of being church? As we pondered
that deeper question, mindful of all the ways neighbors help neighbors, one of
the participants dared to recast the whole issue by asking—what if we had 20
smaller conferences rather than 7 or 8 larger conferences?
In that
moment, when we took a second look at what at first seemed like a little
map-redrawing exercise, we knew we were looking at something bigger. We recognized
that we actually had, not a math problem or a geography conundrum, but a “new
opportunity.”
So our synod
council invited a group of about 20 folks from across the synod and its varied
constituencies to gather and do more than redraw a map. We named this group our synod “Rethinking
Conferences” Task Force.
The group
met regularly throughout 2014 and did several things.
We learned
some of the history of how our old 10-conference structure came to be. An older member of the group recalled a time
long ago when every pastor and congregational president went to conference
gatherings because that’s how you got the “stuff” for the coming year—the paper
resources and “hard copy” curricula—that fed congregational programming.
We learned
that if you go all the way back to 1988, the synod had actually diminished in
size by 67 congregations—from 300 in 1988 down to 233 in 2014.
We pondered
all the realities that fed our earlier pattern—where county lines were drawn,
where school district boundaries were set, where local phone service was a
factor. Revisiting this history, all the
changes that have happened since 1988 came into sharper focus—especially the
overwhelming influence of the Internet, cellular phone technology, and “virtual
reality”—a phrase not even in our vocabularies in 1988.
As we
rediscovered our history, we examined again, with great care the one small
paragraph in the ELCA Constitution for
Synods that describes conferences.
Two things captured our attention on the Rethinking Conferences Task
Force: the varieties of configurations mentioned
and the missional purpose for such ways of connecting with one another.
So, having recognized
we had a new opportunity on our hands, we responded by doing
some cooking and stewing. We shifted
from thinking of this as a microwave oven project, to realizing we had a
crockpot project on our hands.
We took our
time, talked and listened to one another, dreamed together as people among whom
the Holy Spirit was moving--and out of all that, a proposal emerged (described on the handout) that is now before
our synod, to move in three directions simultaneously—involving clusters,
conferences and networks.
To invite congregations to be parts
of 26 clusters of churches and ministry agencies in close
geographic proximity to one another.
· To form these clusters into eight conferences to choose leaders, gather
at least annually (perhaps on the same Sunday afternoon, perhaps with some
shared programing developed in collaboration with the synod), and to tend
legislative functions such as supporting conference shared ministries,
nominating persons for synod council and CWA voting members, and surfacing
resolutions for consideration at synod assembly.
· To open the door to non-geographic networks, using social media platforms
like Facebook…networks of folks coming together around shared affinities and
ministry priorities, e.g. networks of Vibrant Faith congregations, multi-point
parish leaders, a congregations developing relationships with congregations in
our companion synod in southern India.
Postscript: My remarks, obviously, are retrospective in
nature. In truth, we did a lot of “wandering
around” before noticing the possibilities tucked inside these two problems. That’s what the church is always doing,
which is why the most honest way to describe God’s guidance is to say: I’m not
sure right now--but I’ll get back to you, after enough time has passed that God’s
fingerprints have become visible!
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