The Best Ways to Sustain Your New Small Groups--Part 2
Keep groups going after the 40 days of purpose.
by Brett Eastman | posted 12/21/2004
| Topics: | Curriculum, Development, Encouragement, Motivation, Resources, Strategy, Vision |
| Filters: | Director, Pastor, Train |
| Purpose: | Discipleship |
| References: | |
| Date Added: | December 21, 2004 |
Starting something new is often easier than keeping it goingespecially going well. Many small group pastors and champions especially feel this way after the completion of 40 Days of Purpose. People are connected like never before and rising to new spiritual heights, but you question how you are going to sustain this mountaintop experience.
In Part 1, Brett Eastman, CEO and Founder of Lifetogether, Inc., shared how connecting with and celebrating leaders, prayerfully finding a new small group champion, and good planning are essential components of keeping your small group going strong. Part 2 continues to highlight the musts for small group success.
5. Preview, Select, and Promote Your New Small Group Series.A six-week study gives people only a taste of the 5 biblical purposes. Folks, though, need to be transformed by the purposes, and that happens only over time. So start previewing curriculum that will do just that.
Once you've selected your new curriculum, you have to promote it. Instead of sending individuals out to get their own materials, collectively order the materials. This requires some upfront capital from church, but purchasing theseand then having people pay for them when they pick them upmakes it easier for people to stay connected.
6. Access Cheap or Free Resources and Tools.Many great tools are available online. Check out www.purposedriven.com for some downloadable workbooks for their Day 41 curriculum. Another great site is www.zoomerang.com. It's a low-cost resource that provides all kinds of questions to ask your leaders regarding their small groups' future plans.Â
Another website is www.smallgroups.com, which has great ideas, stories, and strategies for small groups. Finally, the small group section at http://www.christianitytoday.com/smallgroups has hundreds of practical articles and stories out there for leaders and small group champions. Both sites are free.
7. Offer End-of-Year Leader/Host Training.Rally your leaders for a time of fun, fellowship, and small-group visionand make sure pastoral leadership is present. You can either send out nice invitations or casual e-mails. To ramp up the excitement, do something creativelike a cookie exchange or a White Elephant party. If you throw the party on a Saturday morning or Sunday afternoon, you'll wind up with a two-and-a-half or three-hour block of time.
If you don't use training material, use the time to listen to and love on them. Go over the "Four P's" to get your conversation going: praises, problems, plans, and prayer. Often, small group leaders share similar concerns and are able to work out their problems together. From those conversations, you'll also learn where you need to spend time training.
8. Leverage the Weekend Services.The greatest communication tool that you have in your church is the weekend services. If the pastor isn't casting a vision for groups, people aren't going to understand what the groups are about and the direction the church is headed.
This is also a great time to tell the congregation what God is doing in your small groups. One small group champion regularly met with his senior pastor to share small group stories, and the pastor would often use these stories in sermons to generate interest in small groups.
To get stories from an even wider circle, solicit stories in your bulletin or newsletter.
9. Identify, Train, and Develop a Coaching Staff.Use the same five characteristics of small group champions to identify coaches: 1. loyal to the senior pastor; 2. part of the small groups community; 3. the gift and experience of leadership; 4. character that is above reproach, and 5. a growing "lock," or a deepening relationship, with God.



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