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Presbytery of Elizabeth. Executive Presbyter Report. Vision 2014. The Presbytery of Elizabeth, as a community of churches, is experiencing, enjoying, and sharing the love of Christ. We are equipping and engaging our congregations to work together on evangelism and mission. .
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Presbytery of Elizabeth Executive Presbyter Report
Vision 2014 The Presbytery of Elizabeth, as a community of churches, is experiencing, enjoying, and sharing the love of Christ. We are equipping and engaging our congregations to work together on evangelism and mission.
A Community of Churches • From Clinton/Pittstown to Elizabeth to Perth Amboy south along the Raritan River and north along the Watchung Mts. from Summit to Bernardsville • 15,087 members • 49 “established” (chartered) churches • 1 Brazilian New Church Development • 1 Hispanic Mission • Worship in 7 languages
A Community of Churches • Largest Congregation: Westfield—1715 members • Smallest Congregation: Greystone—20 members • Under 100 members: 12 churches • 100-200 members: 9 churches • 200-400 members: 12 churches • 400-600 members: 3 churches • 800-900 members: 1 church • 1000+ members: 4 churches * Some churches did not submit 2005 reports
Six Churches Reporting Growth • Basking Ridge Presbyterian Church* • First Presbyterian Church, Cranford* • Siloam Hope Presbyterian Church, Elizabeth* • Liberty Corner Presbyterian Church • Townley Presbyterian Church, Union • First Presbyterian Church, Woodbridge* * Growth included increase in racial/ethnic persons
18 congregations who reported showed increases in racial ethnic membership The General Assembly Research services reports 25% of our congregations as racial ethnic or multicultural 15 congregations who reported showed decreases in racial ethnic membership Increases in diversity were greater than decreases overall in the presbytery Other Racial Ethnic Statistics
Pastors in the Presbytery • 41 Churches are served by one pastor (80%) • 10 Churches are served by more than one • 38 Congregations (75%) have changed permanent pastors in the last 9 years; 15 churches (29%) have transitional ministries until permanent calls are made • 60 Pastors serve churches full-time; 5 serve part-time • 25 of 125 Pastors are racial ethnic (20%) • We have pastors from Korea, Columbia, Brazil, Scotland, Germany, South Africa, and Indonesia
Pastor’s Service • Following the Formula for Agreement we had (2006) a Lutheran and have a United Church of Christ pastor serving in our churches, corresponding pastors from the Uniting Church of South Africa and the Nazarenes, plus we presently have two PCUSA pastors serving a Reformed Church and one a United Church of Christ. • We have pastors in specialized ministries as military and hospital chaplainries, interfaith and parachurch organizations, a college, and the Board of Pensions of the PCUSA
Congregations • Re-direction of Presbytery Mission to resourcing and equipping congregations • Emphasis on more partnerships, co-ministry, and relationships • Mission-oriented locally and globally • Executive Presbyter: Redefined role for congregational emphasis
Our Communities • 51 congregations in 38 municipalities • 4 Counties: • Union (whole county) – 29 churches • Middlesex (northern part of county)—12 churches • Somerset (northern part of county)—8 churches • Hunterdon (eastern part of county) – 2 churches • Presbytery-area Population: 1,764,115 people
The Word became flesh… “To become located and lodged in a particular fragment of human history, with a particular people, is the only way, God knows, to enter history redemptively.” James E. Dittes Yale Divinity School
God works within the language and culture of those to whom salvation is offered. God uses one’s tribal, cultural, racial, or ancestral identity as legitimate gifts, means of revealing love and justice to the world. All Christians, regardless of color, class, size, or gender are chosen people. They are saved, transformed into communities of praise, and sent forth to share the good news of God’s love with people of all nations. R/E Report
The nation is becoming increasingly multicultural, especially in its urban communities. The Church of Jesus Christ can neither ignore nor avoid responding to this growing national diversity. The challenge to all Christians is to learn how to share the gospel in an increasingly diverse culture, a culture that features a rich variety of languages, music, styles, and modes of worship, ministries, and witness. R/EReport
The reality is that a predominantly Anglo, suburban, and middle class denomination like the Presbyterian Church (USA) must be very intentional in its planning and providing the resources if its going to be serious about attracting a more diverse membership. Racial Ethnic Church Growth Report Adopted by the 211 General Assembly
Question:Can Elizabeth Presbytery become a community of churches who wants the diversity of people in its neighborhoods to experience and enjoy the love of Christ?
Will we do what is necessary to equip and engage our congregations to work together in evangelism and mission so that our neighbors—whomever they be--may experience and enjoy and share with us the love of Christ? That is our Presbytery Vision.
What are we doing toward this? • Mission studies and congregational transformation address engaging the local community/population • Encouraging outreach to, and inclusion in our congregations, of new immigrant populations • Discussing the challenge of being bi-lingual and multi-cultural congregations • Assist Anglo congregations making commitments to racial ethnic recruitment • Inviting men and women, and of diverse races, to lead our congregations into the 21st century
What else could we be? • Congregations who want to start new PCUSA outreach/churches locally • People who want to lead into our communities to share the love of Christ • Teams that meet around common ministries and missions and partner with each other to see these succeed faithfully
Stir up one another to love and good works. Hebrews 10.24 “The most important way Scripture can break into our world and invite us into its world is by being read and reread in light of God’s transforming work in human lives. Hebrews, like all Scripture, seeks to turn our attention less to itself as revelatory than to the bodies of men and women in and through which God’s Holy Spirit constantly surprises us with new and powerful witness.” Luke Timothy Johnson Interpretation. A Journal of Bible & Theology July 2003