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Staying
Focused During a Building Campaign
David
G. Berube, Living Stones Associates
This
church is very active and growing, so we`re just about
out of space. (I can see that.) We`ll
need to build soon . . . (Uh-oh.)
. . . for the preschool we`re starting, our
expanding Sunday school, a bigger
sanctuary, and a gym. We really need a gym!
To
these expressions of enthusiasm, my standard response
would be a
noncommittal When the time is right. I
could clearly see what more square
footage could do for our ministry, but I wasn`t ready
to trade my robe and
commentaries for blueprints and a nail apron. (I confess,
however, that I once
caught myself dreaming of a day 50 years hence when
a grandmother would say,
Yes, child, that`s the magnificent building
Pastor Berube led us to put up
when I was your age.)
I`d
heard stories from other pastors about out-of-control
building projects
that diverted energy and distracted their congregations
from ministry. I could
see how easily that might happenwe weren`t even
seriously discussing building
plans and I was already distracted.
So
I started a file for ideas, and we began a long journey
that resulted in a
positive building experience five years later.
Ushers
incoming!
Our
space was cramped. Our Sunday school swapped spaces
with the adult choir
each week. They performed this maneuver in the middle
of the adult study room at the designated time, as
the person taking worship bulletins to the vestibule
passed through the middle of them.
Our
office, really a hallway with an office jammed in,
looked like O`Hare
Airport late on a Friday afternoon. Financial officers,
teachers, and I vied for
the copier and bumped into one another coming and
going.
Sunday
mornings left me feeling as if air traffic controller
school might
have been a better choice than seminary.
Weeknights
weren`t much better. One lucky group would meet in
the adult study
space. Others had to sit on the child-sized chairs
in the preschool or Sunday
school rooms. Still others perched on office counters.
Sometimes additional
groups wandered like the Israelites in the desert,
searching for a home.
I
was willing to build in order to address this space
problem, as long as we
could keep ministry as our number-one priority. I
just wasn`t sure how to do
that.
What
does the Lord require?
That first year, a group of key leaders went on retreat
to begin seeking God`s vision for us. We began with
the scriptural warning, Where there is no vision,
the people perish (Prov. 29:18, KJV), and talked
about the importance of finding and following God`s
specific plan for us. We prayerfully sought to answer
one question: Why is there a First Baptist Church
of Hanson?
As
we left that weekend, we committed to pray about what
we learned, and we
began to formulate a single-sentence picture of the
vision we sensed underneath
it all.
After
subsequent discussion, this emerged as our foundational
statement:
Sharing Christ`s Love, Reaching Out with Joy.
The congregation later
adopted this vision that now guides our ministry.
It
also gave us a framework to make tough decisions during
the building
process.
The
greatest point of debate centered on whether our addition
should have one
or two stories. The sticking point was the cost and
work involved in making
basement-level space accessible to people with physical
challenges. For us, an
elevator was a budget-buster. Yet without one, a basement
would not be
appropriately accessible.
Our
research of the Americans with Disabilities Act and
related state law
indicated that churches might request exemption from
portions of the
accessibility requirements. There were those in our
congregation who advocated
this on a cost-versus-use basis.
In
the end, though, we decided that sharing love
and reaching out meant
being accommodating no matter what. We opted to keep
all our new people-space at ground level, making it
accessible for everyone. Along with that demonstration
of hospitality, we also avoided the cost of an elevator.
Keeping
God`s vision before us gives us the parameters of
our task in the
Lord`s vineyard. I believe that`s a better way to
make choices than a battle of
personal opinions, cost analyses, or simple majority
votes.
Do
we really need a cathedral?
At another leaders` retreat early in the process,
we discussed the pros and
cons of a building program. We weren`t yet at the
bursting-at-the-seams point
that dictates major expansion, yet we dreamed big.
We envisioned a big building
with a big plan for increasing income and attendance
through rentals of the big
gym. The pictures we sketched were of an addition
almost equal in size to our
current facility. Our immediate sense was that we
really needed all that space;
all I could see was a really big price tag and a change
in my title to
Pastor-Facilities Manager.
Inevitably,
of course, we had to bring the dream in line with
reality. In this we were helped greatly by the book
When Not to Build, by Ray Bowman (Baker, 1992). Bowman,
a Christian architect, provides several checklists
for assessing building needs, motivations for construction,
and openness to the community. He also analyzes the
relationships between church people, church buildings,
and ministry. He points out, most significantly, that
buildings only meet building needsnot people
needs or outreach needs or any other kind of need.
If we expect a building to stimulate growth or increase
giving, we will be disappointed: a building only provides
space where people might do ministry.
As
we applied Bowman`s guidelines, we realized that redefining
current space
would address classroom needs now and in the future.
We discovered that the open parlor area where adults
met could become an enclosed room, which would be
more functional and insulate them from the Sunday-morning
traffic. The choir could practice in a room that was
exclusively theirs for rehearsal, but used for other
purposes at other times. And we didn`t need a gym.
Knowing
that our real needs were more modest than our original
dream made the
project more manageable. I, for one, was relieved
that we did not really need a
combination of the Crystal Cathedral and Madison Square
Garden.
Nuts-and-bolts
leadership
I led the initial work of the task force. This involved
evaluating our current space usage; assessing our
ministries and their space needs; looking at ourcommunity`s
needs; and coming up with a building plan to address
priority
areas.
This
required a lot of my time, which was a good investment
for that step of
the process. I was comfortable leading others in that
discovery process and felt
good about the results. It fit very well with my calling
as pastor-teacher.
Once
we settled on a building design and it came time to
tighten the nuts and
bolts of fundraising and construction plans, I moved
to a support role.
A
team of our laypeople, many of whom were part of the
teaching phase,
capably led the financial campaign, made blueprint
decisions, and recruited
others to work with them. I met with them and participated
in the process, but I
didn`t do a lot of the detail work. I reallocated
my time and energy to other
areas of ministry.
I
was fortunate enough to follow a pastor who allowed
lay leaders to lead. As
a result, these people had developed the strength
and the maturity to do
significant ministry. Because of them, I did not have
to choose between ministry
tasks and building tasks.
If
we had it to do over . . .What would I do differently?
I wish we had found a better way to keep the church
family updated.
I
think we did a good job coming to the whole body after
each step of the
process, yet there were times in between when people
lost track of what was
happening.
While
the task force was evaluating, analyzing, measuring
and projecting, the
congregation couldn`t see progress. People would ask
what was taking so long,
what we were planning, how come we hadn`t started
building yet, or were we doing
anything at all.
We
needed to show our progress more clearly. Presentations
to ministry groups
at regular intervals would have helped, as would a
very visible bulletin board
with weekly updates for the whole congregation to
follow. People simply needed
to see an ongoing connection from start to finish.
I
wish we had communicated better that our early proposal
was not a concrete
plan.
I
walked to the back of the sanctuary following worship
the day after we chose the plan. We prominently
displayed the architect`s color sketch so those who
weren`t able to make the previous night`s presentation
could see what the assembled congregation had approved.
So
what do you think? I asked.
Where`s
my choir room? our director wondered.
Over
here is the room where we`ll keep a piano and have
storage space for
music and robes. That will be a place where you can
practice, said I.
But
I thought we were getting a place that would be just
ours so we could lock it when we`re not using it,
said he.
Remember
how we said that most of the space would be shared
space? I said, knowing he did not remember and
neither did anyone else.
I
had thought everyone understood the assumptions behind
the campaign. We had talked about it, but we did not
do a good job of communicating either the
philosophy of shared space or the tentative nature
of anything up to the formal
choice of a plan.
If
I could go back, I would tell people more clearly
that everything prior to
our adoption of a final plan was not set in stone.
I also would not share any
financial figures that were preliminary, and I would
avoid attaching the name of
any group to a particular space, even tentatively.
The
final hurdles
It took about six years from those early, unconnected
conversations to a
groundbreaking ceremony.
For
all its shortcomings, this building process was good
for our church. It
allowed us to find a solution to our space problem
and stay focused on ministry.
We tried to discern God`s plan for us in a prayerful
and deliberate way. This
process allowed us time to clearly define, evaluate,
articulate, and adjust the
plan before lifting a shovelful of dirt.
The
most hectic phase of the process came near the end
of planning, during
the financial campaign, which coincided with the season
of Lent.
Problems
arose over the details of home visitation, and I found
myself drawn
in at a time when my attention needed to be elsewhere.
It
soon became clear that it would take more than a few
minutes to solve the
problems. Though I felt the burden of the problems,
once I remembered that I
didn`t have responsibility for that solution, I was
able to reorient myself to a
pastoral, rather than a task-related role. It was
the job of the lay leaders to
work out these details, and within a couple of days
they did. I was free to
concentrate on interpreting the larger issues of rebirth,
resurrection, and
growth for our congregation.
In
the wake of that ripple, the leader in charge of home
visits called me. We
offered our personal takes on what happened.
I
realized, he reflected, that it isn`t
our time frame or deadlines that matter. It`s going
to happen in the Lord`s time.
His
words sparked a memory for me, and I realized that
the right time is more than a noncommittal
expressionit is a real moment, and our congregation
found it.
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