OUR
QUADRENNIAL MANIFESTO:
“WHERE
THERE IS VISION THE PEOPLE FLOURISH”
Allow me a few paragraphs to
delineate where we are in the Department of Lay Ministry
especially if you do not happen to be a Connectional Board,
Annual CME Convocation, General Conference, or
www.cme.org website aficionado as they pertain to the
department.
Too Busy Doing The Work
We have assumed that if we busied
ourselves within the Department of Lay Ministry actually doing
ministry that folk would see the evidence and fruits of our
labors and appreciate it.
Instead of busying ourselves writing
about our aspirations, hopes, and dreams we have focused on the
business of fulfilling and achieving them.
This General Secretary often speaks
in the collective terminology of “we” because there are so many
people, for little to no compensation, within this department
that really makes it go and maintain vibrancy.
Chief among them is Chief Dr. I.
Carlton Faulk (General Secretary Emeritus of Lay Ministry), the
Chairman of the department, Bishop Thomas L. Hoyt, Jr., and my
wife, Wanda.
But, there are so many, many others
like the Stewardess President, Mrs. Maxine McClury; Mr. Darran
Caudle, Director of Video Ministry; the chair of the
Communications of Information & Technology (CIT) ministry, Sis.
Theresa Duhart; and the Director of Online Services, Mrs. Lauran
James.
Scores of others are active behind
the scenes working diligently and efficaciously.
We are building repeatable models for
expanding the reach and breathe of the department by involving
learned and erudite CME members like Dr. Evelyn Parker. She is
working in place of the general secretary and on behalf of the
department as an executive board member of the National Council
of Churches USA.
Annually, we have sojourned to Africa
and helped spread the vision of spiritual enlightenment and
economic empowerment now under the committed guidance of Bishop
Ronald M. Cunningham.
We have built a tremendous convention
services platform known as “CME TV”. We have a wonderful cadre
of CME members, some of whom lend previous audiovisual skills,
but many who have been trained by us from the ground up to
operate a portable professional audiovisual services ministry.
Consequently, we have been able to
save money for every CME convention we have worked based on
comparable market costs.
For example, a comparable service for
the 18th Annual CME Convocation may have cost the
church a minimum $20,000 extra. Additionally, CME TV gives
thousands of dollars of audiovisual sales revenue back to the
Convocation where no such revenues previously existed.
Importantly, the Convocation is now operating in the black
turning a profit in lieu of a deficit.
Increasingly, connecting the grass
root local churches and local church members to not only the
Department of Lay Ministry but, to all other departments,
Episcopal Districts, and local churches is the incredibly
successful
www.c-m-e.org which is the official CME website.
And coming soon, still beta testing
in the First Episcopal District, is the “CyberChurch”
initiative. CyberChurch is a secure, online, comprehensive
church management solution. Currently, Presiding Prelates may
direct electronic reporting by local churches for any and all
accounting meetings. CIT members in the respective Episcopal
Districts may coordinate regional training at the direction of
their Presiding Prelate.
We have long planned and will soon
name a Director of Christian Methodist Men’s Fellowship to
extend a vision of ministry to focus on urgent needs among our
boys and men.
We have established a permanent
funding method for the W.L. Graham/ Roscoe C. Webb Scholarship
Fund. Although, the previous treasurer of the Connectional Lay
Council, Mrs. Eleanor Lowery, had collected less than $2,000 for
the fund prior to 1998, the fund now has a has a balance of more
than $75,000.
The funding plan includes depositing
the disciplinary required annual contribution to the Department
of Lay Ministry from the annual Connectional Lay Days throughout
the country and the sell of lay pins and lay manuals.
We have been busy about the work of
the Department in a detailed, documented, repeatable, scalable,
and transparent manner.
By the Way
Even though the Department of Lay
Ministry serves as repository and custodian for the many assets
we have purchased and developed the past several years – all of
these assets and the benefits thereto belong to the CME Church.
These assets are principally deployed for ministry enhancement
in the CME Church.
Consequently, when CME TV bids CME
convention events the price includes only labor costs and a
small addition to assist insurance and repair charges. The
Department has not and will not attempt to recover equipment
costs from CME events.
Of course, the church is fully
authorized through its well-established entities to do as it
wishes with these assets at any time.
The Department of Lay Ministry is
very sensitive to the necessity to operate CME TV for the
corporate benefit of the church.
Consequently, we instituted reform in
the handling of our connectional funds. In fact, the Department
of Lay Ministry sends all monies through the Business Department
of the CME Church, that is, the Department of Finance.
The Department of Lay Ministry does
not custody any funds or even write its own checks. The
Department does not possess a checkbook and has not written a
check from the Department since the election of this General
Officer in 1998. All checks are written by the Department of
Finance.
Why CME TV?
Senior Bishop Marshall Gilmore has
framed the issue, ‘What would Jesus have me to do?’ rather than
‘what would Jesus do (wwjd)?’
For the Department of Lay Ministry,
at all levels, we believe that communications of information and
technology is what Jesus would have the lay people do and not
only that but, it is exactly what Jesus did.
Have you ever considered how Jesus,
without any electronic aid, was able to communicate with
probably 10,000 people all at one time?
Jesus and the disciples clearly had
to utilize acoustically friendly environments. That is to say,
they possessed technical literacy.
They did advance planning, secured
the necessary licenses, and it is not unreasonable to assume
they advertised – distributed leaflets, flyers, and hand bills
‘Jesus of Nazareth Speaking Today’.
So then, they were technocrats,
information technologists, and maybe even geeks.
Jesus and the disciples wanted as
many folk as humanly possible to hear about Him, to see Him, to
know Him, to follow Him.
Jesus and the disciples in preaching
and teaching were contemporary urban technocrats.
My fellow
laity this is our hope and charge today.
Not to be
the Pastor or try to speak, teach, or be in charge in his/her
place. Our task at every level is to see to it the message gets
out and replicates itself over and over and over again.
The only way to even remotely accomplish
this today is to be multimedia literate. There is at least one
denomination today that owns a cable channel while some of us
remain mired in a thought process ending in the throw away
phrase, “it don’t take all that”.
However, over and over, throughout our
great Zion we hear the plea and complaint that someone didn’t
know.
As much as our
own church members “don’t know”, is it not reasonable to assume
the world doesn’t know either? Certainly, they do not know
enough about us, that is, the CME Church.
So it does take
all that and then some to maintain relevance in a 21st
century of great challenge for regular parishioner and potential
member attention.
The 21st
century local church must be big and great – not in numerical
strength – but, in the power of its ideas.
If That’s All It Is - It’s Enough
Recently, a prominent and active lay
member asked if the Department of Lay Ministry was going to do
anything other than technology.
After a long list of other things we
are doing, this General Secretary further commented, however,
“if it’s the only thing
people know we accomplished it would be enough to be known for
broadly launching the CME Church into 21st century
multimedia ministry.”
We must eschew the ephemerally
attractive call to continue production of eight track tapes in
an mp3 world.
Jesus would have us to be wise and
erudite because committing to the cause of Christ has never
required commission of intellectual suicide.
To be sure, the structure of the CME
Church has always contemplated a robust, informed, and literate
lay ministry.
The laity serves best when its energy
extends the best of learned, dynamic, vibrant, and just
practices to the church locally, regionally, and connectionally.
The laity must commit to being best
at leading, teaching, extending, and executing these “best
practices”.
Many, and sometimes most, members of
the local church exist in roster name and high holiday season
only. As the popular internet and popular electronic game
expression goes, they exist “virtually”.
However, many of these virtual
members are, in fact, being spiritually advised. It is through
television, radio, and other media forms.
Many of the concepts, precepts, and
teachings of “virtual pastors” that inform them play determinate
roles in their lives. Not only that, but, some of these virtual
members are among the most technically literate and financially
capable in their community.
Many of our local congregations are
viewed by these virtual members as white elephants: fun to be
around and take your picture with but, dangerous to tarry too
close for fear of predatory hunters, being squashed by
inadvertent pachyderm activity, or phobias to anachronism.
And then, of course, too many of our
regular local church attendants, like a pensioner already
receiving social security benefits, are content to proceed full
steam in place.
Others are left to define the stark
choice we have.
The choice is not whether we should
continue with business as usual.
The choice is whether we will embrace
21st century multimedia ministry or like the white
elephant population continue to shrink numerically and
influentially.
Consider this
We believe the era of the horse and
buggy has both literally and figuratively passed.
Yet there are those who posit in this
21st century information age that effective
persuasion may only take place by the departmental General
Officer traveling to different regions to conduct training
sessions. Such a mentality equates to an argument the best
cross country travel in the United States remains the horse and
buggy.
As we have previously written, the
CME Church has finally embraced technologically enhanced 21st
century ministry at the Connectional level by approving the
Communications of Information & Technology (CIT) Ministry in
1998, proceeded by a modicum of funding provided in 2002.
However, who is responsible to take
on the dynamic and challenging issues of working with the
College of Bishops and all the General Officers to see to it
that a CIT net is effectively cast in each Episcopal District
and in each of the several connectional officers ministry.
Of course the CIT Ministry is taking
up this mantle presently but, it requires a great deal of
cooperative work with the College of Bishops and General
Officers. Presently nothing is codified in law or even
effectively enough understood as to how any such legislation
might look.
Further, might such an ambitious and
urgent ministry itself be a free standing department, as in the
United Methodist Church, or minimally take on a much more robust
nature within the Department of Lay Ministry.
There are those who seem to suggest
that if many members of our Zion are not yet ready for the 21st
century the church must do its level best to delay its arrival.
Notwithstanding, this potentially
pervasive attitude, this General Secretary believes there is a
latent and more potently pervasive urgency to develop these
ministries rapidly and close our technological gap versus the
majority populace.
VISION
We do not believe when new vision is
cast it is immediately embraced, however, we feel a great
portion of the landscape we are sowing is simply a journey “back
to future.” We earlier discussed the reflection of technical
literacy exhibited by Jesus’ disciples.
By reaching back and embracing the
best of our past we establish the most effervescent course to
our future.
By continuing to more and more widely
cast this vision we bring more and more adherents.
We believe this sojourn – honor for
the past, vision for the future – will light our Zion and all
who serve it.
For where there is vision the people
flourish.
Dr. Victor Taylor, General Secretary Department of Lay Ministry
February, 2005
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