pure in heart left to right: mark akridge, taccoa first umc elaine latore, wesley chapel umc

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Pure in Heart Left to right: Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC Elaine Latore, Wesley Chapel UMC Marlena Salters, Impact UMC Donna Alexander, Hogansville First UMC Jamie Weaver, Epworth UMC Back row: Ben Green, Acworth UMC Pete Fleming, Five Springs UMC. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC
Page 2: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Pure in Heart Left to right: Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC

Elaine Latore, Wesley Chapel UMCMarlena Salters, Impact UMC

Donna Alexander, Hogansville First UMC Jamie Weaver, Epworth UMC

Back row: Ben Green, Acworth UMCPete Fleming, Five Springs UMC

Page 3: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Key Vital Congregation Ministry Strategies

Key Ministry Strategy Number 9:Vital pastors use their influence to increase participation of others in order to accomplish changes in the church.

Key Ministry Strategy Number 10: Vital pastors motivate the congregation to set and achieve significant goals through effective leadership.

Key Ministry Strategy Number 16: Vital churches use more multi-media in contemporary worship.

Page 4: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Group Process Steps

1. Study the Vital Signs initiative through the Call to Action Steering Committee Report, the Conference website and the umc.org website.

2. Develop additional questions to better define each of our three key ministry strategies, twelve questions in all.

3. Conduct interviews with our pastors to determine their responses to our questions.

4. Develop a composite video and a written summary of their responses.

5. Prepare our report.

Page 5: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Toccoa First UMC

Pastor John Brown

Page 6: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Vital Sign #9: Vital Pastors use their influence to increase the participation of others in order to accomplish changes in the church.

Toccoa First changed the order of worship in the traditional service to make it more in line with the order of worship in the Book of Worship and the hymnal

Ministries and programs have been effective – rather than change, Toccoa First has explored ways to make sure these programs are efficient and effective as possible

Changes being made to the physical building

Page 7: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Vital Sign #10: Vital pastors motivate the congregation to set and achieve significant goals through effective leadership.

The pastor has to be a visionary and lay out a clear vision for what God has in store for the church

The pastor can help people be the best servant of Jesus Christ that they can be

What difference would it make to the community if our church was not here anymore?  

If leaders articulate a clear vision then the congregation can connect the dots – it gives meaning to all that we do and gives people passion for ministry

Page 8: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Vital Sign #16: Vital Churches use more multi-media in contemporary worship.

Toccoa First has a full multi-media presentation at one service and it’s our most well attended service 

Multimedia is important but if there’s no message then it’s irrelevant

Page 9: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Five Springs UMC

Pastor Ann Fleming

Page 10: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Vital Sign #9: Vital Pastors use their influence to increase the participation of others in order to accomplish changes in the church.

I conduct a congregation-wide planning session every six months.

I try to be open to and to encourage ideas from the congregation.

I always involve the congregation in implementation of changes.

Page 11: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

In order to set realistic goals, I always inform the congregation of conference and denominational matters, such as the Vital Church initiative.

The pastor must build trust through her or his actions.

At Five Springs we jointly set clear goals.

The pastor must involve the people in the pews. They are in the community.

Follow Paul’s example.

Vital Sign #10: Vital pastors motivate the congregation to set and achieve significant goals through effective leadership.

Page 12: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Vital Sign #16: Vital Churches use more multi-media in contemporary worship.

This small (50 members) rural church does not routinely use multi-media in worship.

We do provide visual aids when possible.

We have established a good audio system.

We use various media (videos, Internet) in small groups.

We use social media for outreach.

Page 13: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Pastor James Gwin

Acworth UMC

Page 14: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

#9 Vital pastors use their influence to increase the participation of others in order to accomplish changes in the church by:

Adapting to the unique period of growth and challenges for the church.

Taking periods of transitions (staff changes ex. youth director) and turning into a positive Recognizing the need to handle transition periods

differently than in the past. Ex. For interim period bring in persons outside the youth

group to direct so that vital leadership would not get “burned out” and be fresh to help during the transition after the arrival of the new youth director.

“A wise pastor will identify key “influencers” in the congregation and start a dialogue regarding the need to recognize and initiate change. Don’t wait on congregational leadership to respond for

pastor’s guidance Use “education and motivation as tools”, in an open,

transparent, respectful way.” Avoid “manipulating and trying to “out-flank” the other

side leads to long-term distrust and less than ideal results.

Page 15: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

#10: Vital pastors motivate the congregation to set and achieve significant goals through effective leadership by:

Open effective communication as important leadership quality to educate, motivate, persuade, equip, and empower

others to “own” goals and work toward achieving them. done one-on-one through a personal connection based on

trust. Recognizing that helping to achieve a goal is a

critical step in vitality. Reaching or progressing toward a goal builds momentum,

trust in leadership, and ownership by all. Achieving one goal makes the congregational “self-

esteem” go up and there is an overall improvement in confidence in achieving future goals.

Likewise churches will decline if they are not motivated to keep moving toward a goal.

You cannot be a vital congregation without achieve a goal – or many goals. It is the desire to do better that breathes life into a congregation.

Recognizing that good leaders can and will help a group Focus on what is important, negotiate the unexpected, and

organize in a way to make clear progress toward a goal A great leader, can do this while rising up other leaders.

Page 16: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

#16 Vital churches use more multi-media in contemporary worship by:

Increased use of “home made” videos and “social media” for communication Has had a direct, positive impact that builds excitement

and resonates with worshippers under forty years old. And some would never see or experience can become a

part of worship whether it is going on an Africa Mission or seeing children laughing at VBS.

Using visual aspects of video and or photography such as nature scenes to convey a liturgical season of or segue into a sermon theme.

Using videos posted at the church web-site “Welcome to AUMC”, post announcements, and present testimonies.

Using pictures “photos of faces” are powerful as well as videos activity comes alive to convey the sights, sounds, energy,

enthusiasm, and spirit of a church event and the participants in a way that cannot be by just saying “we had a great VBS last week”.

Using less PowerPoint (Media Shout) slide show – useful but limited in impact.

Continue to look ahead and improve by upgrading and improving multi-media capability and technology.

Page 17: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Wesley Chapel UMC

Pastor William Bert Neal, Jr.

Page 18: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

PASTOR NEAL’S REVIEW VITAL CONGREGATION

START UP CHURCH - LONG EXISTING CHURCH

CHURCH INVOLVEMENT/INPUT

EVANGELISM

ATTRACT YOUTH/ YOUNG ADULT WITH SOCIAL MEDIA

Page 19: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Impact UMC

Pastor Olu Brown

Page 20: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

We must make sure that the right people are in the right position

One of the most significant leadership qualities is vision

Great leaders know how to delegate

ALL THREE KEY MINISTRY STRATEGIES

Page 21: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Lay people are essential to the vitality of the church and must be committed to change

Leaders must be instrumental in connecting the dots to facilitate change

At Impact, ideas are filtered through the Leadership Team first to assess the possible need for adjustment before implementationThere must be a renewal process, one should constantly set new goals

Page 22: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Epworth UMC

Pastor Lisa Dempsey

Page 23: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Location, location, location

Leadership is vital

A small church can be vital

Page 24: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

Pastor John Alexander

Hogansville UMC

Page 25: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

#9 Vital pastors use their influence to increase the participation of others in order to accomplish changes in the church by:

First – make sure your approach does no harm.

Second – always use the congregation where ever possible to help bring about change.

Third – consistently and methodically use scripture, experience, and reason to initiate the needed change with the help of the congregation.

Page 26: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

#10: Vital pastors motivate the congregation to set and achieve significant goals through effective leadership by:

The ability to form relationships.

Through servant hood because the better you serve, the more God raises you up to leadership.

It is the role of the leadership to help others to “connect the dots”.

Page 27: Pure in Heart  Left to right:  Mark Akridge, Taccoa First UMC  Elaine Latore,  Wesley Chapel UMC

#16 Vital churches use more multi-media in contemporary worship by:

Using social media to attract potential youth and younger members