Launching Small Group Ministry Source: Carl George and Bill Donahue.
-
Upload
leo-perkins -
Category
Documents
-
view
225 -
download
1
Transcript of Launching Small Group Ministry Source: Carl George and Bill Donahue.
Launching Small Group Ministry
Source: Carl George and Bill Donahue
The Original Small Group
Jesus and the 12
“Building a community to reach a community”
Not only gathering to build community, to invite people into community
The purpose of small groups is to gather, develop/transform, and serve others (in and beyond the group)
What does your church’s small groups ministry look like?
1. No groups
2. Groups as a “program”
3. Groups as a core value Permeates every aspect of
every part of church life
“With” or “Of” Small Groups?
A Church “With” Groups Helps people find place in the
church Get in a group through a
placement system Joining a group is optional Led by reactive shepherd Meetings structured by
program, curriculum Low monitoring of groups Evangelism is possible in group
A Church “Of” Groups Helps people build community Groups invite people Essential to growth Led by proactive shepherd Meetings structured by strategy High monitoring of groups Evangelism is group mandated
How to select a point leader
“Who has empty space on plate?”
“Divide and conquer” (each staffer take a little piece)
Or: by call and giftedness
A Better Way
A). Who has characteristics desired? Spiritual gift of leadership, administration Passion Experience (have they built anything?) Often not a paid staffer
B). What is their role? Banner-waver Team-builder
How to choose a structure
1. Define “span of care” No more than 1 leader to 12 participants
2. Identify ministry roles What will shepherd/coach do? Staff roles?
3. Move toward ministry alignment How does this fit in with the core values of
the church? Vs. federation of “silos”
How to Identify Group Leaders
Affections – what do they love?
Reputation – what do others say about them?
Experience – do they have leadership track record in other settings?
How to Launch some Groups
1. Model group You have a leader and build a group
around that leader
2. Turbo group You have a number of leaders and
you put them together in a sample group to launch several groups
Make the expectation for participation an exit after set time
Assessing and Refining Groups
Are they …
Gathering? Creating community
Building FDFXs? Producing Disciples
Deploying servants?
Phases in Development
Discovering candidates Orienting to role Coaching and debriefing leaders Training coaches
Developing Apprentices
A pre-leadership place where you can learn To be and to have apprentices Creating apprenticeship
tradition in your church culture
Use tool (ie. Find X Survey)
Pre-apprentice Behaviors
Betray above-average interest in the group
Offer assignments Ie. Start group if 5 minutes late
Offer core commitments Carl George “9 Commitments”
#2-5 are “leader-maker” dimensions 800-936-2568 or www.metachurch.com
1. Connect
“I will be available for debriefing interviews with the church staff”
Legitimates authority of church leader Deputizes beyond personal charisma Sets boundaries and expectations
through a covenant
2. Recruit
“I will recruit my replacement(s)/apprentices before we begin meeting with the group, and I will help them develop the ability to lead.”
Makes me part of leadership development tradition/culture of replicating myself via modeling
3. Invite
“I will reach out between meetings, cultivating both old and new contacts.”
The between-meeting job of keeping group energy and focus
4. Prepare
“I will prepare my mind and heart for our meetings and include our apprentice in the process.”
5. Meet
“I will conduct meetings that encourage believers and accept seekers.”
Beyond “duty” and into encouragement
6. Bring
“I will bring group members to worship for the church’s weekend services.”
7. Serve
“I will serve others with my gifts, knowledge, time, energy, and money, conscious that my greatest influence may occur by example.”
8. Win
“I will make time to build acquaintances with unbelievers, serving them at their points of struggle.”
9. Seek
“I will meet regularly with God in private prayer.”
Teaches by example that life with God is the highest value
Coaching Roles
1. Develop leaders 2. Provide pastoral care 3. Support and expand ministry
In huddles (modeling community), group visits (affirming on site and making observations) and one-on-one visits with the group leader
Debriefing Leaders
One-on-one monthly meetings
Structured by prepared questions Carl George handout read verbatim Offers excuse to surface tough issues
Done with an eye toward developing coaches (sideline) out of group leaders (on field)
3-2-1 Coach Development
3 chairs, 3 calls, 3 people present Coach/apprentice coach/group leader
2 debriefing interviews, 2 hours (1 hour each) Coach does first one, apprentice #2
1 reflection, coach to coach “how did your interview just now go?”
Conclusions
To move from a church “with” small groups to a church “of” small groups, we have to make build a culture of:
Being purpose-driven Apprenticing, coaching and
leadership development Assessment and CQI
Launching Small Group Ministry
Dr. John P. Chandler
www.rasnet.org Copy Right John P. Chandler, 2001