Future Leaders, Mentors and the Benefit of Training

Leadership has almost become a reality TV topic over the past year, with the various political elections around the world taking up prime time space in every media source and news feed. The debate over who will make a difference is keenly watched throughout the globe. It has become very obvious that every world leader impacts not only their state/country but other countries and economies either positively or negatively. Finding a suitable leader is not always easy to achieve.

The good news is that, here in Victoria, I am seeing young emerging leaders from our local Baptist churches, between the ages of 16 – 38, stepping up and moving forward with leadership goals and dreams that will bring a positive influence for future generations and ultimately make a difference in the world around them and for God’s Kingdom. Additionally these young leaders are able to develop with the support of intentional mentoring.

During 2016 two groups of Emerging Leaders (ELs) and their Mentors have commenced the new BUV EQUIP Emerging Leaders Mentor Training. This is a 12 month journey of leadership development for ELs through intentional Mentor/Mentoree relationships, online Communities of Practice webinars, and active service. Additionally both the Mentors and the ELs participate in 4 full day workshops that develop their mentor/coaching skills.

The Geelong and Echuca ELMTs were launched as pilot groups last year – the first drawing participant interest from a network of churches in the Geelong and Bellarine region with the support of the Pastors Network. The second group being filled completely with participants from the New Life Baptist church in Echuca Moama with their Pastor strongly involved in the process.

Both groups have already completed the first two full day workshops introducing them to the Biblical basis of mentoring and giving them opportunity to try out the coaching process. Participants some key things they have learned:

  • I’ve learnt to “be fully engaged in what one has to say, without bringing preconceived ideas and opinions to the slate.”
  • Turn off the chatter in my head when listening. Be present: If I’m fully present, God turns up and does the changing. Don’t ask leading questions, ask open questions.
  • Coaching – draws out; future focus; goals. Whereas mentoring puts in; historical/experience.
  • Ask to understand, not to judge.
  • I don’t need to have the answers – I just need the powerful questions.
  • Listening is dying to self.

The intention of the ELMT process is to empower and equip each participant to make a difference wherever they are, i.e. school, university, workplace, community, church. Here is a story from one participant who applied their learning immediately in the workplace after week one:

"I was sitting in my office at the high school where I work about a week after the first training session and an opportunity arose for me to practice some of the coaching skills. A year 12 student walked in and asked whether she was able to speak with me. It turned out she had a really difficult decision to make and was hoping for some advice. I caught myself quickly before I took the well-travelled path of offering my advice and suggesting a course of action. The coaching program emphasised the importance of withholding judgement, advice and personal opinions. So, I asked her lots of questions – roughly following the process we had practiced in coaching session 1. Through this process I helped her make the decision without actually offering any advice at all. She owned the decision and was fully committed to it. I was amazed at how powerful good questions could be. I still need a lot more practice in the coaching area but am feeling more confident asking questions rather than offering advice."

What a wonderful example of positive influential godly leadership.

I’m so excited that in Feb 2017 we start with an online Community of Practice webinar and then there is the third full day workshop for Geelong. Echuca’s third workshop will be in March. The newest group in Morwell is planned to start on 18 February! (Registration for Morwell are still open).

Pray for our emerging leaders. Pray for the strong mentoring network that is developing across our Baptist churches. Give thanks to God for His Biblical example of leadership, mentoring and coaching.

Joanne Semple is our BUV Emerging Leadership Coordinator. She can be contacted on 0414 347 851 or joanne.semple@buv.com.au. More information on our BUV Emerging Leaders work can be found on the BUV Website here

Source: BUV News

Future Leaders, Mentors and the Benefit of Training

Leadership has almost become a reality TV topic over the past year, with the various political elections around the world taking up prime time space in every media source and news feed. The debate over who will make a difference is keenly watched throughout the globe. It has become very obvious that every world leader impacts not only their state/country but other countries and economies either positively or negatively. Finding a suitable leader is not always easy to achieve.

The good news is that, here in Victoria, I am seeing young emerging leaders from our local Baptist churches, between the ages of 16 – 38, stepping up and moving forward with leadership goals and dreams that will bring a positive influence for future generations and ultimately make a difference in the world around them and for God’s Kingdom. Additionally these young leaders are able to develop with the support of intentional mentoring.

During 2016 two groups of Emerging Leaders (ELs) and their Mentors have commenced the new BUV EQUIP Emerging Leaders Mentor Training. This is a 12 month journey of leadership development for ELs through intentional Mentor/Mentoree relationships, online Communities of Practice webinars, and active service. Additionally both the Mentors and the ELs participate in 4 full day workshops that develop their mentor/coaching skills.

The Geelong and Echuca ELMTs were launched as pilot groups last year – the first drawing participant interest from a network of churches in the Geelong and Bellarine region with the support of the Pastors Network. The second group being filled completely with participants from the New Life Baptist church in Echuca Moama with their Pastor strongly involved in the process.

Both groups have already completed the first two full day workshops introducing them to the Biblical basis of mentoring and giving them opportunity to try out the coaching process. Participants some key things they have learned:

  • I’ve learnt to “be fully engaged in what one has to say, without bringing preconceived ideas and opinions to the slate.”
  • Turn off the chatter in my head when listening. Be present: If I’m fully present, God turns up and does the changing. Don’t ask leading questions, ask open questions.
  • Coaching – draws out; future focus; goals. Whereas mentoring puts in; historical/experience.
  • Ask to understand, not to judge.
  • I don’t need to have the answers – I just need the powerful questions.
  • Listening is dying to self.

The intention of the ELMT process is to empower and equip each participant to make a difference wherever they are, i.e. school, university, workplace, community, church. Here is a story from one participant who applied their learning immediately in the workplace after week one:

"I was sitting in my office at the high school where I work about a week after the first training session and an opportunity arose for me to practice some of the coaching skills. A year 12 student walked in and asked whether she was able to speak with me. It turned out she had a really difficult decision to make and was hoping for some advice. I caught myself quickly before I took the well-travelled path of offering my advice and suggesting a course of action. The coaching program emphasised the importance of withholding judgement, advice and personal opinions. So, I asked her lots of questions – roughly following the process we had practiced in coaching session 1. Through this process I helped her make the decision without actually offering any advice at all. She owned the decision and was fully committed to it. I was amazed at how powerful good questions could be. I still need a lot more practice in the coaching area but am feeling more confident asking questions rather than offering advice."

What a wonderful example of positive influential godly leadership.

I’m so excited that in Feb 2017 we start with an online Community of Practice webinar and then there is the third full day workshop for Geelong. Echuca’s third workshop will be in March. The newest group in Morwell is planned to start on 18 February! (Registration for Morwell are still open).

Pray for our emerging leaders. Pray for the strong mentoring network that is developing across our Baptist churches. Give thanks to God for His Biblical example of leadership, mentoring and coaching.

Joanne Semple is our BUV Emerging Leadership Coordinator. She can be contacted on 0414 347 851 or joanne.semple@buv.com.au. More information on our BUV Emerging Leaders work can be found on the BUV Website here

Evangelism in “secular” workplaces

Have you ever thought about going to a nudist beach? We have never enjoyed the fresh air at any of Australia’s 52 nudist (or officially labelled “legal clothing optional”) beaches, let alone thought of going regularly. We imagine we would be welcome. We do not judge those who do go. Maybe one day we might go to one, as a dare, or to see what all the fuss is about. But we don’t spend our waking moments thinking about what we are missing. We don’t honestly think we have a “nudist-beach shaped vacuum” in our life.

Many people in the Western world think about going to church in the same way we might think about going to a nudist beach – it’s simply not on the radar.

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512UAM9vHyL.jpgThis is part of the challenge of evangelism today in our workplaces, neighbourhoods and networks. Many people are not interested in God. Even more are not interested in church. Charles Taylor describes our era as “A Secular Age” (Harvard University Press, 2007); and discusses the place faith has (or does not have) in people’s imaginations today. His basic question is why and how belief in God has become merely one option among others: “Why was it virtually impossible not to believe in God in, say, 1500 in our western society, while in 2000 many of us find this not only easy, but even inescapable?” (p.25)

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51MC80cCciL.jpgTaylor argues that “exclusive humanism” and fostering meaning in life without God has become viable because people no longer see nature pointing to something beyond itself. It is not that we live without God in an age of disbelief, Taylor says, but people have learned creative new options of believing otherwise. We cannot simply say that science has disproved God, or reason replaced belief, or the secular overtaken religion, or immanence displaced transcendence. But these things are in a constant tug of war, and most people default to not revolving their life around God and faith. So for most people the idea of going to church to find meaning is as foreign and likely as us going to a nudist beach for a full-body suntan.  

A guidebook to Taylor’s A Secular Age is James K A Smith’s How (Not) To Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor (Eerdmans, 2014; reviewed by Darren in Witness: Journal of the Academy for Evangelism in Theological Education 2016). It helped us to understand why secular colleagues and neighbours aren’t asking the questions or looking for the answers we might think about. Their interest in God or the afterlife is minimal. They construct meaning from a host of other projects and quests for significance. Yet even agnostics feel like there might be something more. Our secular world is more appropriately called “post-secular”, and is haunted by the transcendent. So how do we practice authentic evangelism in secular places where we work and play? We suggest a few hints from our reading of Smith.

 

1. Celebrate the relevance of faith for everyday life and work

Eat, Pray, Love – Elizabeth Gilbert, 2007.jpgChristianity in its essence is a faith about God incarnate – embracing the world. Part of the problem of modern Christianity is we have allowed it to be excarnated. Michael Frost wrote Incarnate (IVP 2014) to urge engaging the world rather than separating ourselves from it or seeing the value of Christianity only in heaven. Part of the good news about Christianity, especially for a secular age, is that God is interested in everyday life and the concerns of this world. The so-called “secular” is not off limits for God. Let’s celebrate a faith that relates to work and play, friendship and family, money and sex – and to the complex and pressing issues of social justice and environmental care. Smith writes:

Many evangelicals reacting to the “dualism” of their fundamentalist heritage that seemed to only value “heaven” and offered no functional affirmation of the importance of “this life.” Their rejection of this finds expression in a new emphasis on “the goodness of creation” and the importance of social justice. (p.49)

Many who have no interest in church are passionate about work that makes a difference, especially for justice and the environment. We want to help people understand how faith in the God of the Bible is integrally related to everyday life and work, especially caring for creation and advocating for a more just world.

 

2. Offer mystical experience

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-wYlnBZFkUZM/U3ggjTTlc8I/AAAAAAAAAgg/TpaUUtyqOJA/s1600/nakdpastorCapture.PNGAuthentic evangelism in a secular age will engage closely with this world, but still needs to point beyond. One of the fascinating things about so-called secularisation is that people do not totally dismiss the mystical. They suspect and respect that there may be something more than what we see with our eyes and touch with our hands.

 

Part of curating worship is to invite people to really experience God. We give priority to engaging Scripture so people might hear the Bible as the voice of God for them. We also invite people to get a real taste of Jesus with communion, and by exercising gifts of the Spirit, and by setting up a worshipful vibe and contemplative space. In recent decades in attempts to be seeker friendly church architects have given us more factories for churches, but we suspect secular people appreciate the ambience of more traditional worship spaces.  

We want our churches to be relevant to life, but also offer mystical experiences of God – in worship and in the midst of the everyday. We hope our ministries will lift people’s eyes beyond their immanent frame and open them to the transcendent. Part of evangelism, as Smith explains, is to help secular people who value “authenticity” and making meaning understand that the supernatural is possible, and that pursuing something beyond human flourishing is imaginable.

Olivia Smith was talking to a close school friend who told her she was losing her faith, because of studying evolution. Olivia offered to pray. The friend teased her: “who are we going to pray to?” Olivia said she still had her faith in an awesome God, and prayed “Show this friend that you are here.” Then she opened up the Bible to a random verse, and their eyes fell on Psalm 73:2: “But I had almost stopped believing. I had almost lost my faith.” They were both amazed that was an exact verse the friend needed to hear. It is significant that it was an experience of God’s encouragement, not apologetic argument, which encouraged Olivia’s friend to persevere.  

 

3. Tell an alternative story

The other clue about evangelism in secular times is that it is not so much superior scientific argument that will convince people about God, but an alternative story that has potential to capture their imagination. Smith wrote:

Taylor suggests that those who convert to unbelief “because of science” are less convinced by data and more moved by the form of the story that science tells and the self-image that comes with it (rationality = maturity). Moreover, the faith that they left was often worth leaving … the Christian response to such converts to unbelief is not to have an argument about the data or “evidences” but rather to offer an alternative story that offers a more robust, complex understanding of the Christian faith. (p.77)

A generation ago “Evidence that demands a verdict” was all the rage, as evangelists such as Josh McDowell articulated intellectual responses to any objection to the credibility of faith. We spent hours talking to our friends in high school along these lines. But today it is more about the “Story we find ourselves in”, as postmodern evangelists such as Brian McLaren invite people to see the narrative of God’s work in the world and God’s invitation to people to join in on fostering God’s dream for the world. The story God invites us to become part of is not just about getting out tickets for heaven, but joining with God in bringing heaven to earth – the Kingdom of God. That is a story worth revolving our lives around!

 

4. Recognize the difficulty of belief

Faith from some angles is simple. Yet faith does not come easy for many people. We have had numbers of people come to our churches who describe themselves as atheists because they say they simply do not see the evidence for God or have not yet had a convincing experience of God. Others have wanted to experience God, but God still seems distant to them. Faith and belief are not straightforward for everyone, and perhaps for most of us. 

Anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann asks in When God Talks Back: “If you could believe in God, why wouldn’t you?” but concedes at the same time: “It ought to be difficult to believe in God.” Smith discusses this tension and suggests that to live in a secular age is to inhabit just this space and tension (p.6). Our evangelism needs to be honest about the difficulty of belief. Rick Richardson, evangelism professor at Wheaton, comments, “In the past, being an expert and having the answers were what built credibility and a hearing. Today, having the same questions, struggles and hurts is what builds credibility and gains a hearing” (Evangelism Outside the Box, IVP, 2000, 48). If we can be honest, even about our own difficulties and doubts, we are more likely to be able to come alongside and help others who are on a journey towards faith.

 

5. Invite conversation

The most important framework for evangelism in a secular age is conversation. We can never presume that faith sharing is one way speech. We have to start with questions to understand where people are coming from and where they have already experienced God. This is why the L for Listen is just after Beginning with prayer – to prioritise a posture of listening to people and our communities. We listen to others for their stories, and then share our story of God. It is a conversation of mutual interest in identifying and pursuing a life-giving spirituality. Smith comments that evangelism in a secular age must be a form of conversation and that unapologetic “witnessing” involves attentive “listening”:  

Taylor insists that, while he believes a Christian “take” can account for aspects of our experience that an exclusively humanist “take” cannot, he is not primarily interested in winning an argument. Rather, his concern is to foster a “badly needed” conversation. (p.120)

This is the posture that has been so transformative at CityLife Casey. The church supports St Kilda Gatehouse, a safe place of advocacy and hospitality for prostitutes.  By listening to the stories of the women, Gatehouse identified that sexual exploitation of them as girls is what usually started them on the path to prostitution. Gatehouse started an outreach in Dandenong for young girls, and volunteers from CityLife and elsewhere listen to the stories of the young women as they cook and share a meal together, without judgment or Bible bashing. The conversations have helped the team understand where the girls are coming from, and what they really need.

Connecting effectively with people from any sphere of society, and at any stage of faith, starts with a conversation. It recognises the difficulty of belief, shares an alternative society not just a logical argument, and invites people to a mystical experience of God as well as celebrating the relevance of faith for everyday life and justice.

Kim Hammond is Forge’s International Director and serves as Pastor of City Life Casey, a campus of the second largest church in Australia with 10,000 people across four sites. Darren Cronshaw serves as Pastor of AuburnLife, a small but vibrant multicultural community, Mission Catalyst – Researcher with BUV, and Head of Research and Professor of Missional Leadership with Australian College of Ministries. They wrote Sentness (IVP 2014), and this article is an excerpt from their next book Sharing Life (IVP, forthcoming 2018). Write to us via pastor@auburn.org.au. This article was originally published in Crossover PRAC Issue 74 (Summer 2016), 5-6

Darren Cronshaw and Kim Hammond

Source: BUV News

Evangelism in “secular” workplaces

Have you ever thought about going to a nudist beach? We have never enjoyed the fresh air at any of Australia’s 52 nudist (or officially labelled “legal clothing optional”) beaches, let alone thought of going regularly. We imagine we would be welcome. We do not judge those who do go. Maybe one day we might go to one, as a dare, or to see what all the fuss is about. But we don’t spend our waking moments thinking about what we are missing. We don’t honestly think we have a “nudist-beach shaped vacuum” in our life.

Many people in the Western world think about going to church in the same way we might think about going to a nudist beach – it’s simply not on the radar.

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512UAM9vHyL.jpgThis is part of the challenge of evangelism today in our workplaces, neighbourhoods and networks. Many people are not interested in God. Even more are not interested in church. Charles Taylor describes our era as “A Secular Age” (Harvard University Press, 2007); and discusses the place faith has (or does not have) in people’s imaginations today. His basic question is why and how belief in God has become merely one option among others: “Why was it virtually impossible not to believe in God in, say, 1500 in our western society, while in 2000 many of us find this not only easy, but even inescapable?” (p.25)

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51MC80cCciL.jpgTaylor argues that “exclusive humanism” and fostering meaning in life without God has become viable because people no longer see nature pointing to something beyond itself. It is not that we live without God in an age of disbelief, Taylor says, but people have learned creative new options of believing otherwise. We cannot simply say that science has disproved God, or reason replaced belief, or the secular overtaken religion, or immanence displaced transcendence. But these things are in a constant tug of war, and most people default to not revolving their life around God and faith. So for most people the idea of going to church to find meaning is as foreign and likely as us going to a nudist beach for a full-body suntan.  

A guidebook to Taylor’s A Secular Age is James K A Smith’s How (Not) To Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor (Eerdmans, 2014; reviewed by Darren in Witness: Journal of the Academy for Evangelism in Theological Education 2016). It helped us to understand why secular colleagues and neighbours aren’t asking the questions or looking for the answers we might think about. Their interest in God or the afterlife is minimal. They construct meaning from a host of other projects and quests for significance. Yet even agnostics feel like there might be something more. Our secular world is more appropriately called “post-secular”, and is haunted by the transcendent. So how do we practice authentic evangelism in secular places where we work and play? We suggest a few hints from our reading of Smith.

 

1. Celebrate the relevance of faith for everyday life and work

Eat, Pray, Love – Elizabeth Gilbert, 2007.jpgChristianity in its essence is a faith about God incarnate – embracing the world. Part of the problem of modern Christianity is we have allowed it to be excarnated. Michael Frost wrote Incarnate (IVP 2014) to urge engaging the world rather than separating ourselves from it or seeing the value of Christianity only in heaven. Part of the good news about Christianity, especially for a secular age, is that God is interested in everyday life and the concerns of this world. The so-called “secular” is not off limits for God. Let’s celebrate a faith that relates to work and play, friendship and family, money and sex – and to the complex and pressing issues of social justice and environmental care. Smith writes:

Many evangelicals reacting to the “dualism” of their fundamentalist heritage that seemed to only value “heaven” and offered no functional affirmation of the importance of “this life.” Their rejection of this finds expression in a new emphasis on “the goodness of creation” and the importance of social justice. (p.49)

Many who have no interest in church are passionate about work that makes a difference, especially for justice and the environment. We want to help people understand how faith in the God of the Bible is integrally related to everyday life and work, especially caring for creation and advocating for a more just world.

 

2. Offer mystical experience

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-wYlnBZFkUZM/U3ggjTTlc8I/AAAAAAAAAgg/TpaUUtyqOJA/s1600/nakdpastorCapture.PNGAuthentic evangelism in a secular age will engage closely with this world, but still needs to point beyond. One of the fascinating things about so-called secularisation is that people do not totally dismiss the mystical. They suspect and respect that there may be something more than what we see with our eyes and touch with our hands.

 

Part of curating worship is to invite people to really experience God. We give priority to engaging Scripture so people might hear the Bible as the voice of God for them. We also invite people to get a real taste of Jesus with communion, and by exercising gifts of the Spirit, and by setting up a worshipful vibe and contemplative space. In recent decades in attempts to be seeker friendly church architects have given us more factories for churches, but we suspect secular people appreciate the ambience of more traditional worship spaces.  

We want our churches to be relevant to life, but also offer mystical experiences of God – in worship and in the midst of the everyday. We hope our ministries will lift people’s eyes beyond their immanent frame and open them to the transcendent. Part of evangelism, as Smith explains, is to help secular people who value “authenticity” and making meaning understand that the supernatural is possible, and that pursuing something beyond human flourishing is imaginable.

Olivia Smith was talking to a close school friend who told her she was losing her faith, because of studying evolution. Olivia offered to pray. The friend teased her: “who are we going to pray to?” Olivia said she still had her faith in an awesome God, and prayed “Show this friend that you are here.” Then she opened up the Bible to a random verse, and their eyes fell on Psalm 73:2: “But I had almost stopped believing. I had almost lost my faith.” They were both amazed that was an exact verse the friend needed to hear. It is significant that it was an experience of God’s encouragement, not apologetic argument, which encouraged Olivia’s friend to persevere.  

 

3. Tell an alternative story

The other clue about evangelism in secular times is that it is not so much superior scientific argument that will convince people about God, but an alternative story that has potential to capture their imagination. Smith wrote:

Taylor suggests that those who convert to unbelief “because of science” are less convinced by data and more moved by the form of the story that science tells and the self-image that comes with it (rationality = maturity). Moreover, the faith that they left was often worth leaving … the Christian response to such converts to unbelief is not to have an argument about the data or “evidences” but rather to offer an alternative story that offers a more robust, complex understanding of the Christian faith. (p.77)

A generation ago “Evidence that demands a verdict” was all the rage, as evangelists such as Josh McDowell articulated intellectual responses to any objection to the credibility of faith. We spent hours talking to our friends in high school along these lines. But today it is more about the “Story we find ourselves in”, as postmodern evangelists such as Brian McLaren invite people to see the narrative of God’s work in the world and God’s invitation to people to join in on fostering God’s dream for the world. The story God invites us to become part of is not just about getting out tickets for heaven, but joining with God in bringing heaven to earth – the Kingdom of God. That is a story worth revolving our lives around!

 

4. Recognize the difficulty of belief

Faith from some angles is simple. Yet faith does not come easy for many people. We have had numbers of people come to our churches who describe themselves as atheists because they say they simply do not see the evidence for God or have not yet had a convincing experience of God. Others have wanted to experience God, but God still seems distant to them. Faith and belief are not straightforward for everyone, and perhaps for most of us. 

Anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann asks in When God Talks Back: “If you could believe in God, why wouldn’t you?” but concedes at the same time: “It ought to be difficult to believe in God.” Smith discusses this tension and suggests that to live in a secular age is to inhabit just this space and tension (p.6). Our evangelism needs to be honest about the difficulty of belief. Rick Richardson, evangelism professor at Wheaton, comments, “In the past, being an expert and having the answers were what built credibility and a hearing. Today, having the same questions, struggles and hurts is what builds credibility and gains a hearing” (Evangelism Outside the Box, IVP, 2000, 48). If we can be honest, even about our own difficulties and doubts, we are more likely to be able to come alongside and help others who are on a journey towards faith.

 

5. Invite conversation

The most important framework for evangelism in a secular age is conversation. We can never presume that faith sharing is one way speech. We have to start with questions to understand where people are coming from and where they have already experienced God. This is why the L for Listen is just after Beginning with prayer – to prioritise a posture of listening to people and our communities. We listen to others for their stories, and then share our story of God. It is a conversation of mutual interest in identifying and pursuing a life-giving spirituality. Smith comments that evangelism in a secular age must be a form of conversation and that unapologetic “witnessing” involves attentive “listening”:  

Taylor insists that, while he believes a Christian “take” can account for aspects of our experience that an exclusively humanist “take” cannot, he is not primarily interested in winning an argument. Rather, his concern is to foster a “badly needed” conversation. (p.120)

This is the posture that has been so transformative at CityLife Casey. The church supports St Kilda Gatehouse, a safe place of advocacy and hospitality for prostitutes.  By listening to the stories of the women, Gatehouse identified that sexual exploitation of them as girls is what usually started them on the path to prostitution. Gatehouse started an outreach in Dandenong for young girls, and volunteers from CityLife and elsewhere listen to the stories of the young women as they cook and share a meal together, without judgment or Bible bashing. The conversations have helped the team understand where the girls are coming from, and what they really need.

Connecting effectively with people from any sphere of society, and at any stage of faith, starts with a conversation. It recognises the difficulty of belief, shares an alternative society not just a logical argument, and invites people to a mystical experience of God as well as celebrating the relevance of faith for everyday life and justice.

Kim Hammond is Forge’s International Director and serves as Pastor of City Life Casey, a campus of the second largest church in Australia with 10,000 people across four sites. Darren Cronshaw serves as Pastor of AuburnLife, a small but vibrant multicultural community, Mission Catalyst – Researcher with BUV, and Head of Research and Professor of Missional Leadership with Australian College of Ministries. They wrote Sentness (IVP 2014), and this article is an excerpt from their next book Sharing Life (IVP, forthcoming 2018). Write to us via pastor@auburn.org.au. This article was originally published in Crossover PRAC Issue 74 (Summer 2016), 5-6

Darren Cronshaw and Kim Hammond

Baptcare Helping Young Mums Thrive

Baptcare’s Home Start program is a voluntary home visiting service that offers practical support and friendship to families with children under the age of five. Emily*, aged 22, was one such mum who benefitted from the program. With no family support and a difficult and traumatic childhood, Emily struggled to care for her two boys, aged two and four, as well as her newborn twin girls.

Emily was referred to our Home Start program by her Maternal Child Health (MCH) Nurse, after she displayed low mood and a lack of motivation around her children.

Emily was matched with Katie, a Home-Start mentor and qualified MCH Nurse, in April 2015.  During their initial weekly visits, Emily admitted that none of the children were vaccinated beyond their first vaccinations and was therefore very anxious about her older child accessing kinder and school. She was also worried about losing her child benefits because of this.

With Katie’s encouragement and support, the family engaged with the Universal Services, got their vaccinations up to date, and also developed a relationship with a new MCH Team.

Emily was also supported with getting a Mental Health Plan and counselling services to address her now diagnosed depression and anxiety, which allowed her to better care for her children as well as engage with her local community. She enrolled her boys into a kinder program and began attending a local playgroup with her girls.

More than a year on, Emily is now a happier person who has formed new friendships in her community. Her mental health has also improved as she continues to see a counsellor, which has alleviated her anxiety and depression. Emily also attends a parenting class which has helped her build a supportive network of fellow parents.

Emily is now looking forward to her future and has goals and aspirations of going back to study, something Katie is supporting her with.

* Name changed for privacy and confidentiality

Baptcare Helping Young Mums Thrive

Baptcare’s Home Start program is a voluntary home visiting service that offers practical support and friendship to families with children under the age of five. Emily*, aged 22, was one such mum who benefitted from the program. With no family support and a difficult and traumatic childhood, Emily struggled to care for her two boys, aged two and four, as well as her newborn twin girls.

Emily was referred to our Home Start program by her Maternal Child Health (MCH) Nurse, after she displayed low mood and a lack of motivation around her children.

Emily was matched with Katie, a Home-Start mentor and qualified MCH Nurse, in April 2015.  During their initial weekly visits, Emily admitted that none of the children were vaccinated beyond their first vaccinations and was therefore very anxious about her older child accessing kinder and school. She was also worried about losing her child benefits because of this.

With Katie’s encouragement and support, the family engaged with the Universal Services, got their vaccinations up to date, and also developed a relationship with a new MCH Team.

Emily was also supported with getting a Mental Health Plan and counselling services to address her now diagnosed depression and anxiety, which allowed her to better care for her children as well as engage with her local community. She enrolled her boys into a kinder program and began attending a local playgroup with her girls.

More than a year on, Emily is now a happier person who has formed new friendships in her community. Her mental health has also improved as she continues to see a counsellor, which has alleviated her anxiety and depression. Emily also attends a parenting class which has helped her build a supportive network of fellow parents.

Emily is now looking forward to her future and has goals and aspirations of going back to study, something Katie is supporting her with.

* Name changed for privacy and confidentiality

Source: BUV News