Showing posts with label Gary Shockley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gary Shockley. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Equipping Vital Congregations - Becoming a Vital and Thriving Post-Pandemic Church


Rev. Gary Alan Shockley, Director of Equipping Vital Congregations

There’s quite a bit of speculation going on right now about what the church should look like post-pandemic. For sure, it will look different. The idea of going back to normal is a fantasy because “normal” has changed. 

Like many of you, I’ve been reading blogs of popular authors and church experts and have read books seeking to describe what a post-pandemic church might look like. This is my attempt to summarize.

My goal here is to give you the broad categories and encourage you to have conversation, in your own context, about what this means for the future of your church. Please know that the offices of Grow, Equip and Connect are available to resource, coach and consult your congregation in this time of transition. 

Churches that will thrive post-pandemic…

#1 Get clear about and stay focused on WHY.Why do we exist?” This doesn’t require a lengthy process a developing a finely crafted mission or vision statement but simply to go back to the beginning of what Jesus intended the church to BE and Do. I would invite you to read the following scriptures, preferably with a group, and then write in your own words a Why Statement of less than 15 words that begins with, “Our church exists so that…” Once you have agreement on the WHY, everything (and I do mean EVERYTHING) your church does should align with that WHY. (Matthew 22:34-40; Matthew 25:31-46 and Matthew 28:16-20)

#2 Focus on formation rather than information. Discipleship is less about knowing who Jesus is and more about doing the things that Jesus did. Being formed in the image of Jesus is vastly more important than being informed about Jesus. We already know more about Jesus than we need to do be about his WHY for us! What are you doing, or will you do, to help your people become formed in the image and likeness of Jesus? 

#3 Recapture a sense of being a neighborhood church. Your church exists in the community for a reason. Do you know what that is? When we begin to see our community as part of our church parish (and vice versa) we will begin to treat those who live around us as though they already belong to us. We will learn their names. We will hear their stories. We will feel their pain. We will recognize their needs. And we will become their friends. Together, we will be on the journey as God’s beloved people transforming the neighborhood and the wider community for good. Is your church neighborhood friendly? Well, how thick is your policy manual designed to protect your building from outsiders? Do your policies make it easier for the people of your community to use your facilities? Do you understand your buildings as God’s gifts intended for your community?

#4 Move more fully into the digital world. In person worship will continue post-pandemic but will likely be smaller in attendance for some time. Online worship, online small groups, virtual community engagement, are not just temporary things we do until the pandemic is over. Our digital presence will become one of the most essential evangelism tools we have to fulfil our mission. Much like God used the persecution of the early church to move it out of its comfort zone (Jerusalem) God is using this pandemic to move us out of our comfort zones to meet people where they are…online! How wonderful that many of our congregations have experienced a growth in worship attendance through digital means. Maintaining and growing our digital presence will ensure that we stay connected with those whom we have met online (maybe God has sent us) during this pandemic. How will we continue to connect with people we may never see in person and disciple them in the ways of Jesus? Think Both/And when planning worship with a mixture of in-person and virtual experiences. 

#5 Learn how to pivot more quickly as the world around us changes at a dizzying pace. They will learn how to abandon the things that no longer work in fulfilling their mission. They will practice simplicity by letting go of those things that drain away energy and limited resources and may not serve the mission (the WHY). They will encourage families who have found opportunities to spend more time together during the pandemic to continue doing so rather than creating new ministries and programs that will try to pull them back into business. 

#6 Take seriously a call to prayer. May I ask you directly? When was the last time you prayed for your church? Your pastor and staff? Your leaders? Your community? Your people and your newcomers by name? Now, when was the last time you sat and listened for response from God? I’d like to add a simple prayer for your use especially as you move back to in-person gatherings: “Lord, what do you want to do through ME (or US in a corporate setting) to fulfil your WHY for my/our church?” Simple. Powerful. Revitalizing. Take time to sit and listen. “To be a Christian without prayer is no more possible than to be alive without breathing.” (Martin Luther)

Many more books and blogs will likely be written with better lists than mine. But this is enough, I believe, to get us started. I encourage you to print this and use it for conversation with your leadership team.

These are the things we in the church should have been doing all along. We lost our focus (our WHY) became distracted by our own needs and desires and forget to stay focused outward where God is working in the world. 

Isn’t it wonderful how God is using this present crisis to bring us back to center? How exciting to contemplate the marvelous works of God ahead of us and to know that we are still invited to be partners in it!

Monday, January 11, 2021

EQUIP: Wait! God is Doing WHAT?


By Rev. Gary Alan Shockley, Director of Equipping Vital Congregations

“Do not remember the former things, or consider the things of old. I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert.” Isaiah 43:18-19 (NRSV) 

I believe God guided me to this passage in February when I led devotions for our EVC Team retreat. Little did I know then that Covid-19 was already lurking in the shadows. We opened our hearts and minds to scripture and sensed the Spirit’s leading as we expressed our mutual desire to become even more effective in our work together. We formed our plans. We had direction! It was very good. And then Covid. (I can’t wait for the time when I can end a thought or a sentence without adding those three words! How about you?) 

This scripture from Isaiah 43 has followed me around this past year like a voice of hope echoing through the chaos and the fear that has threatened all of us on planet earth. 

This morning, I went back to this passage but felt guided this time to the chapter before it. God says something astounding! I never saw it before or maybe I never paid any mind. “For a long time I have held my peace, I have kept still and restrained myself; now I will cry out like a woman in labor. I will gasp and pant.” (Isaiah 42:14) 

Now, couple this with my opening scripture: “Now I will cry out like a woman in labor. I will gasp and pant. I am about to do a new thing, now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?” 

God is giving birth! Wait…what? What on earth does this mean? God giving birth? 

I have never given birth but I was right there when it happened-twice. The life inside was hidden from view. I knew it was there. I made preparations to receive it. I waited with excitement, and honestly, a little trepidation. And then there it was. Bam! Right before me. In my arms. In the world for all to see! I was never the same again. The whole wide world was never the same again! I had NO idea how much this new life would change EVERYTHING! 

These days I carry around within me a strange sense of expectation. It was very small in the beginning of this mess but it has been growing. I’m finding myself asking, ‘What IS this? What’s going on?’ And I find myself leaning forward on tip toe and with eyes wide open straining to see. See what? And I’ve been speaking with others, pastors and lay folk alike, who have also been carrying around this strange sense of pregnant pause. They too have been leaning forward asking questions—of God. ‘What’s happening? What are you up to? What do you need from us?’ 

All along God has been crying out, “I’m pregnant! I’m about to birth new life, new possibilities, new hopes and dreams, new chances to be whom I created you to be. And I want YOU to be the mid-wives.” Silence. What can one say to this? I mean the promise is so spectacular. The implications so earth shattering. The invitation so startling! Silence. Reflection. Longing is all I’ve been able to offer back. Until now.

Yes God! Do it! Continue the fulfillment of your promises and purposes for us. Keep us from shrinking back into our familiar lives. Free us from the indifference that has rendered us bland in a world that longs for the vibrant flavor palette that only you can give. Help us leave behind the familiar things that have held us in place. Free us from the fear of change because there can be no new life when we allow fear to blind us and bind us to a past that was no longer working anyway. Help us ‘forget the former things’ to free up the space we need in our heads and hearts to ‘perceive the new things’ and then help to birth them. 

When these words from Isaiah 43 blew into my heart like a mighty rush of wind this thought appeared in prayer: ‘Who am I, now that I am no longer who I used to be? And I would expand that to include you and your community of faith and invite you to pray in preparation for the birth of whatever God is doing among us: Who are WE becoming, now that we are no longer who we used to be?’

Through all the “gasping and panting” our laboring God is calling us to be the midwives of what is about to be born- in you, in your church, and in this waiting world. What will be our response? Let’s choose faith over fear and commitment over complacency! 

This is not the time to throw up our hands and walk away. Don your mask, cleanse your hands, lean forward—God is about to give birth. Are you ready?