Taking Faith Home... not a Program but a Ministry and even more so a Mission!
I am aware that there are many congregations and
denominations working on home centered models for ministry. I simply would like to share one
congregation's efforts. From the very
onset it is important to understand that this is NOT a program that can be bought instead it is a
vision for doing ministry, better yet it is a Mission in Ministry!
I have come to appreciate that Luther was right. In the book "The Evangelizing
Church", by Mark Hanson and edited by Craig Van Gelder and Richard Bliese,
it states on page 22 that: "Luther himself had no problem connecting the
gift of salvation through Christ with the call to follow Christ. But the reality is that not even the very
next generation of Lutherans showed any evidence that they had caught Luther's
passion for sharing the gospel with those who did not know it." So what happened?
Luther had an expectation for the church, an expectation for
the believers who made up the church. In
his introduction to the Small Catechism Luther tells of the
"deplorable" state in which he found the homes of the common people
and of their inability to understand and know even the most basic of Christian
teachings. It is for this reason that
Luther wrote the Small Catechism, for the home. Luther believed that parents
were the bishops and priests to their children and therefore the church
itself. When his writing on the estate
of marriage in 1522 Luther wrote: "Most certainly father and mother are
apostles, bishops, and priests to their children, for it is they who make them
acquainted with the gospel. In short, there is no greater or nobler authority
on earth than that of parents over their children, for this authority is both
spiritual and temporal. Whoever teaches the gospel to another is truly his
apostle and bishop."" So, again I
ask, what happened?
For well over 30 years I have had the privilege to teach,
engage, and even evangelize teenagers and adults. I have used countless materials, enlisted the
efforts of youth, parent, and adult leaders. I
have worked with small groups, large groups, employed skits and dramas, used
videos and Power Points . However, what
became clearer over the years was that we were always trying to provide a
program that was focused at the lowest common denominators. We wanted programs and materials that were
easy to prepare, simple to teach, attractive and compelling to the youth, low
cost, and entertaining. It seemed that
often the goal of the materials was to try and attract youth that were not
connected to worship and simply didn't want to be there. I will never forget
one of my brightest Confirmands. During
her final year we discussed what her life in the church might look like after
confirmation. To my surprise this young
Confirmand looked at me and simply said; "Oh, I'm not coming
back." In response I asked,
"Why"? Her reply caught me
completely by surprise. "Do you see
my parents here? Do you ever see my
brothers here? I won't be
either!" That was over 14 years ago and she has not been back since! I
recall the words of John H. Westerhoff in his book "Will our Children Have
Faith", page 18: "You can teach about religion, but you cannot teach
people faith."
As a continuing education opportunity I
enrolled in a workshop entitled "the Role
of Family in Faith Development".
The class allowed me to catch a vision of what a home centered,
faith-based ministry might look like.
The next fall we began by asking parents to participate in a year of
confirmation with their teenager, not as a teacher or leader, but as a parent
and family member and fellow student with their child. The
result has developed into a home centered emphasis that has far surpassed my expectations.
What began as an effort to engage the homes of 7th, 8th, and
9th graders has now reached out to engage almost every home in the
congregation. Confirmation, education,
faith enrichment, and service are no longer just for youth or teenagers;
instead they are for the whole people of God, for everyone in the parish and
even the community.
Home Centered Ministry recognizes the home as the central
location where values and faith are nurtured and passed on. Oh we realize that
not every home passes on faith and values in a way that we may appreciate or
agree with, but none the less they still pass them on.
What I also began to understand is this, that congregations are NOT made up of members, but instead everyone one who comes into this community of faith is part of a home, that each one of them comes from and home and returns to a home. It is also true that not all those homes look or even act the same, there are homes with mothers and fathers, husbands and wives, brothers and sisters, but there are homes with just one parents or where grandparents are responsible for raising children. There are home with no children, homes with single persons and yet they are still come from and are a part of a home outside of this community of faith.
Our mission, as a congregation, is to engage
the homes of our congregation and community in the passing on faith and values.
Dr. David Anderson from Vibrant Faith has always said what we have found to be true that 'faith and values are encouraged and taught
through caring, trusted, and compassionate relationships and that most often
those relationships are rooted in the home and nurtured through a community of
faith'. However, we have also found that
many of our homes, though desiring things spiritual, are often 'barren' of
things spiritual: Prayer, devotions,
worship, service to others, and not the least something as simple as daily caring conversation is neither encouraged nor practiced.
Ben Fredenburg, in his book "The Family Friendly
Church", states that "Parents are the primary Christian Educators in
the church, and the family is the God-ordained institution for faith-building
in children and youth and for the passing of the faith from one generation to
the next."
For over 14 years our congregation has been working to
engage and encourage parent(s), guardians, and mentors to “pass on the
faith”. Oh, we realize this concept is
not new, Luther encouraged it as did Moses in Deuteronomy 6: “Keep these words that I
am commanding you today in your heart.
Recite them to your children and talk about them when you are at home
and when you are away, when you lie down and when you rise. Bind them as a sign on your hand, fix them as
a emblem on your forehead, and write them on the doorposts of your house and on
your gates.”
14 years ago we began a vision to strengthen and nurture
faith and values in and through the homes of the congregation. What has been exciting is that this effort
has offered us not only an opportunity to support and encourage the homes of
the congregation but, by supporting and encouraging the homes of the
congregation, we also support and encourage the homes in the community and
beyond. In other words, we have come to
understand that by encouraging faith in the homes of the congregation we also
encourage faith in the community as well.
This shift in focus
from a facility-based, program-centered congregation to one that focuses on the
home as the primary institution for passing on the faith defines what we call
“Home Centered Ministry”. You might
ask; “What has changed because of this focus?” Everything!
We have shifted from an age-specific, group teaching to an
intentional focus on the home as the basic unit of the congregation and
community. You will note that we do not
use the term "family", instead we have intentionally chosen to use
the word “home” because not every home is made up of a mom, dad, and the
children. Instead, the homes within our
congregation and community differ in a host of ways. We have traditional families, extended
families, single parent families, blended families, families being raised by
grandparents; as well singles, widowed, and divorced. Each one of these is a 'home'.
Therefore, our vision
and mission is to find ways to nurture faith in the home. We began simply by making available free
resources for the home; devotional books, prayers, and even suggestions for
worship in the home. Second, we began to
encourage the use of the "Four Keys for Christian living" from The
Youth and Family Institute in Minneapolis which is now called "Vibrant Ministry" in Bloomington, MN that encourages each home to engage
in: (1)Daily Caring Conversation; (2) Daily Devotion and Prayer; (3) Regular Worship,
Rituals, and Practices; (4) Service.
These four keys are woven into the fabric of how we seek to
do ministry; from Sunday and Wednesday Education programs for the home,
Confirmation, Worship, Youth, to our council and its' committees.
However, the beginning point is the home. Whenever we meet
with a home (parents) before Baptism, we ask them about the values that guide
and direct their lives. We then ask how
these values were passed on to them and how they intend to pass those values on
to their children. We then invited and
encourage them to participate in home centered ministry offered by the
congregation. We tell them that they
will be invited, each year, to participate with other parents and homes in
passing on values and faith to their children.
The response has been overwhelming. We have discovered that many of our homes
have extended home members that come from diverse religious backgrounds. One Catholic Grandmother told me after one
event that no one had ever asked her to teach the faith to her children, let
alone her grandchildren. Nor did she ever expect a Lutheran minister to ask
her, a Roman Catholic, to pass on faith.
I simply responded: "Why would I ever stop you from doing
so?" She responded: "You can't!" and then she thanked me and said
she was looked forward to coming back with her grandchildren and she has!
One of my favorite sessions is the one we have with three
year olds and their homes on how to "playing" the faith. We begin by asking the parents and home
members about the faith talks they have with their children. Usually the
response is simply a blank stare that would suggest that discussions are not
easy to come by. Then, through a series
of exercises that involve various play stations, we ask parents to engage in
'faith talk'. By the end of the session
parents are usually overwhelmed by the questions and insights their little ones
have about life and death, about creation, about the world, and about God and
faith. Currently we offer sessions for
each year from Baptism to an event for graduating seniors. At every session the home is central and
parent(s) or other home members are present, as well as members of the
congregation.
Our 7th and 9th grade take part in what we call 'Bridging Faith" where the parents and mentors which include grandparents, aunts and uncles, along with members of the congregation chosen
by the home and Confirmand, gather for a bridging event that models lessons for the month and then passed on to the homes to practice in the home.
In 8th grade we offer a Bible Survey Course. At the end of the year we interview each home involved in the “Bible Basics Course”. During the interview we asked
how they liked coming to class as a family instead of with simply
classmates. Now, many of you may not
believe this, but out of nearly 300 8th graders the response was almost unanimous, only 3 so far have told us that they would prefer only classmates or friends in the class, the rest, 99% said they like having friends in class, but they want their homes there as well.
More than one of the teens responded that if they were to
attend with just their classmates they probably would not learn as much, plus 'it
isn’t cool to participate when it is just other friends' (peer pressure). The youth noticed that the presence of parents and mentor simply made the difference that they appreciated.
It is amazing to watch the look in the eyes of a young adult when he or she watches and listens to a caring adult, a mentor or parent share their questions and responses related to faith. Ask yourself: "What is the worse that will happen to a 7th,
8th, or 9th graders who spends an hour a week learning,
talking, and sharing faith and values with a parent, grandparents, or mentor?"
Please note, that all of our confirmation programs are 'Home
Centered" which means they are not age or grade specific. We have youth of various ages along with parent
and non-parent adults attending the Basic Bible Course. The Mentoring program is open to all homes
and can begin at any age. In other
words it is not uncommon to have youth of various ages in the course.
The response has been overwhelming. One parent remarked: "I finally figured out what your up to…
you're after us!" Or another parent
remarked: "Thank you, this is one
of the few activities in my child's life where I am asked to be more than an
spectator, instead you have asked me to be a participant."
One of the most unexpected blessings of doing ministry in
this way has come from the homes that have experienced division. It is not uncommon in our program for
divorced couples to attend the class together with their child. In one instance we had a family where the
mother and father had never married, but shared custody. Every week the three of them came not only to
class together, but also met for an extra hour to study and prepare. This study time was not required! In short, I have seen more lives changed,
reconciled, and blessed by this emphasis than I ever witnessed in the 20 plus
years of doing traditional religious education.
Again, in the book "The Evangelizing Church", on
page 128, the editors quote Soren Kierkegaard:
"Lutheran church culture needs to cultivate intentional speaking of
faith". This is exactly what we
are striving to do. We are seeking to
give the homes within our congregation both the opportunity and the encouragement
to speak faith 'out loud' to their children, in their families, to their
neighbors, and with their brothers and sisters in Christ, even to the whole
world!
Now for a moment of twentieth century church heresy and I
need to be state this clearly. Our focus
is not on youth. This is not
a youth based program. It is not
a way of getting youth so that we can get the parents. Instead, this is a home-centered
program. The emphasis is on the home;
children and adults together!
We know and understand that it is adults that pass on faith
and values or don't pass on faith and values. They are the ones
responsible for teaching and nurturing faith or not teaching and
nurturing. We also believe that when a
home is nurtured in the practices and teachings of the faith that it will bless
not only that home but that the blessing is passed on to extended families,
neighbors, community members, the congregation, people at work, and the world!
And there is another
blessing. For we have come to believe,
more now than ever before, that parents and homes who intentionally engage in
passing on of faith and values to their children bless not only their children,
but they also bless their grandchildren and great-grandchildren!
Again, on page 39 of “The Evangelizing
Church”, it says: “In the end, all evangelical ministry boils down to the
reality of Jesus coming to people.
Jesus’ presence makes the difference in people’s lives.” One
grandmother, who at first was very offended by a presentation on home centered
ministry called me a few days later and asked if she could begin now, if she
could start passing on the faith now?
She then told me that over the weekend she had called her adult children and asked if there
were faith practices that they could start doing at family gatherings. It was obvious that she wanted to bless her
grandchildren and great grandchildren.
Now some might ask: 'How does encouraging the home help the
local congregation?" I want to state this clearly as well: this emphasis on home centered ministry is not a church growth
gimmick. Instead, the vision that began
this program years ago was never about the growth of one congregation,
instead it began in response to the command to "go and make
disciples", beginning here and moving into the world! Now that's mission, that's evangelism,
that's the call of Christ's church!
Mark Yaconelli, son of Mike Yaconelli an innovator in youth
ministry and who worked tirelessly in the evangelization of the Christ's
church, writes on the website 'LookSmart': "The problem goes far deeper
than the neglect of catechetical duties.
It is not that we've forgotten how to pass on our faith but that we
often can't find any faith to pass on.... What we fear most in our youth is not
their rambunctious ness, but their lack of interest in the Bible, their boredom
in worship, their dismissal of church doctrine.
We fear their judgment of the church as trivial, even laughable".
We are not suggesting that what we are doing is some great
answer to all the needs of the church.
But over the years I have watched as children and the adults have
joined together in faith development and have seen the blessings that have come
from it. It is amazing to watch a bored
child perk up as a parent, grandparent, aunt or uncles answers or asks a
question in class. It is amazing to
watch as a home takes the time to engage in daily conversation and prayer. A grandmother told me that she had been at a
large family gather during the summer and overheard her granddaughter tell the
cousins about confirmation, how her dad, grandmother, and uncle and aunt had
all attended to class with her. The
response from the cousins was that it must have boring, even embarrassing. What
caught the grandmother's attention was her granddaughter's response; she
disagreed with her cousins, her peers and said: "No, it was
great!" I suspect she will never
forget whom she went to confirmation with, the very people who continue to
be a part of her life today.
It is my hope that our experience with 'Taking Faith Home' will encourage and support those who are seeking to engage such an emphasis
in their community of faith. To God be
all glory, now and ever more. Amen
Blessings,
Rev. Mark Asleson, Pastor pastormark@dilworthlutheran.org
P.O. Box 474 Dilworth,
Minnesota 56529
Website: dilworthlutheran.org phone:
218-287-2628