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[PCUSANEWS] Not for the faint of heart


From PCUSA NEWS <PCUSA.NEWS@ecunet.org>
Date 28 May 2003 20:07:32 -0400

Note #7743 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:

Not for the faint of heart
GA03053

Not for the faint of heart

Transforming a church is 'stressful, messy and yucky' - and rewarding

by Alexa Smith

DENVER, May 27 - Church redevelopment work is paradoxical - awful and
wonderful, painful and exhilarating - says the Rev. Steve Smith, who offered
a whimsical take on a tough ministry at the Network for Churchwide
Transformation Luncheon.

	Calling on his experiences at the Collingwood Presbyterian Church in
Toledo, OH, and in his years with the Network, Smith said redevelopment work
isn't for the faint-hearted, nor for anyone who can't hold seemingly
contradictory ideas in his head at the same time.

	"You need to try new things.  And you need to be doing fewer things,
but doing them well. You need to be gentle and compassionate with those on
your doorstep  and you need to stop pacifying disgruntled parishioners and
let them go," he said. "You need to act like it all depends on you, and trust
that it all depends on God."

	The Network, created in 1995, is a covenantal organization with a
mailing list of more than 1,200 people interested in church redevelopment, or
"transformation." The organization gathers every year for a Churchwide
Transformation Conference, which attracts four times as many now as in the
early years of the Network, according to the Rev. Kenny Davis of Ruidoso, NM,
a Network board member.

	The next gathering, whose theme is "Extreme Boldness," starts Jan. 22
in Charlotte, NC. For more information, call board member Debra Lanham at
1-888-728-7228.

	Reflecting on his experience at Collingwood, Smith is quick to say
that change comes hard. "Church people," he said with a laugh, "want things
to be different - but they don't want anything to change. And they want more
members, but not new people."

	He said he has watched volunteers tackle work once done by paid
staff, had members take on tithing as a spiritual practice, and seen an
almost-vacant church building become an active community center open seven
days a week that draws 31,000 visits a year.

	Smith said Collingwood's transition has been "stressful, messy and
yucky," but transformation is like cocooning, in which a caterpillar - tucked
away in the dark - turns into a butterfly. "Transformation is messy  and
when a caterpillar is becoming a butterfly, you don't want to see inside the
cocoon," he said.

	"This is not for the faint of heart."

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