Thursday, December 17, 2009

Vision-driven, not Anxiety-Ridden

I will speak plainly: in the next 60 days, New ACT must make some of the most difficult decisions it has faced. We've committed to begin sharing the essence of our "plan of union" with you for review and discussion by March. Over the next 60 days we will be finalizing recommendations on:
  • a 2010 new conference budget (including program ministry funding levels)
  • Health and Property/Liability Insurance
  • Pension recommendations
  • Clergy Minimum Salaries
  • 2011 apportionment figures
Again, let me speak plainly: we have some challenging choices to make. With Troy's Vermont churches uniting with the New England Conference and Wyoming's Pennsylvania churches uniting with the new Susquehanna Conference, Upper New York will have fewer churches supporting ministries in the second half of 2010 (when we are a new conference). Health care costs would have risen for Upper New York churches regardless of whether we were uniting or not, but that still means we will all see increased costs. Differences in way we have packaged clergy benefits across the region have made balancing fairness for clergy with financial manageability for local churches a significant dilemma.

The situation is complex and (at times!) anxiety producing.

One thing about anxiety I've learned through the years is that it thrives in a "vision vacuum." If you lack a sense of direction and destination, anxiety will move right in and gum up the works quicker than you can say "worry and fret."

That's why in the face of these significant challenges New ACT spent a good chunk of its last meeting getting clear again about the principles and values that guide our work. We did so because we have committed ourselves to be vision-driven, not anxiety-ridden.

I'm going to lay these out for you below, hoping you'll ponder them and offer some feedback (you can do that by clicking the link below. Please...!)

So here they are:
  • The Upper New York State Annual conference exists primarily to help persons “live the gospel of Jesus Christ and be God’s love to [their] neighbors."
  • The local church is the primary setting where the purpose and vision of the annual conference is enacted; therefore, the first priority of the annual conference is to engage, equip, and empower local churches to be in ministry with and to our Global Neighborhood.
  • Vital and principled leadership is essential for effective local church ministry; therefore, encouraging and developing leadership within the laity and clergy that is diverse and engaged with the vision of Christ is the primary work of the annual conference.
  • “To be church” means “to be in mission;” therefore, the quality and quantity of relationships established with our neighbors, particularly those who have been disenfranchised by mainstream society is the primary measure of success for the annual conference, its congregations and its members.
  • The people of the Upper New York Area are linked by covenant with United Methodists around the world in shared ministry and mission; therefore, the Four Areas of Focus of The United Methodist Church are a primary resource to guide congregations and conferences in doing the work of ministry today.
These five principles (based on our "Vision and Purpose Statement" and the mission statement of The United Methodist Church) provide the framework by which New ACT will seek to make the challenging decisions we face.

Let me know what you think.

3 comments:

  1. as a methodist since birth, my views may seem radical at this juncture of church and God. our current beliefs do not match our founders in any way shape or form. what happened to sin and saving souls? be good, be nice and everything is beautiful is the current credo. preach a little old time methodist religion, and half your congregation will leave------the rest will stay and then the church can grow again. all the churches that are growing in our area are preaching the old message. why don't methodists read john wesley for a change-----see how he saw things. grants for celtic heresy studies, and tthrow old religion under the bus. lets go way back and study witchcraft, sun gods would be popular here in the northwoods. we all ready have tree worship. lets pile it all on and say how up-to-date we are. and not a soul will be saved from sin. and this will be on our plate to answer for on judgement day.

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  2. Bill, Thank you for articulating again and again the vision. I have appreciated the Advent bulletin inserts to help us during this season of "watching and waiting!" During the next few rapidly moving months the vision will become clearer and clearer for those of us further from the center.

    You and the New ACT leadership are in my prayers.

    Jeff Childs

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  3. I will also speak plainly. It would appear that there is no dilemma regarding the future of the lay staff of the conferences. They have all been laid off. What about their futures? What about their health insurance? Will they be entitled to unemployment? Does anybody care? Your lay staff should be a priority- not the forgotten ones. They need action and information.

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