Building the Leadership Team
The Interim Steering
Committee
This
committee will include some of the leaders who represent networks or key areas
of direction or who are apostolic or prophetic leaders of the city. Their main
roles will be to:
·
encourage the emergence of the relational
dynamics across the city
·
develop the listening progressions leading up
to a City Strategy Consultation.
·
integrate longer term strategic plans and goals
into formats that mobilize.
The Poor Wise Man
Crucial
in this is the discovery of the "poor wise man" (or woman) of the city[37] who can
give Leadership to the process. This
person needs to build around himself a team that integrates the leaders of many
major groupings (networks, pastors' fraternities, movements, denominational
leaders, leaders of cities within the city) in the mega-city.
Those
from a more Pentecostal background talk of leaders who have a mantle of
authority.
This
must of necessity also be someone with
enough organizational structure from which to develop a citywide process. At minimum this requires freedom of a
significant bloc of time weekly, from a day to full time, secretarial and
admin. backup, adequate volunteer labor for developing the infrastructure for
conferences and events, and sufficient financial structure to be able to
capitalize them.
Such
a person, who has built relationships
through serving leaders in the city can pull together the city leaders. Others trying to do so find that they have
plans to implement but they are listened to and not followed through.
The Gamaliel Principle
As
in the emergence of pastoral Leadership in a church, so at the city Leadership
level, the quality of wisdom becomes a determining factor in the acceptance of
a leader. The word of advice, the timely
Gamaliel type of word, the ability to create consensus, are all qualities
needed. The apostle
James was the first Christian
city coordinator, leader of the first apostolic Leadership team in
Jerusalem. He writes:
Who
is wise and understanding among you? Let
him show it by his good life, by deeds done in the humility that comes from
wisdom. But if you harbour bitter envy and selfish ambition in your hearts do
not boast about it or deny the truth....But the wisdom that comes from above is
first of all pure, then peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of mercy
and good fruit, impartial and sincere.
Peacemakers who sow in peace raise a harvest of righteousness
(James 3:13-18).
At
the same time it seems it is the mantle of an overwhelming vision that seems to
mark city leaders I have met, rather than the grace of wisdom. It is their capacity to make things happen
and get people mobilized rather than simply the fullness of character that
marks good Leadership. It seems the
Peter-style Leadership rather than James-style wisdom is central.
Urban Leadership Networking Centers
The
final measure of a season of citywide revival will be the extent to which new
lay Leadership has emerged. That
requires simple training models. It
requires the emergence of defined lay Leadership roles that provide status,
security and learning environments for emerging leaders. There are models of Leadership in any
culture. Identifying these and
collectively facilitating their development will give longevity to the fruits
of revival.
There
are urban training centres in a number of cities, such as
Doug Hall's
Emmanual
Center in Boston, or CUTS in
Philadelphia, or Pentecostal
training schools attached to mega-churches in many cities. Each of these are
contexts where emerging leaders and poor leaders can tell of their problems and
rejoice in their stories with others.
They are centres of reflection on the stories of their peers. Urban ministry is so diverse that learning
institutions based on didactic models do not produce the kind of responsive
leaders needed.
Lay
Leadership and House
Church Dynamics
Leadership,
structuring, and developing an environment for the work of the Spirit will only
be effective in growth to the extent that small group movements develop . Since the reformation, the home has been the
center of the church. The extent of
family devotional disciplines is the measure of effective penetration of the
city.
Howard Snyder has written extensively
on small group dynamics in churches.[38]
In Cry of the Urban Poor I have
written two chapters on movement dynamics.[39] Ralph Neighbour has popularized small
house church modeling.[40]
In
most countries the small group dynamic is developed through church-planting
approaches. Poor people need churches
(with buildings) for 70-200, and nightly worship, lead by a strong charismatic
leader. Their homes are too small for
house churches, though the church may begin in Bible studies in multiple homes. But in Western countries and among middle
class people the idea of churches meeting in the lounges of larger homes has
struck a modern day cultural chord.
Leadership is more interactive.
Homes are large enough. There is
an educated culture that likes to discuss issues. Both of these models and many in between
emerge levels of lay Leadership.
Apart
from the conversion rate and depth of Holy Spirit lead revival dynamics, it is
the mentoring, facilitating, serving of these emergent leaders that determines
the growth of the future church of the city.
The Role
of the Mega-Church
Small
churches usually do not have sufficient logistical resources to influence other
churches and to influence the city.
Often it is para-church movements that take Leadership in the city for
these provide contexts for those with apostolic, or prophetic or visionary
giftings. However, logistical
constraints remain an issue. For this
reason the mega-church, the large city church has a strategic role. It has resources in people, administrative
structure and financially.
On
the other hand the mega-church rarely partners well. It has been built by going about its own
business. Smaller churches do not trust
it. It tends to subsume them under its
own objectives. In many cities the
pastors work together minus the mega-church.
Ted Haggard[41] , pastor of a church of
4,000 in Colorado Springs has some useful ideas
in this regard that would encourage a larger church in its partnering with
other churches in the city. His thesis
is that a large church cannot grow unless there are surrounding churches of a
reasonable size. Hence the mega-church must encourage church growth in the
whole city, rather than seeking to upbuild only itself.