What is My part in Building a Church Community? -Ep.252

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What is my part in building community? -Ep.252 – Run With Horses Podcast

 

Take responsibility for your community.

1. Know your Purpose.

Build your community by keeping your purpose in mind and reminding yourself of how your contribution matters.

As a leader, provide people with vision and line of sight so they are crystal clear about the broader purpose of the organization and how their work fits into the whole.

2. Help others know that they Belong.

Plato said, “The part cannot be well unless the whole is well.” Communities take care of their members and vice versa. Stay in touch with people. Invest time and energy in maintaining your relationships.

As a leader, Have frequent meetings with your team so you can coordinate tasks and ensure people are making meaningful connections. Encourage relational ties.

3. Face Challenges well.

Strong communities adapt and become stronger as they cope together. Embrace conflict and diversity—working through differences of opinion and making space for civil discourse and the learning that occurs from appreciating multiple points of view.

As a leader, support people if they try something new and fail. Don’t let perfection get in the way of progress. If you’re not seeing some mistakes or missteps, your team may not be reaching high enough.

*Reference

Tracy Brower, PhD
https://www.forbes.com/sites/tracybrower/2020/10/25/how-to-build-community-and-why-it-matters-so-much/?sh=57cd6675751b

How to build community in your church.

1. Cultivate and support small groups.

The key is to build a time of prayer, a devotion and fellowship into each meeting.

2. Train small group leaders to do the work of pastoral ministry.

No pastor, no matter how caring, can provide personal attention to more than a dozen or so people at a time.

3. Be willing to give up expediency. Take time.

If we want to build authentic community, sometimes the labor-intensive choice is the best choice.

4. Preach and teach regularly on the importance of caring.

Caring means reaching out to new people in meaningful ways, like sharing a meal with them or inviting them on an activity.

5. Set a good example.

Be the first to show up at events and the last to leave. It takes time to build community.

It takes hard work, vigilance and a commitment to training laypeople to do the work of ministry (Ephesians 4:11-16)

*Reference

Lisa Price

https://influencemagazine.com/Practice/Five-Ways-to-Build-Community-in-Your-Church