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Rev. Clare Morgan is drowsily sifting through her mail
at Grace Church. She has just returned from a lunch appointment and expects
to spend a couple of hours in the office before the Board of Elders meets
in the evening.
The top sheet on the stack of papers pleases Clare
even before she picks it up. It is the first report of the new Sunday
School Director, Angela Michaels. Angela symbolizes for Rev. Morgan the
new hope that has blossomed since Clare became pastor of the 200-member
mainline congregation three years ago. Angela is young and energetic,
full of ideas -- a former bank branch manager with an infant daughter.
Angela is one of a handful of Grace Church's newer members who had begun
to take responsibility for the long-neglected Sunday School program. Clare
smiled as she thought of Angela proudly presenting her report to the Board.
It was a very hopeful time at Grace Church.
But as Clare read Angela's report, she began to worry.
There was trouble on the horizon. Angela was headed for a tongue-lashing
from the church treasurer and she did not even know it. Angela's sin appeared
innocent enough. She and the Christian Education Committee had decided
to abandon the Sunday School curriculum produced by the denominational
publishing house. They had met together as a committee, reviewed the available
options and selected the curriculum that Angela's report said was "the
most Christ-centered." The fact that it was not published by the denomination
was never really a factor in their decision.
Clare knew this was going to be a problem. She
knew it was going to upset Gilbert Gaddis, the church treasurer. Gil had
an authoritarian personality. He tended to reprimand people who displeased
him. He had been the treasurer for twenty years and Clare had not yet
convinced him that his job as treasurer did not include veto power. He
believed that he had the right to approve all congregational purchases.
The fact that Angela had not consulted with Gil was going
to make him testy. But that was not the real problem. Gil was one
of the core group in the congregation who felt a real allegiance to the
denomination. This band of denominational stalwarts tended to be more
theologically liberal than the young families who were beginning to take
responsibility for the Sunday School. The old guard, as Clare thought
of them, would likely be disturbed by the theological content of the new
curriculum, interpreting it as yet another sign that they were losing
control of the congregation that they had sustained for a generation.
Clare was convinced that Gil would view Angela's report as saying that
she had turned her back on the denomination, and done it without his approval.
Instantly, Clare knew this was a pivotal moment in her
ministry at Grace Church. This situation touched on too many of
the issues bubbling below the surface of her growing congregation. Now
was the time for Clare to exercise leadership. Clare ditched her plans
for the afternoon and decided instead to map out a strategy for meeting
the evening's challenge.
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