Our denomination-wide ministry plan, Our Journey 2020, speaks of our desire as a Christian Reformed Church to grow leaders for our churches and ministries: āOur churches and ministries will grow new leaders of many kinds. At all levelsālocal, regional, denominationalāwe discover the talents, skills, and strengths in our ordained and lay people. We cultivate those gifts through education, hands-on ministry opportunities, and guidance from mature leaders in order to raise new leaders who have deep roots and yield abundant fruit.ā
Yet we know that living into this statement of intent can be difficult. Our congregations and ministries donāt exist in self-contained bubbles. Instead, we serve as Christās representatives in our communities, nations, and world, where many beliefs compete for our attention and acceptance.
Gone are the times when truth was universally found in a transcendent God or even in rational thought and science. Instead, we live in a time of āfake newsā and competing narratives where truth can be understood from within each personās own construction.
This becomes especially challenging as our world presents us with more and more issues to navigate. Whether these issues are babies genetically edited before birth or complex immigration policy, it often seems that the church is faced with a cacophony of competing voices telling us how Christians should respond.
Leadership becomes especially important in these confusing times. The characteristics of these leaders are also important. As Christians, we need gifted, faith-filled leaders who can direct our spiritual walk, foster civil dialogue, discern the Spiritās leading, and guide our participation in the world.
We need men and women of God who understand the times in which we live and can show us how to give witness to the faith we have in Christ, just as in Old Testament times when there were those āfrom Issachar, men who understood the times and knew what Israel should doā (1 Chron. 12:32).
Whether these leaders are parents around the dinner table reading the , volunteers leading a GEMS or Cadets group or discipling others during a Coffee Break session, deacons fostering community outreach, or pastors leading a congregation, all these forms of leadership are important to our congregations in a variety of ways, from a variety of people, and at all levels.
And this leadership doesnāt stop with todayās challenges. As we look to the future and the new issues, challenges, and opportunities that may arise, it is also essential that weāas a denominationāraise up a new generation of leaders.
Let us seek out those with leadership potential in our congregationsā youth groups, among emerging immigrant congregations, in college classrooms or InterVarsity Christian Fellowship groups, and any other place where leaders may be found. Let us share openly the leadership gifts we see in these men and women and provide them with opportunities to develop and use those skills. Let us encourage them to continue to grow and then walk alongside them by lending faithful support to seminary education, online learning, mentoring, and prayer.
Only through such efforts will we be able to achieve the desired future of Our Journey 2020 of raising up new leaders who āhave deep roots and yield abundant fruit.ā
About the Author
Steven Timmermans served as the executive director of the Christian Reformed Church in North America from 2014 to 2020.
Steven Timmermans se desempeĆ±Ć³ como director ejecutivo de la Iglesia Cristiana Reformada en AmĆ©rica del Norte de 2014 a 2020.
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