This time the Council met in the newly completed "Disciples Regional Mission Center" - formerly the regional office. The facility, located on the campus of the Rickman Conference Center, houses offices for the regional staff and the Missouri School of Religion. A meeting room and annex can seat up to 75 in chairs, up to 40 around tables. The meeting room doubles as a chapel. The building was paid for with money given by the Missouri Department of Transportation because they had to build a road through the location of the last regional office building.
After prayer, the Council began work on Friday hearing a report by the regional minister about the history of the regional office since restructure in 1968 when it changed from an association of Missouri DOC congregations to the Christian Church in Mid-America.
The Council also received reports, approved a resolution recognizing the region's partnership with Woodhaven, recognized three new congregations in formation and reviewed the work of the four areas as it relates to the region's mission.
Those conversations were resumed Saturday morning with a focus on how areas, commissions, and constituency groups were planning to expand or deepen their missions in the next two years. Three of the four areas admitted to serious financial shortfalls this year (only Ozark Lakes Area has reserve funds). Short-term influxes of cash from within those areas have helped but a more sustainable strategy is needed soon. (It should be noted here that this situation is common to a growing number of presbyteries, associations, conferences, diocese, and other middle judicatories in North America.)
A deficit budget ($395743 income and $405583 expenses) was passed for the 2009-2010 biennium and recommended for approval at the Regional Assembly - though not without abstentions and negative votes - something unusual at these gatherings where almost every motion passes unanimously.
Conversations grew animated around our shared ministry and the rapidly changing contexts in which we all work. Some shared good insights. Some told stories of trying to accomplish much on budgets already cut to muscle and bone. There was even more mention of the ecumenical nature of our work and a growing appreciation for the fact that the work of the Church is a work entrusted to a whole Church and not merely to its constituent denominations.
The meeting's outcomes were predictably familiar. It is not unreasonable to assume that even positive changes occurring over the next two years as a result of decisions made during our two-day meeting will go largely unnoticed by the very congregations that fund the many ministries and missions of the region more out of habit than passion and intention. The challenges may be more than better communications between regions, areas, congregations and individual disciples of Christ.
Hence, this question: Just what is the mission of a middle judicatory in this century?
- Whom are we called to serve?
- By what authority?
- With what resources?
- How are we to be accountable, if drift from mission is inevitable among humans and human institutions - no matter how divinely inspired?
- If this is a ministry the Church cannot do without, what are our spiritual strategic plans for its growth?
- How many Christ-followers in our congregations know this?
- How do we measure significant advances?
- Who decides all this?