This truly is an
encyclopedia of practical ideas for women’s ministry leaders.
What intrigued me the most about the title was “for the 21st
Century.” I thought it would be interesting to see what those
outside this office would think a 21st century
women’s ministry would look. Contributors to this book were from
Vineyard churches, a Christian church, an Evangelical Free church,
and a Lutheran church.
The book does
contain some great and practical ideas. There are nine sections.
Section one is entitled Fellowship and Fun—
“…The
church is to be built on relationships and community. The Bible
says more than once that we are the body of Christ—we are all
connected.” “One of your jobs as a women’s ministry director
is to help women build deep lasting ties with other women in the
church…learn to bear one another’s burdens and to love one
another with Christ’s love…” “Help every woman in your
church discover how we are mysteriously and wonderfully
interconnected and interdependent.”
This section has
some great ideas for welcoming, icebreakers, and fellowship.
Section two is
about serving others.
“The
Bible never calls for us to be spectators, or worse, to be needy
creatures who continually enjoy being served without ever
returning the favor by serving others. In fact, the Bible makes it
quite clear that each Christian has been given a gift and is
expected to use that gift for the benefit of the body.”
There are great
service ideas from haircuts for those in jail or shelters to
helping those in the congregation with home projects.
Section three
covers spiritual growth.
“It’s
also helpful for women to spend time with other women who know and
love Jesus. In every church, there are women who are wise and
spiritually mature. These women are great examples to others.
Spiritually mature women can encourage others, inspire others,
instruct others, counsel others, and gently rebuke others where
needed.”
This section
includes a mentoring program, ten-minute devotions to be used in a
group (some good, some shallow, some out of context), and fifteen
group prayer ideas (that I personally found hokey).
On Bible studies
they state, “Bible studies are the core of every women’s
ministry.” The Bible studies included in the manual are
open-ended questions with no theological guidance for the leader.
Section five is
called “Girls Movie Night Out.” This section has more than 25
movie choices with discussion questions. For more formal
gatherings, section six tackles celebrations and special events.
“There are several events in this section that are designed to
celebrate family relationships or a special time in someone’s
life” There are some great ideas for special events that include
teens in celebrating with each other.
The chapter on
outreach not only gives some clever outreach program ideas, but it
offers help in practice sharing Christ. Before an outreach event,
a few meetings are planned to help women practice sharing their
faith.
Many women’s
ministries offer retreats.
“Retreats
are wonderful opportunities for women to get away from their
everyday responsibilities and to rest, have fun, and spend some
concentrated time learning about God”
Here you will
find basic retreat planning information, suggested schedules,
discussion group ideas, and themes.
But, back to my
interest in what others thought a 21st century
women’s ministry would look like in structure. The “Leader
Helps” segment is full of information about purpose statements,
building leadership teams, team communication, job descriptions,
surveys, and financial forms. I chuckled to myself, because it was
like reading our old WIC Manual…very similar actually. We are
ahead of the game! Others think the 21st Century does
want structure.
Until we can
produce our own comprehensive manual, I would recommend this as a
resource to those who could wisely use the ideas through our
reformed/covenantal grid.
Kathy Stair
CE&P Staff
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