Made for Mission. Tim Glemkowski. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Tim Glemkowski
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Словари
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781681924595
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Culture

       Chapter 2 Diagnosing Your Parish

       Chapter 3 Addressing the Real Crisis

       Chapter 4 The First Key: Cast Vision

       Chapter 5 The Second Key: Craft a Clear Path to Discipleship

       Chapter 6 Win, Build, Send

       Chapter 7 The Third Key: Mobilize Leaders

       Chapter 8 The Fourth Key: Align Everything

       Conclusion Responding to Our Cultural Moment

       Appendix 1 Resources for Culture Change

       Appendix 2 Simple and Practical Ideas for Implementing the Four Keys

       Notes

      Author’s Note

      I wrote this book for you, the parish leader, influencer, staff member, priest, or pastor. There is an old Chinese curse, “May he live in interesting times.” It is no secret that we live in difficult and interesting times for our world and in our Church, but it is no accident that God has chosen us for these times. No matter our frailties and weaknesses, our sinfulness and worries, God has put us in this place for a reason, and he has committed to us some definite good to do. Somehow, in some way, we are called to be a part of the renewal of the Church that is so desperately needed, both for the sake of our members and those who are still outside the Church.

      I hope that you find this book to be a benefit and a support in your labors. Please know of my prayers for you, that God will make you the great saint he has called you to be, that he will bless your efforts to renew your parish’s culture, and that he will bring many others to himself through your efforts.

      God bless you.

      Foreword

      I’m a science fiction nerd. (Bear with me, this will be relevant in just a few sentences.)

      That’s why one of my favorite quotes from any movie comes from the title character of the 1984 cult-classic movie, The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension. In a moment of intentional profundity, Buckaroo lays down the following wisdom: “No matter where you go, there you are.”

      It’s an axiom that is so self-evident it almost acts as a caricature — and yet it has stuck with me through all these years as a reminder to be present to whatever geographical, social, cultural, or historical context in which I find myself.

      That’s a lesson the Church needs to learn today.

      The Church currently occupies a particularly fraught and changing sociocultural space in the twenty-first century. Books like Forming Intentional Disciples and sociological studies from Gallup and the Pew Research Center have brought these realities to our attention, but more urgently, we are living them out in parishes all across North America and Europe.

      Certainly, the news isn’t all doom and gloom. Life in the twenty-first century — with global instability, the breakdown of former superpowers, and a growing persecution of Christians across the globe — is more like life in the early Church, which was one of the greatest and most accelerated periods of Church growth not fueled simply by “birthing” new Catholics. Post-modernity, while resistant to truth claims, has a particular heart for stories, and we believe in a God who has invited us into his very story — the story of an unending and triumphant love.

      In such a time as this, the last thing the Church needs is another program, another canned response, or a structural process that purports to do the hard work of accompaniment and disciple-making. The crisis the Church faces today is one of discipleship, and that crisis extends to almost every layer of leadership in the Church. Discipleship and evangelization cannot be understood from the outside. Without a personal relationship with Christ and practical experience in helping others encounter Christ, walking with them into relationship with him, forming them as mature disciples, and equipping them as missionary focused men and women eager to share Christ with others, parish and diocesan leaders will be unable to create cultures and structures that support evangelization and mission. In short, they will be unable to bear the particular fruit that Jesus expects.

      That’s what excites me so much about this book.

      Tim Glemkowski is a personal friend and a colleague. He is passionate, knowledgeable, and articulate. But more importantly, he possesses the kind of experience that Church leaders need today. Made for Mission breaks open the hard-won wisdom Tim has gained by laboring in the trenches and “doing” the work of renewal alongside dozens of parishes. In this book, he presents a very Christ-centered approach to cultural change and parish transformation.

      But be warned.

      What you have before you is not a silver bullet, or a detailed playbook that you can use to check off the right steps and simply glide into the new reality of your parish. Rather, it is a masterclass in the application of critical principles through which our parishes, in cooperation with the grace of God, can truly be transformed.

      The hard work — the blood, sweat, and tears — are all yours.

      This book, however, provides a clear path.

      In my work with almost a hundred parishes and dioceses over the last twenty years in the area of parish transformation and renewal, I would have been blessed beyond measure to possess a resource like this.

      God bless you as you dive into its pages and continue on your journey of parish renewal.

      Deacon Keith Strohm

      Author of Ablaze: 5 Essential Paradigm Shiftsfor Parish Renewal Executive Director, M3 Ministries

      Chapter 1

       Changing Culture in a Changing Culture

      The very last Blockbuster video store in the United States can be found in the town of Bend, Oregon.1 The franchisee who proudly operates this last bastion of a key 1990s cultural touchpoint said in an interview: “It’s very nostalgic. We have a bunch of 19-year-olds working here; it’s fun explaining to them what a floppy disk was.”2

      Personally, it is strange for me to believe that a Blockbuster store can already be considered “nostalgic.” I do not feel old enough to have such vivid memories of something that is now of a past era. Nothing defined my middle school years more than riding my bike down to our local Blockbuster store to rent the latest video game (I found that a five-day rental period was enough time to finish a game … if you didn’t eat or sleep) or a Chris Farley movie.

      The glory of Blockbuster was in the experience of visiting the store itself. People would spend twenty minutes combing through the various aisles looking for a movie, finally whittling their decision down to one or two options before just taking the plunge. Often, the movie you came in to rent was not the one you ended up getting because you stumbled on an old favorite or saw that fresh-out-of-theaters title you had been meaning to see. Then, as you reached