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Clergy

Nurturing Creative Leadership

By May 17, 2019No Comments


There has been a lot of talk about the need for creative leadership in the church. Recognizing that in the Reformed Church, leadership is shared among elders, deacons, and clergy, there is a need to expand our nurture of that leadership. One of the barriers to creative leadership is the power of negative responses. Often new ideas are not fully formed when they come into our heads. When we share them in their unformed state, and people point out the problems with the idea, we quickly learn not to be too radical in our next proposal.

ENCOURAGE CREATIVE THINKING


There are a couple of rules in responding to creative ideas that need to be followed. The first rule is that when you respond, you are asked to first share two strengths or positives about the idea. The second rule is that when you do share a weakness or problem with the new idea, it is shared as a corporate challenge. For example, “I like this and this about your idea, but how do WE solve this problem that I think is a concern.” The person who proposed the idea, often in its newly formed state, doesn’t have to have all the answers but joins with a community to strengthen the idea proposed.

BEYOND THE COMMUNITY


Now let’s apply that to the nurture of church leadership. First, let’s think of ministry outside the immediate church community. The leadership identifies several areas of ministry that seemed to be supported by the Gospel’s mandate but are not part of the current outreach of the congregation. Next, the leadership enters into a time of prayer seeking to identify one of those areas for deeper reflection. While the group still has not determined what they will do with respect to the area, they seek to come to some consensus about one area for the current discussion, knowing that others can come later.

TAKING TIME FOR THE SPIRIT TO BREATHE


Then, both the clergy and the lay leaders are asked to take at least one-half an hour each day for a week to pray asking what God might be saying to them about possible directions of ministry in that area. When they reconvene, in almost Quaker fashion, any who wishes shares what has formed in their thinking. After all have shared, using the rules above, they begin to focus down on how they might seek to respond to God’s call in this area.

AVAILABLE SOON. IF YOU WANT TO SEE AN EARLY COPY, CONTACT STEPHENMCCUTCHAN@GMAIL.COM

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