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Women's Ministries

Targeting Comprehensive Christian Education

March 1, 2011 by Dennis

It never ceases to amaze me that anywhere in the world you say “Christian Education” people automatically think Sunday school. Is this the only Christian education the church does? If it is, then we are in big trouble. Let me explain.

In teaching the Christian Education (CE) courses in South Africa for eight years, the student’s first exercise was to list every church activity, i.e., worship, soup kitchens, Bible study, missions, etc. The challenge was for them to tell me which one was not CE! As you read further, that is my challenge to you, because the way you understand the educational ministry of your church will determine its spiritual depth. You disagree? Then my challenge is to prove my point.

Let’s start with missions. My contention is that missions is a sub-set of CE! What do missionaries do? They share the Gospel. To share the Gospel means to teach the meaning of the Gospel – this is CE! When there is a group of converts a church is started and training leaders is a number one priority. Training is CE! How about worship? Worship is leading people in worship to understand the importance of what they are doing. It is not only the sermon (which in itself is CE), but it is instructing the people to understand what they are singing and why. A well planned worship service is led by one who understands what it means to keep the people focused and aware of what they are doing. This too is CE!

View and download the complete Equip to Disciple Issue 1, 2011 (Acrobat Reader required).

Think about every ministry in your Church. Is there one thing that isn’t in actuality Christian education in some way?

So what is the point? In any good education program there must be good planning and coordination. This is where it appears that many churches fall short in seeing the big picture of what is really taking place.

If you had asked your child’s teacher what she was going to cover that year, how would you react if told she will figure that out as they go along? Imagine 12 years of this? Would anyone ever get an education? Then why do we think that we can do this in the church? This leads to a further challenge.

I will use several examples:

Youth: What are they being taught? Why? What is the plan? What should they know, be, and do after 4 years? Or is your group like most, simply teaching one topic this week and another the next; somehow hoping they will eventually develop a healthy Christian worldview by themselves. Is this what you want for your young people who will be going on to university where they will be confronted with philosophies that are not only not Christian, but in many cases anti-Christian? Have you really prepared them? This is like that teacher with no plan.

Bible studies: What is being studied? Why this study? What are you trying to accomplish in this group and study? At the end of this study what will they know, be, and do? Think about this – if you have no objectives then your objective is to accomplish nothing. But you say, “Our objective is to study the book of Romans.” Great! But what does that mean? If you ask the group at the end what they have learned about Romans you might be shocked that little was learned or remembered. Worse yet, little has happened to change anyone’s life. The goal for CE (discipleship) must be transformed lives! If our only goal is to cover a book, or to know a doctrine, then true discipleship has not taken place. Discipleship is moving people ever closer (by the work of the Holy Spirit) to being like Jesus (Rom. 8.29). So I ask you again, in your teaching, what are your goals for your group becoming more like Jesus? Will they see Jesus in every verse? Will they grow in their relationship with Jesus as a result of interacting with Romans?

Another area focuses on – preaching. Are your sermons planned for the next year? Why not? What are you trying to accomplish? What really “scares” me about wellmeaning preachers is when they say they believe they are discipling their people through their sermons. That is scary because you have already told me that you do not have a plan for what you hope your sermons will accomplish. How does your sermon connect with other teaching going on in the church? You have one ‘goal’ for this sermon and another for the next. If your people don’t know your objective, how can you expect them to figure it out when you haven’t? This is not discipleship; this is a hit-and-miss approach to giving disconnected information, with no thread to help the people tie it all together! This again is like the teacher you would not allow to teach your children.

Continued…

Filed Under: Children, Church Leadership, Men, Seniors, Women, Youth Tagged With: Children's Ministries, Church Leadership, Men's Ministries, Seniors' Ministries, Teachers/Disciplers, Women's Ministries, Youth Ministries

A Warm Welcome to the Women’s Leadership Training Conference First-Time Attendees

November 29, 2010 by Editor

Leadership Training

Adapted from an LT welcome speech given by Susan Phillis, who served as WASC Chairman from 2005-2007.

When was the last time you planned an event? Do you remember starting with the basic questions?

  • Who should come?
  • When should we have it?
  • Where will we meet?
  • What will we serve?
  • How will we spend our time?

That’s what your Women’s Advisory Sub-Committee (WASC) members have done in regard to this year’s Leadership Training.

The WASC chose, intentionally, to invite you to this event:

  • PresWIC leadership
  • Bible study leaders
  • Local church women’s ministry leaders
  • Directors of Women’s Ministry
  • PCA staff members

They made a conscious decision to invite you, because, as you will hear over and over again, we are one body, one church, one team, with one common purpose: to serve God’s church in ministering to people.

Some come as old friends, much like the TV show Cheers, “where everybody knows your name.” Some of you will come for the very first time, wondering why you ever agreed to do this, feeling frightened, isolated, and overwhelmed. Rest assured-everyone in the room has been in your shoes! And the feeling doesn’t last long.

I want you to know: GOD wants you here! You have been prayed for by name and chosen by Him to come and be encouraged and equipped for service.

Our purpose is simple: to train you so you can train others. We’re going to sharpen your skills, challenge your comfort zone, and connect you with other women in ministry. Our hope is as you sit under the teaching of our conference faculty, as you attend various workshops, as you hear testimonies from your sisters, as you gather in regional meetings, and as you meet the coordinators of PCA agencies and committees-through all of this-you will be encouraged and challenged to “fight the good fight of faith.”


Adapted from a welcome speech given by Jane Wiggins who currently serves as WASC chairman.

On behalf of the Women’s Advisory Sub-Committee (or WASC, as you will hear us called), I would like to welcome you to our Women’s Leadership Training Conference. We look forward to our time with you over the three days we will be together during the conference! We usually have many first-time attendees. (Last year the Mid-South, my region, had 20 of our 32 attending for the first time). As the PCA website states, the goal of the annual Leadership Training is to help equip and train you as leaders so that you, in turn, can take back to your women important foundational biblical truths to undergird your ministries as well as resources and ideas to enrich your ministries.

Our challenge each year is to be reminded of our purpose for women’s ministry. The purpose statement for women’s ministry as written by the PCA founding fathers in 1973 is one that you may know by heart: That every woman know Christ personally and be committed to extending His kingdom in her life, home, church, community, and throughout the world. I would ask you to consider these questions as you anticipate coming to the conference:

  • What IS the goal of your ministry? Is it a calendar filled with events, programs, Bible studies, and retreats…all good, mind you…but simply there because you “think” that this is what ministry is all about? (After all, you were handed a notebook, and this is what has been done year after year). Have you and your ministry team been in prayer as to what the over-all purpose should be? Then, is this purpose reflected in each of your ministry events, studies, and service projects for the year?
  • Is your ministry based upon biblical foundations and what God’s Word teaches about His design for women? Or has today’s culture painted its own picture of what a modern woman should be and this stamp is slowly being seen upon the lives of your women?
  • Does your ministry encourage women to love Christ, to love His Word, His people, and those outside the church? The gospel of Jesus Christ is not only the basis for coming to Christ but also must be what drives us in our daily lives. As one WASC member said, “Our discipleship must be gospel-driven or it simply becomes just another program and not the transforming power of Christ in our lives.”
  • The last question I have is one that is more personal. Does the love of Christ compel us? Is the love of Christ the driving force in our own lives? Do we spend time in His Word each day, a Word that has the power to new our minds? Do we seek His will in our lives and for the ministry to which He has called us? We know because scripture tells us that God’s Word has the power to transform. So I would ask, are our hearts being changed through the power of His Holy Spirit? Is so, and only then, can we as leaders hope to be used by Him in our ministries, in our families, and in our communities.

Lastly I want to encourage each of you to make the most of the three days together. Try to meet and engage in conversation with the many women at the conference that you do not know. I know…it’s hard sometimes to begin a conversation with a total stranger…it calls us to get out of our comfort zone, doesn’t it? Just remember that all of us will be in the same boat! Remember that because Christ has transformed our hearts, we will actually be meeting women who, although at the present may live in a distant state, we will one day live side-by-side in our eternal home!

Filed Under: Women Tagged With: Women's Ministries

Suggested LT Reading List

November 29, 2010 by Jane

Leadership Training

Please choose one of the following resources to read in preparation for coming to Leadership Training 2011. (We are full of grace, so there will be no test if you don’t!)

These selected resources will:

  1. Focus our hearts, minds, and ministry goals on the God and Gospel that calls us to serve.
  2. Remind us that it is not the latest marketing trends, nor well-crafted strategies, but humble, broken, obedient, prayinghearts tuned to God’s call of kingdom service and leadership founded on a biblical, covenantal approach to ministry.

A summary is available for each of the following-just click on the title. These are available through the CEP Bookstore. Call 1-800-283-1357 or visit www.cepbookstore.com to order.

  • Spiritual Leadership by J. Oswald Sanders – a classic!
  • The Heart of a Servant Leader – C. Jon Miller – pastoral, compassionate letters that model biblical leadership for the reader
  • Leadership for Women in the Church -Susan Hunt and Peggy Hutcheson – another classic!
  • Women’s Ministry in the Local Church – J. Ligon Duncan and Susan Hunt
  • Leading with a Limp – Dan B. Allender – What God can do with flawed leaders!
  • Leading with Love – Alexander Strauch
  • The Enduring Community – Brian Habig and Les Newsom – A useful picture of what the Bible has to say about His Church – a good training tool for leaders
  • The Church – Richard Phillips, Philip Ryken, Mark Dever -Reminds us of the context of our call to leadership and service – “The Church is the vessel for the display of God’s glory throughout the world.”

Filed Under: Women Tagged With: Women's Ministries

Dory, Optical Illusions, and the 2010 WIC Love Gift

October 6, 2010 by Editor

By Step Hubach

Over the years, our family has established a funny pattern of associating different people we know with characters in movies that we watch. This all started with my youngest son Tim, who has Down syndrome. When he was little, as a movie progressed, we’d all wait for him to identity the “who’s who” of that particular film. For example, if the movie was Sleeping Beauty (and it had been a tough parenting week) I pretty much cringed, expecting to be assigned the role of “Maleficent, the wicked fairy.” A better week might earn me a slot as “Princess Aurora, gifted with grace and beauty.” No one was exempt from a potential role. Family members, friends, and even church elders received assignments from time to time. (A balding elder at our church was once named “Yoda” from Star Wars. Sadly for him the name has stuck!) When the movie Finding Nemo came out a number of years ago, both my boys decided that I was definitely “Dory, the friendly but forgetful regal blue tang fish.” As a character that is both optimistic and somewhat easily distracted, I have to admit…oh, I forgot, what was I going to say? Anyway, Dory has a hard time staying focused.

StephIn our Christian life, we all have struggle with focus. And it often stems from focusing on the wrong things. You’ve probably seen the image before. It is a black and white optical illusion that reveals two totally different pictures depending on where you focus. If your eyes focus one way, you will see a vase. If they focus another way, you will see the silhouettes of two faces pointed towards each other. It all depends on your perspective. Both images are real-but only one can be the focus of the viewer.

In a similar way, our perspective on others in the body of Christ will impact what we see in them. When you focus on another individual, do you tend to see their deficits or do you tend to focus on their competencies? More often than not, we tend to view people-especially people with disabilities-from the orientation of what they cannot do. This view comes, in part, from an unbiblical worldview of disability-and therefore an inaccurate view of not only others, but also of us. The Bible teaches us that disability is a normal part of life in an abnormal world. Brokenness occurs across a spectrum-in differences of degree for each of us-in every area of life. None of us exists in a state of complete and utter brokenness on every level. None of us exists in a state of complete and utter blessing or “wholeness” on any level. Disability is a normal part of living in a world where there is a complicated mix of the blessedness of creation and the brokenness of the fall. All of us need encouragement and supports to deal with our limitations and to build on our strengths.

Now, think about the grace of God for a moment. When the Father looks at us, does he focus on our inadequacies, or does His gaze focus only on the ultimate, beautiful competency of Christ alone on our behalf? God knows what our deficits are more fully than we do-but instead of condemning us for our inabilities He supplied the supports we needed to be successful in a relationship with Him-the perfect sacrifice of His Son, and His perfect life lived on our behalf. Can we do any less? How can we be any less than intentional about sacrificially making the Gospel-the good news of the coming of the Kingdom-accessible to all, in word and deed?

In addition, not only do we all struggle with perspective when we look at the disabilities and abilities of ourselves and of others-we also all struggle, at times, with having a sense of perspective on God’s purposes in our lives too. That struggle can manifest itself in a variety of ways for different people. Parents who have children with special needs often have difficulty letting go of the life they anticipated and embracing the life that God has called them to, in His Providence. This can be a normal part of the grieving process. But if a family gets “stuck” in that place, it is easy for frustration to set in. By fixating on “what might have been” the optical illusion can become stuck in the mind of the viewer, making it very difficult to switch focus and see “the great opportunities that God has provided.” When we interviewed families for the 2010 WIC Love Gift DVD, we heard countless stories of God at work changing the focus of lives from their agenda to His. Recently, I received an email from a mother of an adult child with disabilities. Here is an excerpt of it…

Henry Blackaby once wrote that “God is always at work and He invites you to join Him.” Great is Thy Faithfulness is my favorite hymn and I’ve asked my family to make sure that it’s sung at my funeral. But more than a hymn, it’s been a “sacred echo” or theme in my life the last 3 years as God brought Briarwood’s Special Needs Ministry, Missions and Multiplication, Flower Guild and ESL ministries together in my life.

My name is Donna Evans. My husband Bruce and I have been married for 35 years. We have four adult children ages 22-31. Our 26 year old son, James Bruce, is autistic and mentally challenged. Bruce and I have been members at Briarwood for almost 23 years. I work as a pharmacist at UAB Hospital, teach women’s Sunday School classes and weekly Bible studies, and speak at women’s conferences/retreats across the Southeast.I say all of that only to give you a little background for the story below which I hope will encourage you.

About 3 years ago, I really started praying about taking a short term mission trip anywhere. We have participated in Faith Promise at Briarwood for over 20 years, but I’ve never been able to go to another part of the world due to child care arrangements for James Bruce. Still I prayed. God, however, didn’t answer my prayer as I planned. (He seldom does!) What He did was send three internationals to me: one a Hungarian, special needs mom who “happened” to be a pharmacist; a Japanese non-believer who joined our flower guild as a way to “pay back” the church for ESL lessons; and a Vietnamese atheist co-worker, also a special needs mom who is willing to come to our parent support groups. Each has a different story but God has given me a different perspective on “segregating” ministries. And the one thing that I thought was “holding me back” (ie: James Bruce and special needs) really became the vehicle for ministry.

Perspective. Godly focus. We all need it. We all lack it. That’s what this year’s 2010 WIC Love Gift for MNA Special Needs Ministries is all about.

  • Learning to see people with disabilities through a biblical lens, and thereby seeing ourselves more accurately as a result.
  • Learning to view our life’s circumstances through God’s eyes, and thereby fully embracing the life that was always in His plan for us-even if it was never in ours.
  • Learning to make the Gospel-the good news of the coming of the Kingdom-accessible to all of us-in word and deed.

Won’t you help your church focus on these things this year? And give generously?

Oh, look…there goes a bird! Gotta go… :>)

Steph “Dory” Hubach

MNA Special Needs Ministries Director

For more information on the 2010 WIC Love Gift:

Mission to North America or

Christian Education and Publications

Filed Under: Women Tagged With: Women's Ministries

2010 WIC Love Gift FAQs

October 6, 2010 by Editor

FAQs

2010 WIC Love Gift FAQs

Q: Who is the recipient of the 2010 WIC Love Gift?

A: MNA (Mission to North America) Special Needs Ministries. This outreach ministry of MNA was launched in 2007. Stephanie Hubach serves as MNA Special Needs Ministries Director.

Q: Is there anywhere I can watch the DVD online?

A: Of course! It IS the 21st century! It is posted on YouTube here.

Q: Where can I order my FREE copy of the DVD and FREE bulletin inserts?

A: You can order your DVD and bulletin inserts on the CEP Bookstore site here. Please try to coordinate with others in your congregation so that there is only one DVD ordered per church.

Q: Is there an information page on the 2010 WIC Love Gift that I can print off?

A: Yes! It is a two-sided paper called Love Gift Program Information. It provides great background on why Women in the Church sponsors the Love Gift each year, how to promote it, and what it will be used for in 2010.

Q: Is there a website I can go to where I can find everything I need to know in one place?

A: Better than that, there are TWO! CEP has a devoted webpage here. And MNA has a different webpage here.

Q: How can I find out what vehicles other churches are using to promote the WIC Love Gift? It seems silly to reinvent the wheel if other people already have great ideas.

A: Ah, so glad you asked. We just started an MNA Special Needs Ministries Facebook page. We’ve started a “Discussion” thread on this topic. Please feel free to contribute! (You can also “like us” while you’re there!)

Q: What if my church is interested in receiving one of the Gospel and Disability Educational Gift Packs that the 2010 WIC Love Gift funds will be underwriting? How do we get one?

A: We’re glad you’re planning ahead! Information will be going out in the Summer of 2011. There will be an online signup link on the MNA Special Needs Ministries website at that time. (www.pca-mna.org/specialneeds)

Q: When will Trainers from the “Train the Trainers” aspect of the Love Gift be available to visit and work with PCA churches?

A: You can get some support from MNA Special Needs Ministries right now…(see the Resources section of this newsletter). However, the 2010 WIC Love Gift will allow MNA Special Needs Ministries to greatly expand its services to provide a group of trainers who have 1) subject area expertise, and 2) have geographic proximity to where you live-making it easier to do face-to-face meetings. Most church consultations currently are done by email, phone and/or Skype with Steph Hubach. Trainers should become increasingly available to the denomination throughout 2011.

Q: What if our church is interested in acquiring a Luke 14 matching grant, once the Love Gift funds have been collected and are available? How would we go about doing that?

A: Starting in January 2012, there will be a simple grant proposal process in place. All the information you’ll need to apply for a Luke 14 Matching Grant will be available on the MNA Special Needs Ministries website. (www.pca-mna.org/specialneeds) The size of the Love Gift offering will affect how much grant money will be available. The Love Gift will first pay for Gospel and Disability Educational Gift Packs, then for “Train the Trainers” and any residual monies will be available for grants. Hopefully, that will be a significant amount!

Q: I’d like to learn more about the families and the churches featured on the 2010 WIC Love Gift DVD. How can I do that?

A: We thought you might ask us that… That’s why we’ve been posting “The Rest of the Story” on our website. So far, you can read Behind the Scenes: How the WIC Love Gift Video Was Made, meet The Smith Family, and meet Nada Ghattas. By early October, you will be able to read about Pear Orchard Presbyterian Church’s Sonbeams Ministry and Reformed Presbyterian Church’s Special Needs Ministry. More will follow each month.

Q: How much time do we have to give to the 2010 WIC Love Gift for MNA Special Needs Ministries?

A: The 2010 WIC Love Gift for MNA Special Needs Ministries can be collected through May 2011. May 2011 is the last month that donations can be accepted. Please note that there is always an overlap in the spring months between the end of one WIC Love Gift and the launching of another.

Q: How do I donate? Can I donate online?

A: Well, remember how I said this IS the 21st century? Well, we’re not that far into the 21st century yet, so online donations to the WIC Love Gift cannot be processed that way. All donations need to be made out/mailed to:

2010 WIC Love Gift

Women in the Church

Christian Education and Publications

1700 N. Brown Road, Suite 102

Lawrenceville, GA 30043

Filed Under: Women Tagged With: Women's Ministries

Where’s Steph?

October 6, 2010 by Editor

DeltaAsking “Where can I find Steph Hubach” is kind of like asking “Where’s Waldo?” While Steph usually has a pretty busy speaking schedule in the fall, this year, she’s busy filming a 13-week DVD series on her book Same Lake, Different Boat for inclusion in the Gospel and Disability Educational Gift Packs. Grant funding from the Harris-Harper Family Foundation, matched by MNA, is providing the money for the creation of the video series itself. Replication and distribution will occur with Love Gift funds next year.

Here are a few places that Steph will be in the next few months. Her travel/speaking schedule is usually booked about a year in advance. So, if you’d like Steph to come speak to your congregation, PresWIC, presbytery, retreat, or at a larger event, please plan ahead and contact her at shubach@pcanet.org. (BTW, she is conversant on subjects besides disability!) One of the best ways to get on the schedule is to “piggy-back” off another already scheduled event. If you live in the same region as one of the events listed below, feel free to contact Steph to see if she could add your church or group to her plans while she’s in your area.

  • October 17th, St. Mark’s Church, Wheaton, IL
  • October 20th, Chicago Metro Presbytery, Naperville, IL
  • November TBD, Covenant Presbyterian Church, Abingdon, MD (tentative)
  • December 4th-5th, Covenant Presbyterian Church, Sebring, FL
  • January 26th-28th, Joni and Friends Int’l Disability Center (meetings), Agoura Hills, CA (tentative)
  • February 12th 2011, Southwest Florida Presbytery, Location TBD (tentative)
  • February 24th-26th 2011, WIC Leadership Training, Atlanta, GA
  • February 26th 2011, Old Peachtree Presbyterian Church, Duluth, GA
  • April 1st 2011, College Church, Wheaton, IL
  • April 2nd 2011, Voice of Care, Chicago, IL
  • April 3rd 2011, All Souls Anglican Church, Wheaton, IL (tentative)
  • July TBD 2011, YXL Northeast, Stevens, PA (tentative)

Unfortunately, Steph will not be at General Assembly in 2011 as Tim (her younger son with Down syndrome) is graduating from high school that week! (Go Tim!) Instead, Martie Kwasny-who serves on Steph’s MNA Special Needs Advisory Team-will be working at the MNA Special Needs Ministries booth that week. So please stop in and meet Martie!

Hubach

Picture of Steph and Timmy 10 years ago…

Tim

Picture of Tim Hubach now…

Kwasney

Picture of Martie Kwasny

Filed Under: Women Tagged With: Women's Ministries

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