Why do we need mission pioneers?

Watch the latest update from the CMS Pioneer Mission Leadership Training course.

View this video on the CMS website.

Transcript

Jonny Baker, CMS Pioneer Mission Course Leader: I mean I think every system, organisation, culture, always gets stuck with business as usual and needs people that see new possibilities that are different to the way things are and the church is no different to that at all. Pioneers are people that see new possibilities and then they're able to make them happen and we sometimes call them 'dreamers who do'.

Andrea Campanale, CMS Pioneer Course Graduate, Kingston: I've been working with spiritual seekers for about eight years altogether. I started at the Green Fair in Kingston, somebody came up to us and said, 'I'm on the organising committee of a pagan festival called Lammas in Eastbourne and I'd really like it if you could get together a team and come and do some of the kind of outreach you've talked about'. By the end of the first day, the organisers had said, 'We'd really like it if you could come again'.

Gavin Mart, CMS Pioneer Student, Colwyn Bay, Wales: The original idea was to come into a community to try and unearth some sense of spirituality within that community through the arts and we found this building here, which is an old abandoned hotel on the high street in Colwyn Bay. We threw open the doors and let the community come in. At the moment we're a kind of fledgling community of folk who are looking out for one another, exploring some sense of spirituality through the arts.

Kim Hartshorne, CMS Pioneer Course MA Student, Cirencester: We'd noticed that the people from the sort of difficult parts of town were not represented in the churches and were kind of maybe not welcome there so we decided to set up a space that would welcome those people in. We didn't have a grand master plan, we were four housewives, but we just had this tug of our heart that God cares for these people and how could that care be communicated?

Angela Howarth, CMS Student and Ordained Pioneer Minister, Coventry: The church isn't so much about Sundays any more. I think for a lot of families, Sundays are family days and people will have conversations around a table but they won't feel that comfortable on a Sunday in something that's maybe a little bit more formal. And we find that food, people like anything that they have food around the table.

The world needs dreamers who do and that's why CMS started a pioneer training course.

Jonny Baker: Well I think our USP is simple; it's pioneering mission. The strange thing is I think we're almost the only course out there who that's the USP. So, for people who are pioneers and who love mission, we're just the best thing around. Unbiased opinion!

Kim Hartshorne: Pioneering can be really isolating. It's been like a sort of homecoming to get in here and find the space that's opened up for us.

Andrea Campanale: It's a community in which each of us is trying to find out more about who we are in Christ.

Gavin Mart: The course has given me a language framework which I can use, not just to communicate what I'm trying to do but also process in my own psyche why things aren't working, why perhaps things are working when they shouldn't. It's been very helpful for that kind of thing.

Angela Howarth: Some people say to me, 'you're not a pioneer, look at your age, you don't have a church' and I say I think pioneer means more than that; it's just starting things that are new.

Jonny Baker: One of the things I love about the pioneers that seem to connect with CMS is that they just have such diverse ideas of what they pioneer so I love it that somebody engages in Forest Church, I love that somebody's doing bicycle repair workshop with young people as a way to build community. I never expected we'd have someone running a singing café to reach people with dementia. I love that, I think it's really creative; I could not have predicted the things that people are doing.

For more information, go to pioneer.cms-uk.org.

Joining the strands

Phil Potter reflects on the strands of partnership.

"A three-stranded rope isn't easily snapped"

(Ecclesiastes 4.12, The Message)

I recently made a rope swing for my young grandsons in our garden. Having heard that one of them had fallen from a very thin and dodgy one not too long previously, I was careful to find a strong 'three-stranded' rope that was guaranteed for grandfather use as well!

The principle of 'better together' is of course a simple one, so it's rather sad that the Christian Church has often had a history of making heavy weather of all things ecumenical. That is why when Archbishop Justin says that he believes Fresh Expressions to be one of the most exciting ecumenical initiatives around today, I am determined that we should do everything we can to justify such an accolade, and to make sure that we don't end up snapping or falling from the rope.

It is interesting that, as well as the biblical imperative for partnership, the secular world is also increasingly emphasizing the importance of partnership in our globalised 21st century society. In his book The Wide Lens – A New Strategy for Innovation, Ron Adner shows how some of the most innovative developments of this century have only come to fruition through a major focus on partnership and collaboration between major players. He tells the story of Apple for instance; explaining that whilst other mobile phone companies were simply trying to design better phones, Apple were collaborating with the makers and retailers of music to design a truly innovative iPhone that could do far 'smarter' things. Similarly, Amazon cornered the e-reader market by partnering with authors, publishers and retailers to create a revolutionary product in the Kindle. Many other companies meanwhile are still embracing mediocrity or failure, simply because their focus is very narrow and centred solely on what they themselves can produce.

On a personal level, my own journey into pioneering and innovating in mission has illustrated both the biblical and the latest business insights (though I lay far more trust in the former!). In planning major pioneer projects, I learned the importance of partnering as widely and freely as possibly. So when planning to plant a fresh expression of church into a town centre, there was collaboration and partnership in many directions. We began by asking what the surrounding local churches could themselves bring to the vision, then we found a larger resource church (outside the area) that could provide a significantly sized team. Human resources were then added from the central Church Growth Team, finances negotiated creatively with the Diocesan finance department, and a pioneer minister added to the mix. The missional partnership continued as the plant created formal partnerships with the local school, the college, the town centre management – and finally a shopping arcade where the church community was to be housed.

Whatever else Fresh Expressions is, it is first and foremost a partnership of pioneer networks, of denominations, streams and agencies which together are committed to planting and multiplying new forms of church in a mixed economy of Church. Our challenge is to keep that focus clear, to keep innovating how partnership works across a growing movement, and to keep our hearts open to genuine partnership and collaboration on a very wide scale. In that spirit, I commend this month not only our latest video sharing the Church of England Missioners' stories from various dioceses but also the video sharing the latest developments in pioneer training at CMS. I hope you will continue to help us to become increasingly effective partners in the gospel in the days ahead.

Phil Potter

11 Self-supporting ministry (Share booklet 11)

Self-supporting ministry explores the practicalities of raising finance for those involved in a fresh expression of church and the role of others who share your vision in supporting you financially.

This booklet highlights the biblical perspective on income generation and examines the advantages and disadvantages of self-supporting ministry. It also considers contemporary challenges and opportunities offered by this style of funding.

This Share booklet is one of a series which aims to help you to think about how to start, support and sustain a fresh expression of church. Buy multiple Share booklets for a discount (applied automatically at checkout): other offers and packs are detailed on the Share booklets page.

msm South London – South Croydon

You are invited to share a learning journey in a supportive community to be equipped for a lifetime of good practice and learning in growing fresh expressions of church.

Your local course

The Salvation Army, Church of England, Methodist Church, United Reformed Church are delighted to make msm available locally. We believe it will be a significant resource for building the Kingdom of God in this area.

Individuals are most welcome, but we particularly hope that small groups from a church or fresh expression will come as this will deepen the impact of the course.

The course leaders and teachers include Stephen Hance, Sharon Prentis, Will Cookson, Phil Potter and Bob and Mary Hopkins.

Course timetable and venue

Saturday 9th May 2015

Thursday 18th June 2015

Thursday 9th July 2015

Friday 25th to Sunday 27th September 2015

Thursday 15th October 2015

Thursday 19th November 2015

Saturday 5th December 2015

Thursday 21st January 2016

Thursday 25th February 2016

Saturday 12th March 2016

Saturdays run from 10.00 to 16.00, weekdays from 19.30 to 21.30, both at All Saints Church Hall, Onslow Gardens, Sanderstead, Surrey, CR2 9AB.

The residential weekend is at Ashburnham Place, Battle, East Sussex, TN33 9NX.

Cost

£300 per person, which covers all materials, refreshments and the weekend away. Bursaries are available.

Book

Download the flier and booking form at the foot of the page or book online.

Contact

Angie Cookson

Course Administrator

angie@springfieldchurch.org.uk

0208 647 3410

View mission shaped ministry in a larger map

Treasures old and new: exploring how the Spirit is moving in traditional and emerging communities

Treasures old and new: exploring how the Spirit is moving in traditional and emerging communities. A conversation hosted by Anglican Religious Communities and Archbishop Justin Welby.

At a recent day gathering at Lambeth Palace, Archbishop Justin Welby said that the Church is need of a wild burst of fresh and spirit-filled religious communities, rooted in the traditions but new and spontaneous-a re-imagination drawn on a rich history.

This week will be an opportunity through conversation, meditation and creativity to explore what the Holy Spirit is saying to us now for the ongoing life of Religious communities. The conversation will take place at Sneaton Castle Centre in the town of Whitby, historic home of St Hilda and today of the sisters of the Order of the Holy Paraclete.

Cost

A variety of rooms are available on a first come first served basis, the cost of the weekend is per person. Rooms which use a shared bathroom will be subsidised (£120); if you feel able to pay the full price (£160) please do. En-suite rooms are available at full cost (£200) and will be allocated first to those with a specific need (please indicate on the booking form).

Further details and booking

Please complete and return the booking form below. Online booking will be available soon.

If you have questions, please contact Mark Berry on mark.berry@cms-uk.org.

How do we tackle the challenge of Methodist decline?

Phil Potter asks how we respond to the latest Methodist statistics for mission.

So, we all know that the latest Methodist Statistics for Mission are 'challenging' to say the least but what is the way forward? In just 22 pages, the report catalogues the loss of 100,000 members over 10 years. BUT, is that a sign for all Methodists to lie down in a darkened room and give up? I don't think so.

The statistics also show how three quarters of all Methodist work with groups and outreach happens through the week, with over 483,000 people involved in one way or another. To me, that reflects the changing face of church in today's society.

As Martyn Atkins said, in his General Secretary's report to Conference, the lessons from the statistics must be learned but there is

a growing desire to reclaim evangelism as a crucial part of God’s mission, as the main thing.

The recent commissioning of New Song Network Church in Warrington as the newest church in Methodism is evidence of that desire becoming a reality but how will New Song become just the first in a long line of new churches?

In looking at overarching practice in Methodism, I'd suggest three main things:

  • every Circuit to have at least one half-time post developing new forms of church. Don't worry about what 'sort' of church is being encouraged by the Holy Spirit; look instead at their intention; what do they intend to do to reach the people who wouldn't otherwise be reached with the Good News? There is a real window of opportunity to respond to the missional challenges all around us; that's why every Circuit needs to have a designated person to explore and encourage and help to source funding for fresh expressions.
  • develop pathways for lay people to lead churches.The Church Army's Research Unit report, From Anecdote to Evidence – which looked at fresh expressions in ten Church of England Dioceses – highlighted the increasing importance, relevance and role of lay people in leading new forms of church. Identify them, support them, give them the backing to develop the ministry that God has given them.
  • conduct an urgent review of present leadership structures and make it a matter of policy to increasingly partner with Christians of other denominations and streams. Working alongside Christians from all traditions and denominations has been at the heart of Fresh Expressions since it first saw the light of day in 2004. The value of that has become all too clear with hundreds of new churches being formed which, in turn reach thousands of people – many of whom have never been anywhere near a Christian community before. That has only been possible through working together.

In all of these things, difficult resourcing decisions need to be made – but is it important for God's people called Methodists, for all of us, to prop up the present or invest in the future?

Grace

Steve Collins tracks the 20 year history of Grace, an alternative worship community based at St Mary's Church, Ealing.

Our 10th anniversary in 2003 came as a bit of a shock, because we'd always thought of ourselves as fragile in the face of circumstances and liable to end at any moment; we had to readjust our mindset when we realised that we were in it for the long haul! Our 20th anniversary offers us opportunity for reflection and re-evaluation.

Grace was born out of dissatisfaction with standard forms of Anglican worship, while taking inspiration from various experiments that were happening at the time. The dissatisfaction was that the standard forms did not seem to relate well to the culture of the world outside of the Church, or even to the culture of many people inside the Church. The inspiration was that Christians in other churches were acting to create new forms to bridge the cultural gap. It seemed that it might be possible to do something constructive within our own church community, rather than put up unwillingly with the status quo or leave.

So a lay member of St Mary's and the then-curate obtained permission to hold an experimental service on two Sundays a month, starting in November 1993. The 8pm slot didn't interfere with existing church arrangements, and suited the intended demographic, which was people in their 20s and 30s who might have been out on Saturday night – and would prefer to give Sunday morning a miss – but would see Grace as a good way to round off a weekend. The demographic did, of course, include the team, their families and friends, rather than an abstract target market that might be 'out there'. We felt that if it didn't work for us, regardless of who else came, how would it work for anyone else?

Grace - masksAt first the services were created by a team of five people, but the twice-a-month frequency was too much work. So Grace took a break and returned with one main service a month, which continues to this day. From 1998 we again ran a second service each month, initially as a vehicle for experiments with the Eucharist and later as a place for community-focussed prayer, but the second service had to be kept simple to be sustainable. It never attracted a large congregation or had a long-term fixed form. Eventually it lost direction and numbers, and we finally abandoned it in 2013.

Over the years Grace has generally had a core of about 10-15 people who get involved in creating services and other events, and another 10-15 people as the direct community. Beyond that we have variable numbers of regular and irregular visitors. Congregational numbers have been as high as 100 and as low as 1, but the long-term average has been 20-40. However, we never know until the service starts who, exactly, will turn up! Our location in London means that we get quite a lot of overseas visitors who are studying new forms of church in Britain. We've made some good friends this way.

Grace is a strong example of what the Church Army's Research Unit recent report into fresh expressions of church and church plants calls 'lay-lay spare-time' leadership – people who are mostly not ordained and who do not have any formal training or accreditation. They generally serve in their spare time and so face all the associated limitations of resources and energy. There has never been any full-time or paid leadership, and the ordained people who were involved in Grace were doing it in their spare time, not as an official part of their ministry.

For many years there was no formal structure at all. This went with our stated commitments to openness and equality of opportunity – but those who got involved found that they were involved all the time, and those who were not involved in making the services had no other clear way to belong. There were also buried power issues common to all 'open' groups – male versus female ways of working, getting stuck in default roles, people whose word carried more weight than others. In addition, as we grew older and members came and went, we became more diverse. The diversity challenged our (sub)cultural focus – as we knew and intended that it would – but amazingly without causing conservatism or loss of creativity.

Grace - event

In 2001 we moved the main service to a Saturday night, 8pm to 9 or 9.30pm with our cafe open to 10.30pm or even past 11 if there's demand for it. The café allows us to be properly hospitable to visitors, who have often travelled a long way, as well as properly hospitable to ourselves!

The next change was to move to a 'curation' model for service planning – meaning that someone gathers and leads a group of volunteers to create a service. Since it's a different curator and group each time, nobody has to take part all of the time. The curator can also call in specific contributions from people who can't or don't want to be otherwise involved.

Grace has always been mission-minded, but our sense of what that mission might be has changed over the years. At the beginning we hoped that creative worship events would have a direct appeal to the unchurched, as well as the dechurched and the disaffected still within churches. We wanted to encourage and resource others who were on similar journeys, in gratitude at how we had been encouraged and resourced. We created worship events for youthwork conferences, festivals such as Greenbelt, and even individual churches, to inspire people to try it for themselves.

In doing all this we found ourselves, ironically, on a mission to the Church. We have a constant stream of visitors from around the globe, studying what we do and how we do it and taking it back to their own churches and denominations. It wasn't the mission we expected to have, but we've embraced it as the one we were given.

At the same time Grace has been a support for our own personal missions, in whatever places we find ourselves. Some of us do 'official' mission work, with mission agencies in the UK and abroad, or training pioneer ministers, or working with charities. Others are involved in more mainstream contexts but our community and creative activity as Grace supports our faith and witness wherever we are.

Grace - candle

Over the last few years, individuals have faced major stage-of-life issues which make it hard to find the time and energy for Grace. Ironically, our deepening personal commitments to mission have also had an impact. With core members struggling to be available, or unwilling to commit, and a decline in the congregational numbers (probably for similar reasons) the structures we set up 10 years ago are proving hard to sustain. Our 19th year found us at a low ebb, barely able to make the monthly services happen. We openly discussed the possibility of giving up.

In the circumstances it didn't seem right to make a big fuss over our 20th anniversary. We had a fairly low key celebration for the actual anniversary, and filled the rest of our 20th year by revisiting favourite services from the archives. The intention was to take them 'ready-made' to make things easy, but our creative instincts seem to have revived and most of the services so far have been significantly reinvented. It seems to be part of the DNA of Grace – even through all the changes in personnel over the years – that we have to reinvent things, we can't bear to do the same thing twice, even when it costs us or risks failure. We constantly re-use parts of previous material, or other people's material, but the sum totals don't repeat. Life, technology, circumstances, who's in the room, all move on.

We're in the fortunate position of being able to give ourselves permission to change if it suits us – so, for instance, when the second service ran out of steam we ended it and shifted our focus to community meals. All of our structures are self-imposed, so the questions as we look forward are: What do we want to do now? What are we capable of doing now? What do we need to do, to continue as a missional and worshipping community?

For Grace the secret of longevity seems to be in having a mix of new people but also people who have been there for most or all of the community's life. The former stop it growing stale, repetitive or inward-looking, the latter carry the historical memory of the community, the wisdom and fortitude that comes from having been there and done that before. Don't have the new people, and you settle into a routine that offers nothing new for others or yourselves. Don't have the long-term people and you fight your first battles over and over again and never get past the beginners' stages.

For those just starting on this path, we offer two lessons from our experience: persistence, and publicity. Persistence is essential if you are to last long enough to grow into community and to develop your own mission. It turns failures into experience and success into a foundation. Publicity brings outsiders to inspire you and stop you becoming a clique. It allows you to share your wisdom and receive wisdom from others. It lets you be part of a bigger picture.

How long will Grace last? We don't know, but we don't know what else we would do as church. This experiment became a way of life and an enduring community.

New shoots in the United Reformed Church (Linda Rayner)

Linda Rayner reflects on progress in the United Reformed Church.

Four years ago, I took up the half-time post as Fresh Expressions Coordinator for the United Reformed Church after the denomination had become a partner in the movement.

My original remit was to discover where fresh expressions of church were already happening, but the mapping exercise didn't quite happen as first planned and the bulk of the job has seen me acting as an advocate of fresh expressions and pioneering at all levels of the church – and I just love it!

Since then, I've witnessed quite a few changes but have always been delighted when local churches suddenly 'get' fresh expressions and embrace what God is doing through fresh expressions of church. It's wonderful to see them making mission their top priority and starting to discern what's going on as they join the movement of the Holy Spirit in their own communities.

It has also been a blessing to be invited to various ministers' summer/winter schools, where discussions about new ways of being church are lively and thought-provoking – with some of those gatherings leading to local invitation to facilitate further discussions. It's great to know that some of those ministers go home to share fresh ideas with their churches across the UK, building enthusiasm for mission and new ways of being church.

At the recent URC General Assembly, it was good to hear the term 'fresh expressions' used in many of the discussions; in some respects it's becoming part of the URC language. However, at the same General Assembly, Fresh Expressions team leader Phil Potter addressed a very-well attended fringe meeting and it became clear that there are wide variations in levels of understanding, so there is plenty of work to be done!

At congregation and ministerial level, there is still a fear of change; I don't think this is any different in the URC to any other denomination. We are witnessing something new, which is very scary for a lot of churches – and many church members find it difficult to accept that there are two or three generations who have never heard of Jesus Christ and never set foot inside a church. These churches don't understand why others won't just come to church 'like we did when we were young' and they don't realise that cultural change means that people (not just young people) don't feel obliged to accept the 'hymn sandwich' approach to worship when society expects interaction.

Yet they see the age of their own members increase, and numbers fall, and cannot bring themselves to try something new. It's not that they stubbornly insist on staying the same, it's more a case of them not knowing where – or how – to turn, and anyway, their own church is providing sufficient spiritual nourishment for them, so why should they change?

That's where the message of the mixed economy is so, so important. When I talk to these congregations and leadership teams, I always start by reassuring them that any fresh expression of church, inspired by the promptings of the Holy Spirit, will run alongside their current church and definitely not replace it. Mind you, I do get them to examine what it really means to be a welcoming church – and that can cause a few uncomfortable moments. It's also important to explain that the new expression of church will never be a bridge into their current Sunday service, which again can cause a few murmurs.

Interestingly I've noticed that the churches that are currently in vacancy are often the ones that respond most quickly to the message of fresh expressions. In the URC, the vacancy period is normally at least two years, meaning that these churches have been forced into close self-inspection and started to realise that they need to adapt to new ways of thinking as they work together without a minister.

Like other denominations, during the last two years, the URC has forged ahead in introducing pioneer ministers into some of the Synods (regions). These ministers are discerning the way forward, looking and listening for ways to set up fresh expressions of church in their own areas. This has led to some important discussions in the church about the nature of ministry, ordination and church leadership. I think the URC is unique in that we have a recognised ministry called Church Related Community Worker (CRCW). These ministers are commissioned to help the church live out its calling to serve as Christ in the community; this can lead to some confusion, because CRCW ministry can look similar to Pioneer ministry. CRCWs make a huge difference as they encourage churches to engage with their communities, and bring the Gospel message to those who may not otherwise hear. Their remit is to enrich the community, whilst the pioneer remit is to develop a new worshipping community.

The URC is working hard to embed fresh expressions into its everyday life, and I believe we're now starting to see the difference in our denomination.