ministries
humanitarian
community service |
PASTOR THE COMMUNITY, NOT JUST MEMBERS,
ADVENTIST CHURCH LEADERS URGE
[Taashi Rowe/ANN]
| We
must work in the community as
people who desire the good of
others--reflecting Jesus' love
for humanity. |
|
When was the last time your church focused on
problems outside its doors? If you can't remember,
you are not alone. There are many other Seventh-day
Adventists who do little to alleviate the suffering
of those in their communities. According to
a 2002 world survey of Adventists, only 29 percent
of church members were involved in community
service.
This number may come as a surprise, since Adventists
have founded and today lead a number of humanitarian
organizations. Such organizations include Adventist
Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), Adventist
Community Services, Adventist AIDS International
Ministry and the Dorcas Society.
While these organizations are an important part
of the world church's efforts to help those
less fortunate, Dr. May-Ellen Colon, assistant
director for the world church's Sabbath School/Personal
Ministries (SS/PM) department, says the average
church member is not often personally involved
in community service.
At its 2005 General Conference Session the Adventist
world church
recast its approach to sharing the gospel message
between 2005 and 2010. With the "Tell the
World" vision, the church intends to "increase
the percentage of church members involved in
community service from 29 percent to at least
40 percent."
Colon is responsible for nudging members beyond
church doors to make that vision a reality.
She also heads training programs for church
leaders globally to improve community service.
"Twenty-nine percent is abysmal,"
Colon says. This might be a result of more traditional
outreach that generally holds activities at
the church. But Colon says, "instead of
making the community come to us we're going
to them."
"It's not all about us," she continues.
Colon envisions that every
Adventist church will engage in a more community-based
ministry that creates a church that is an indispensable
to the community. "We need a paradigm shift
... Pastors should pastor the community not
just the church," she explains.
At that same 2005 meeting Kenneth Flemmer, from
ADRA, noted, "The official mission of Seventh-day
Adventists calls for a compassionate ministry
for the poor, but there is such a focus on evangelism
that there is a neglected theology of ministry
to people's physical and human needs."
"Lots of people think that it is a traditional
part of Adventism not to
be involved in community work," agrees
Monte Sahlin, a vice president for creative
ministries at the Columbia Union Conference
in the United States, "but that's a malformed
Adventism that came about in the 1920s and 1930s
[when the church decided to focus mostly on
evangelism]. The early pioneers of the Adventist
church were deeply involved in issues of injustice
and social involvement."
Colon, though, stresses that there are many
Adventist churches already very involved in
their communities. In a recent SS/PM departmental
newsletter Sharing, Colon lists several such
churches. In Virginia, United States, the Summerville
Adventist Church sponsors the only childcare
center in the county, as well as after-school
programs in several public schools. The Central
Coast Community Church in Australia, in conjunction
with the Red Cross and Sanitarium Health Food
Company, feeds breakfast to at-risk children
five days a week at the local primary public
school. And in Seoul, Korea, the Central Church
runs a popular vegetarian restaurant from Monday
to Friday in their church. They also provide
Sabbath meals, haircuts, and free health diagnoses
to aged people in their community.
Colon talks of uniting social ministry with
evangelical ministry. She
refers to the writings of one of the Adventist
church's founders, Ellen G. White, who calls
this kind of ministry Jesus Christ's Method--by
showing people you care about their physical
problems, you open the doors to addressing spiritual
problems as well.
In some ways Colon sees this renewed effort
at community outreach as a way to enhance and
transform traditional witnessing methods.
Sahlin, who has written three books on the subject
including Ministries of Compassion and Understanding
Your Community, says there is no denying "community
involvement is absolutely essential to church
growth."
She cautions against just arbitrarily deciding
what programs may best suit the community. Instead,
she suggests working with the communities and
their leaders to find out what needs the church
can fill. "Why invent new ways of doing
what others have done when you can partner with
already successful programs?" she asks.
She also notes, "in this age of fast food,
fast results and fast
baptisms, this kind of ministry may not gain
immediate converts to
Adventism but we must work in the community
as people who desire the good of others--reflecting
Jesus' love for humanity." |
|
|
UPDATES |
The mission is to share the love of God to the
community, from a material and spiritual point
of view.
The more member of the church are involve in
the program, the more effectif will be the sharing.
Please consider to join the group at the next
meeting. Everybody's welcome. |
|