(FFM) of the Christian Reformed Church is gaining momentum for its work just a year after the denominationās Board of Trustees approved its curriculum proposal but said there was little money to fund it.
Within the past two months, Syd Hielema, team leader of FFM, has secured about $65,000 in funding from a foundation and other donors to continue the work of the ministry, including funding the updates to curriculum.
With that new funding, the ministry is going ahead with much of the program proposed a year ago, including a , developing for churches when they evaluate their curriculum options, and hiring a childrenās ministry catalyzer. There will soon be reviews of current popular curricula.
What has not yet begun are the refreshing of the curriculum and the addition of a Dwell at Home piece to complement it. Budget for those projects is estimated at $143,000, with ongoing annual costs of $45,000 for the two.
Faith Formation Ministries was formed by Synod 2015 after Faith Alive (the curriculum publishing agency of the CRC) was dissolved in 2013. (Synod is the annual leadership meeting of the CRC.) The Faith Alive brand remains.
Hielema noted that FFMās approach to ministry is different from Faith Alive. Rather than being programmatic, FFMās approach sees faith formation as coming from home, through childrenās programming like Sunday school, and from faith formation practices of entire congregations.
Hielema said in an interview with The Banner that significant emphasis is going to be on helping congregations equip parents. āWe are discerning that traditional modes of exercising faith formation in the home are falling by the way.ā As fewer families eat together, dinner devotions donāt happen. He said that in an age of expected parental perfectionism, parents feel inadequate to be spiritual leaders for their children.
Faith formation has traditionally happened through programs, such as Sunday school, GEMS, and Cadets. āI believe we are in a post programmatic context. We donāt cancel programs, but programs alone canāt do the job. We need . . . multiple places during the week where significant reminders of what it means to follow Jesus are part of our environment.ā Hielema said itās not about keeping curriculum alive but embedding curriculum as one part of a faith formation immersive environment.
About the Author
Gayla Postma retired as news editor for The Banner in 2020.