Disciples Women
Kick starting new groups
How do you get something new started with the
women in your church?
This is one of the key questions Disciples Women are asking.
And just asking puts you on the cutting edge. Being on the
cutting edge doesn't mean you have all the answers, but it
does mean you can see what's coming, and you have a chance.
You can do what you have always done (and continue to get
what you always got!) or you can see your role in the new
thing God is doing.
So How Do You Start?!
- Deal with Past and Present
· Spend 3 minutes or less lamenting all that has
changed.
· Look at all the limitations, obstacles, problems.
· Recognize the ministry that has been.
· Celebrate what is being done with and by women
in your congregation.
- Prepare for Change
· Begin with prayer and scripture:
· Read Isaiah 43:18
Remember not the former things...Behold, I am doing a
new thing. Now it
springs forth. Do you not perceive it?
· Read I Corinthians 5:17
Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, they are a new creation.
The old has passed away. Behold, the new has come.
· Read Matthew 28
The Great Commission
The Great Commandment
· Read the purpose of Christian Women's Fellowship
- even if you call your group
something else. Isn't this what women's ministries is all
about?!
To provide opportunities for spiritual growth, enrichment,
education and creative ministries to enable women to develop
a sense of personal responsibility for the whole mission
of the church of Jesus Christ.
So What Do You Do After You Have Prepared Yourself So Well?
- Pray
· Give God praise and thanks for all God's blessings
in the past, present, and them many good things God has
yet to do.
· For each woman in your church.
· Then listen. Not for what you think the women want,
but listen for what God is calling you to do in this time
and place.
Take a look at the Book of Esther. Hear the question that
asks, Who knows but that you were born for such a
time as this?
- Next some steps or tools...
· Look around the church and see if you can find
at least 3 women with something in common (age, life stage,
interests, need)
· Call women together around a meal or dessert.
· Invite them personally
· Call to remind them
Provide opportunities to get to know one another
· Share interests and needs with one another
· Invite them to continue
· Plan with them the next when, how, where
- Listen to the women you have gathered about the best time
and place.
· Provide childcare whenever possible and give lots
of suggestions about resources.
Things To Remember
Fact 1:
Small is beautiful! Surprise! The optimal size for a group
is about seven persons. Thus, our focus should not be on forming
one or two large groups, but on forming a number of small
women's groups.
Fact 2:
People are intimidated by groups that are already in existence
and are much more likely to want to be a part of the formation
of a new group. The survival of women's ministries in your
congregation has everything to do with starting new circles.
Remember ...
- Don't rush success. You are building a community, not
an institution. Community takes time!
- It takes at least 5-6 months for people to see themselves
as a group.
- Never give someone a job as a way of inviting them into
community.
- If you want to introduce specific Disciples Women/Christian
Women's Fellowship resource, do so one at a time.
- It is not a failure when a group or program ends (if you
have done your work!) It simply means its time is over,
or its time has not yet come. If it was a new group that
didn't last, wait five to six months and begin again. It
may be that the leader you need just had a baby and three
months from now she will be ready for something new.
- If you can gather three women together who have something
in common, shared life situations or interest, you can start
a new group.
May God bless you in the new things you are doing!
Based on the writings and work of Dr. Ruth Richardson, former
regional staff, Tennessee.
reprinted from Guideposts for Leaders, l999
by Susan Gonzales-Dewey
Susan Gonzales-Dewey is Associate Pastor of First CC, Ventura,
Calif., and Regional Staff for the women of the Pacific Southwest.
She and her husband, Don, are the parents of two children,
Noah and Leah.
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