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Disciples Home Missions

The Vision Team Report on the Future Directions for Disciples Home Missions

Adopted by the DHM Board of Directors
November 9, 2001

Process Summary

The Board of Disciples Home Missions, at its meeting November 2000, authorized a study process to discern a vision and mission for the direction of its ministry. The Executive Committee appointed a Vision Team that was comprised to reflect the diversity of the Church. It was of mixed race and gender and consisted of lay and clergy. There were two members each from the HM Board, HM Staff, partners of congregations, regions and general ministries. The General Minister and President, the HM Chairperson, the HM Interim President and consultants serving as ex officio were also members of the Team. The Team members were: Carla Aday~ Former HM Board Member, Kansas City, Missouri; Billye P. Bridges~HM Staff; Jim Brooks~HM Staff; Raymond E. Brown~HM Interim President; William H. Edwards~Associate General Minister and Vice President; Richard L. Hamm~General Minister and President; Rex Horne~HM Board Chairperson, Wilson, North Carolina; Dennis L. Landon~Division of Higher Education President, St. Louis, Missouri; James L Powell (Internal Consultant), Church Extension President; Judith E. Ridlen~Clergy, St. Louis, Missouri; Patricia Tucker Spier~Division of Overseas Ministries President; Patsie Sweeden~ Regional Minister, Kansas; Richard Tumblin~HM Board, Knoxville, Tennessee; and, Dennis Williams~ Regional Minister, Arizona. The Team's task was to guide the study process. The Board also provided the services of an External Consultant, Rose S. Miller. Homeland Ministries provided the services of Jennie King, Corporate Secretary, who served as the Team's Recording Secretary.

The purpose of the visioning process was to: confirm core values, name the mission and describe the vision for Homeland Ministries, articulate priorities for moving into the vision, including matters relating to leadership, partnership, organization and doing mission. The Vision Team was charged with a threefold task:

  1. devise and implement a method for gaining input and feedback from all partners throughout the church (including ecumenical) regarding their experience with Homeland Ministries, in the past, present and future;
  2. collate and summarize the data collected from the process; and
  3. report the findings and make recommendations to the Board, at its November 2001 meeting. The recommendations would serve as the basis for rethinking leadership, mission, core values, organization, and partnerships. They would also inform future plans of action and implementation.

The Vision Team had its initial meeting February 2001 to begin charting its course. The aim of the meeting was to provide time for the Team to gain a firm grasp of the task and to get to know each other as colleagues to enable a covenantal community. A major task of the meeting was to develop a preliminary mission statement and intended core values for Homeland Ministries, to be used in the interview process.

In order to work more expeditiously, the Vision Team was organized in March 2001, by the Internal and External Consultants, to accomplish the multiple tasks that lay ahead. These two subcommittees were formed: The Liaison Committee and The Data Collection Committee. They were delegated separate tasks and responsibilities, but remained fully collaborative and accountable to each other and to the Vision Team as a whole.

Members of the Liaison Committee were: Carla Aday (Committee Chair), Billye P. Bridges, Dennis L. Landon, Dennis Williams, Richard Tumblin, with Jim Powell (Internal Consultant), facilitating their work. The Committee was responsible for interfacing directly with the Homeland Ministries Board and Staff; it paid attention to all concerns of the Board and Staff during the visioning process. The Committee also participated in the Board's meeting in May 2001, providing an update of the Vision Team's work and outlining examples of the kind of recommendations which would be brought to the Board in November 2001. It was also responsible for receiving the Data Collection Committee's draft report and helped review and refine it in preparation for its presentation to the Board on behalf of the full Team. The Internal Consultant met regularly with Homeland Ministries staff to give updates, receive feedback, and help staff articulate current core values.

The members of the Data Collection Committee were: Jim Brooks, William H. Edwards (Committee Chair), Rex Horne, Judith Ridlen, Patsie Sweeden and Patricia Tucker Spier. The Committee was responsible for all matters concerning Homeland Ministries constituents. It was in charge of the interviewing process, collecting and synthesizing all data obtained through the interviews, and writing the draft report.

The Data Collection Committee established a goal of at least 100 sources from which to obtain information. It developed a structure for gathering information which entailed the use of individual one-on-one interviews, group and telephone interviews, regular mail and e-mail responses.

The Team prepared for its work by participating in a brief data collection training session designed by the External Consultant. The session was intended to groom the Team's skills as interviewers.

Members of the Liaison Committee led a similar training session for the Board at its meeting in May 2001. Board members were asked to help in the data collection process. They conducted interviews that were convenient for them to arrange. The interview questionnaire focused on issues of mission, vision, and aspects of HM's ministry. (See attached)

Targeted groupings for the interviews included: The Executive Committee of the National Convocation; the Executive Committee of College of Regional Ministers; Regional Staff; Homeland Ministries Staff; HM's Anti-racism Team; Executive Committee of the National Hispanic Commission; Executive Committee of NAPAD; Homeland Ministries Board of Directors; General Church Cabinet; Moderators of the General Assembly; General Board; Ecumenical Partners, and BMF-giving churches.

The Data Collection Committee, together with the consultants, met in June to review and synthesize the data collected from the above sources. The following pages describe the themes derived from the interviews. These themes are issues that received the greatest response in the interviews. Quotes from interviews are used to highlight issues reflected by the themes. They also represent the myriad of voices that contributed their thoughts and ideas..



Major Themes From Gathered Data

1. Relationships and Partnerships need to be enhanced and strengthened.

Division of Homeland Ministries must work out its relationship with Regions and how Regions and Disciples Home Missions carry out their missions in cooperation.

People talk about the 'golden days' of The UCMS and the home and state mission conferences, but nostalgia aside, more of a partnership/resourcing relationship with the regions would be helpful.

DHM needs partnerships with racial/ethnic constituencies under the umbrella of a new structure. New people often get into the church and never really learn how the local church works both by itself and in relationship with other churches. We need to develop an awareness of how we try to work through the larger church. It would be good if we could develop some way for us that we would really understand the core missions, model servanthood, and covenantal relationship.

Hispanic Ministries does not have a relationship to DHM. There was an intentional pulling away of resources for Hispanic Ministries when the Central Pastoral Office for Hispanics was established.

There is an overall consensus that HM's quality of relationships is weak and needs strengthening. Homeland Ministries has had to be broadly focused in its relationships and has not had highly focused priorities. However, there needs to be more emphasis placed on reaching out to regions, constituency groups, congregations, general units, and ecumenical partnerships.

The relationships with regions are strained due to perceptions about HM's style of relating; which include: its tendency toward unilateral decision making; overlapping programs with regions and lack of clarity of mission. There's also a sense that programs are forced on regions to implement. However, there are a number of ministries, such as: Kid to Kids, Disciples Volunteering, African American Educational Ministries and Black Ministries, which affirm and enhance the community and are very much appreciated.

Yet, there is a perceived climate of suspicion, a spirit of protection among the constituency groups. Trust needs to be rebuilt. In some cases, groups have been in competition with one another for resources. The originating purpose of empowerment of constituencies has suffered from this loss of trust and has created a climate of protectionism.

Congregations experience a perfunctory relationship with Homeland Ministries. They know where to get some of the resources produced by Homeland Ministries, but, beyond that, there is unfamiliarity with most of HM's programs and ministries. While a particular staff person may be known due to services provided, that does not translate into a sense of connection with Homeland Ministries. This is due largely to poor communications, lack of trust, lack of unifying identity, and HM's perceived paternalistic approach. Partners feel these factors rule out desire for collaboration.

There is a commitment to several Ecumenical Partnerships and Homeland Ministries has a deep desire for covenantal relationships with them. However, Disciple's identity often gets watered down or lost in these relationships when it has to compromise. As a result, the relationships then become less sustainable.

General Ministries tend to be supportive of each other in their work. Yet, their relationship with one another is sometimes characterized by rivalry, mistrust, and lack of clarity of mission.

A culture of autonomy within the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) undermines HM's ability to collaborate. This may be an ingrained feature of Disciples who staunchly believe in their freedom and independence and fear being controlled. Homeland Ministries has a reputation for moving unilaterally in its relationships, asking for input, and then doing what it wants. When this occurs, it contributes to feelings of mistrust and a sense of being unaccountable. This threatens potential partnerships.

2. Leadership Development

Identify and incubate leadership early. Offer hands-on experience.

We just don't have enough financial strength to get the leadership we need.

I would also like to see DHM staff committed to leadership development and modeling the importance of being a life long learner!

We must have great leadership training if we are to survive. It needs to be a part of every seminary curriculum!

The need for Leadership Development is indicated in all areas of church life. Homeland Ministries has reduced capacity to lead in this area. Search and Call, for instance, is seen as a perfunctory operation primarily involved in paper shuffling.

The decline in HM's ability to take up this task has an adverse impact on the calling to ministry. Pastors are besieged with frustrations; the lack of attention in this area has serious impact on their lives. The shortage of pastors will be keenly felt by the year 2020 when nearly two-thirds Disciple clergy will have retired. There is urgent need to recruit and to develop clergy and lay to start new congregations and revitalize current ones. Many see Homeland Ministries as the logical unit to lead and coordinate this church-wide priority and effort.

3. Congregational Vitality

I would like things to be happening in congregations because DHM is creating the opportunity for them to happen.... local churches catching fire because DHM is on fire.

Congregational vitality assumes an educational component within the church; if not, that's a weak area of the mission.

Help us as churches find ways to create a desire for commitment among our members.

I would like to see DHM promote congregational outreach to groups such as those who are poor and those with disabilities, and other groups not part of the church.

Congregational Vitality has to do with being whole, connected with the Spirit, and visionary. Congregations are mission outposts for the church of Christ. There cannot be vitality without leadership and many churches struggle because they have no vision or mission. There needs to be a coordinated network of support and resources to help congregations become vital in their ministries of worship, discipleship, outreach, evangelism and witness. Many of the persons interviewed felt that Homeland Ministries could lead and coordinate in this church-wide priority and effort.

4. Organizational Excellence

DHM has a damaged reputation and image that must be intentionally rebuilt.

Partner to get more done and more efficiently. Be the forerunner for demonstrating new forms of ministry.

Our system isn't set up to promote team ethos; suggest we give more attention to this.

Develop a unified approach to communicating the work of DHM, rather than having each staff person plan, market, and communicate their own program.

Organizational Excellence suggests that Homeland Ministries must address the challenge of how to be a church organization in the midst of the postmodern world. As an organization, Homeland Ministries must clarify its mission and discern what God is calling it to be in order to address the issue of excellence. “What does it mean to be a “healthy organization committed to excellence?

Like all organizations, for Homeland Ministries to survive and make progress, it must continuously address the demand of its changing external environment without forsaking the evolving needs of its internal life. Currently there is controversy about how well it is doing. The outside environment (constituency groups, congregations, regions, ecumenical and global partnerships, etc.) has mixed reviews about HM's effectiveness.

Inside Homeland Ministries there are concerns about the quality of how the organization's goals and objectives are accomplished. Staff, for instance, question whether the impact of their work and ministry is helping the church grow in significant and meaningful ways. They worry that their ideas, passions, and concerns are not in sync with the aims of the Board and that the “disconnect that exists between them is a difficult one to broach.

The day-to-day operations and procedures at HM's offices raise questions for concern:

  • Is the organizational culture conducive to a healthy intellectual and emotional work environment? Is the organizational infrastructure optimal?
  • Is the use of technology sufficiently advanced and innovative to support quality work and products? HM's ability to commit to excellence will, in large part, be determined by where it stands on questions such as these and what steps are taken to improve the organization structure, ethos, and spirit.

5. Mission and Values

There is a lack of spiritual life descriptions all the way through the paper. There should be first of all, the desire to help people walk with Jesus and have a deeper spiritual walk.

There's no mention at all about evangelism. If we mean that in new congregations and congregational vitality, then say it!

Where is the passion? Are we willing to 'die for' these intended core values? What gets you out of bed in the morning? These intended core values seem humanistic not even an implied relationship to God, the Church or Jesus Christ.

The word 'responding' means reactive; let's consider 'witnessing' because we should reach out to win people for Christ.

Mission statement does not say why we do what we do...'responding' is not adequate to express the 'why'.

Where are evangelism, worship and spiritual life?

Anything specifically Christian about your work?

Where's the relationship with God?

I see no language about promotion of a broad sense of diversity that I would hope to see become more intentional, not only gender, race, culture, but also ability, gifts, and other characteristics of people.

The above comments were the major concerns raised in response to the proposed Mission Statement and Intended Core Values. Spirituality and evangelism were noticeably absent, yet they are the ingredients for which members of the congregation find most passion and excitement. The omission of spirituality and evangelism possibly exacerbates the disconnect the congregations feel with Homeland Ministries. Christians are constantly seeking how to do evangelism: win souls. The fact spirituality and evangelism were missing, raises at least two questions. One question is based on the following adage: Keep 'head & heart'. Don't want all my religion in my head 'cause if I lose my mind, I have lost my religion. “Has Homeland Ministries kept its head and lost its heart? The second question is: “If congregations, regions, and Homeland Ministries are not speaking the same language, then who are they in relationship to one another? Is a partnership possible?

There is ambiguity about what to expect regarding diversity. The desire is to have Homeland Ministries be intentional about the inclusion and valuing of all groups and differences. It is important to stay mindful of the history of inclusivity in the church; it began with movements, i.e., racial/ethnic groups, women's groups, etc. In the process of Homeland Ministries discerning its mission, it is important to consider what movements could emerge in the 21st century.


Vision Team Recommendations

After distillation of all the data gathered, prayer, Biblical reflection, and thorough discussion, the Vision Team makes the following recommendation, beginning with a proposed mission statement and core values.

• Mission Statement
Homeland Ministries commits to connecting people to the life-changing love of God by developing partnerships throughout the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) that strengthen congregations and leaders to make a difference in the world by revealing the light of Christ.

• Core Values Relationships
Integrity and Honesty Christlike Service Stewards of Time, Gifts, Resources Accountability to God, One Another and Those We Serve Justice

Note: The core values are incomplete in as much as they originated only with staff and need to incorporate the DHM Board of Directors' understanding of values, so that there can be complete ownership and accuracy. It is anticipated that the Core Values will be named by the May 2002 Board meeting.

Priorities and Strategies

The Vision Team recommends that Homeland Ministries carry out this mission, focusing on two priorities:

• Leadership Development
• Congregational Life and Vitality

Further, the Vision Team recommends a few key strategies for addressing these priorities, as follows:

• Leadership Development

In partnership with the regions and the General Commission on Ministry, Homeland Ministries should re engineer and expand the Search and Call function into a highly visible and effective office.

In partnership with related church bodies, Homeland Ministries should establish strategies for the identification, recruitment, care and nurture of ordained and licensed ministers.

In partnership with related church bodies, Homeland Ministries should review and enhance strategies for ministries to and with youth and young adults.

In partnership with related church bodies, Homeland Ministries should evaluate and enhance functions related to chaplaincy and other specialized ministries.

In partnership with related church bodies, Homeland Ministries should equip lay leaders (elders, teachers, etc.).

• Congregational Life and Vitality

Work collaboratively with regions, other general units, and racial/ethnic groups to invite congregations to articulate their mission and priorities and begin (or continue) acting on those plans.

Work collaboratively to mobilize our many constituencies and congregations to increase vitality as congregations reach out in witness and service.

• In General:

  1. Conduct a ministry analysis to assess ministries in light of priorities to determine what is to be done or not and how it will be done, given the new mission and priorities.
  2. Focus primary assignment of staff to facilitate networks with regions and other partners to respond to needs of congregations and leaders.
  3. Because congregational vitality and leader development are whole church priorities (see attached mission statement of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)), Homeland Ministries should call regions and other partners to also consider re configurations of their ministries in light of these whole church priorities and look for ways to release their expertise to the use of the whole church.
  4. Homeland Ministries should establish new covenants with constituent groups around HM's mission and priorities and the respective callings of those groups.
  5. Homeland Ministries should establish ministry teams comprised of HM staff, regional and congregational leaders with passion and skills in areas of need, called together and networked (facilitated by) Homeland Ministries.

Implications of Priorities and Strategies

• Deploy staff into connection with clusters of regions to provide network and collaborative resources for congregational mission and planning.

• Revise staffing arrangements with constituencies, such as women, men, National Convocation, Hispanic Ministries, NAPAD, etc. (This will call for some covenanting and recovenanting with constituency groups and might include some shifting of staffing, as the ministry analysis might also suggest.)

• Understand that public witness to the gospel's call to proclaim and do justice among people and nations must inhabit and motivate all of the priorities and methodologies. Note: While the Vision Team did not have enough time to work through all the Implications of Priorities and Strategies, these three were recurrent topics throughout the process that the Vision Team felt important to name.

Based upon this mission and vision for Homeland Ministries, the Vision Team recommends the following Qualities in its Next President:

Someone with a proven track record in the following competencies and characteristics:

  • Ability to live in a fluid environment
    – flexibility
    – creativity
    – adaptability
  • Integrity and trust with the denomination
    – is a Disciple
  • Leadership, management, administrative experience
    – visionary
    – pastoral
    – inclusive
    – conflict resolution
  • Deep spirituality
  • Good communication skills
    – listening
    – written
    – technology
    – relational
    – speaking
  • Collaborative
    – advisory committee
  • Ability to ensure intentional connection of Board and Staff
    – to provide collegiality
    – to have a common sense of purpose

The Vision Team recommends that Homeland Ministries' Partners be communicated with in the following ways:

• Homeland Ministries Staff
Share the Board's action immediately following the November Board meeting (at the November 13 staff meeting). Monthly updates as appropriate.

• Denominational and Ecumenical Partners
News Release following HM Board's action.

• Regions
News Release regarding recommendations. Updated information on Search and Call, as available. Letter to all Regions and Areas outlining the decisions made by Homeland Ministries and the desire to collaborate on implementation of the mission and vision, including Search and Call, Office of Ministry, and Congregational Life and Vitality. Seek time to share in person – Update at the Team Leadership Conference and the College of Regional Ministers.

• General Cabinet
Letter to all General Ministry Presidents and other members of the General Cabinet, outlining the decisions made and the desire for collaboration, as appropriate. Face-to-face updates at General Cabinet meetings.

• Constituency Groups
Letter to each constituency group, asking for an opportunity for a face-to-face meeting to begin the planning for collaboration and covenanting (or re covenanting).


Recommended Time Line

November 2001

  • Homeland Ministries Board approves recommendations
  • Homeland Ministries Staff is notified immediately of Board's decisions
  • Search and Call Search Committee finalizes job description and establishes process to fill position

by March 2002

  • Interim President begins ministry analysis process to assess ministries in light of priorities (preparing for new president)
    — finish by May 2002
  • Homeland Ministries Board establishes process for Presidential Search (include on the Search Committee a regional minister as a sign of partnership)
    — to fill by September 2002
  • Contact all partners with information about HM's priorities/processes
  • Formulate a press release about HM's priorities/processes
  • Vision Team receives updates following both the staff review and HM Board's decisions

March 2002

  • New Search and Call staff person meets with Regional Ministers and General Commission on the Ministry for common understandings and work plan formulation for the Office of Ministry

May 2002

  • Homeland Ministries Board Meeting
    — to receive update/results of the ministry analysis process
  • Finalize Core Values

September 2002

  • New President begins
  • Priorities begin to get implemented

 
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Don Shelton
Interim President
(317) 713-2679