My Call To Action

“Competent employees crave accountability; incompetent ones flee it,” writes one of our management consultants. I’m pleased that the North Alabama Conference, through the invention and use of our Dashboard, has pioneered a renewed culture of accountability. The spirit has caught on with the bishops’ Call to Action – a plan to build in accountability for mission into the life of our connection. Of course, like any innovation, the plan has its critics, most of whom see no need for increased accountability in our church [1].

Paul Nixon has become a very helpful coach to our pastors and churches who want to improve their mission engagement. Recently Paul published a piece on how measurement and accountability, inspired by the Holy Spirit, have motivated his own ministry. - Will Willimon

MY CALL TO ACTION

I was sixteen years old, traveling with my church youth group in the New Mexico mountains: listening to an American missionary talk about his work in Korea. Blah, blah, blah the speaker went on. Calling us to action. It meant nothing to me. But it just so happened, as I zoned out from whatever he was talking about, that the Spirit of God started chattering in my soul. I experienced that night what my faith community confirmed to be a "call to ministry." I had no idea what I was getting into, but the sense of God's calling that began that night, has guided and motivated me now for more than 33 years….a Call burning in my soul.

So I have benchmarked my work constantly (and a bit ruthlessly) across the years. I cannot imagine not doing so! No bishop or DS asked me to do so. I did it because I believed the work mattered! Because I believed God demanded it!

In my first appointment out of seminary, as associate pastor to a suburban church, I decided in my first week on the job (the last week of June) that we needed to double the number of children's church school classes from 9 to 18. This would entail quadrupling the number of teachers by August. I convened a group that walked with me through the church membership roll, discussing each name, in terms of their potential to teach. I started calling with A, and secured my last teacher somewhere in the W's in early August. That year our church school attendance rose from 370 to over 500….

A few years later I was appointed to a church that was consistently taking in 200 new members a year. But I wanted 300. So I began to calculate, and to work a series of strategies that would kick that number over 300 within a couple years.

Some would say I was driven. Yeah, maybe... But I always took my day off, came home for dinner, played with my kid, and so forth. I just believed this work was really important - and so I kept careful score about key metrics that seemed connected to fulfillment of the mission. I constantly re-arranged my time to make sure that the most strategic things happened.

I now coach pastors. And I cannot count how many times in the past month I have gently but directly asked my pastors "How are you going to know you are making progress in the next six months? How will you know that you are on track in your mission?" Ultimately, they set benchmarks for themselves and I help them reach those goals. It is a ministry of accountability and encouragement. I believe in accountability.

I have learned over the years that accountability has very little to do with motivation, and that it rarely ever motivates a person to work harder. Pastors work hard because they are passionate about their work. That passion is almost always connected to their experience of God's call. It grows from within their soul.

My denomination is moving into a season of renewed accountability. Long past due! Some of our bishops now want a report card from their pastors every week. Maybe overkill, but a little accountability will not hurt The United Methodist Church.

What might hurt is the disappointment five years from now…, if we assume that accountability will produce the motivation now lacking. The motivation that produced the Book of Acts came from a place higher than the Council of Bishops.

If the United Methodist Call to Action yields anything, it may be because the bishops themselves take action to remove ineffective pastors from vital places of service when those persons persistently fail to grow their churches or meet reasonable benchmarks in changing community situations. If the Call to Action yields anything, it could be because conference leaders do what it takes to help their conferences recruit women and men passionate and competent for the work of growing the church….

To my friends in the episcopacy, thank you for caring about our church enough to call us to action - but now the church looks to you for action. When we see some $20,000 salary cuts begin to show up across the connection in response to pastoral ineffectiveness, that is when we will know you all were serious.

Hold us accountable!

Paul Nixon
The Epicenter Group
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[1] For example, see the compromised UMCPlanB.org

By: William H. Willimon On 4/23/2012
Topics: Weekly Message from the Conference

Comments

1. William H. Thrasher, Ph.D. wrote on 4/23/2012 3:50:05 PM
Paul mentioned a weekly accountability report and that it may be too much. In California I pastored in the Foursquare Gospel Church, organized very similar to the UMC and mostly Wesleyan doctrine with charismatic or contemporary worship styles. We did a weekly report. The report included the amount of money that came in, the number in SS and in worship by general age groups, the number and types of classes, the number of visits made by the church that week, the number of visits made by the pastor that week, the number of people professing Christ that week, and the number of people divinely healed that week. I have no problem with the minimal reporting and accountability procedures chiefly engineered by Bishop Willimon. I don't understand why anyone would.
2. Larry Wright wrote on 4/23/2012 4:15:59 PM
I followed the footnote to the UMC PlanB.org link and read what it had to say. I don't see anything in it that justifies the remark that "critcs" of innovative ideas see no need for accountability. My understanding is largely about the granting of certain new powers and authority to the Council of Bishops that Plan B opposes. Am I right or wrong on that point?
3. Will Willimon wrote on 4/23/2012 5:21:24 PM
Larry One of my problems with the Plan B proposal is that it has no plans for accoutability for our general church structure, our boards and agencies. I hear throughout the church that our boards and agencies of the church function as autonomous, unaccountable units. Much of the church believes that the bishops have a hand in guiding and overseeing the board and agencies. We do not. Ironically, Plan B, in its fear of granting authority to the bishops, has made common cause with the agencies that fear oversight. Or at least that's how many of us see it.
4. Larry Wright wrote on 4/23/2012 5:59:22 PM
Thanks Bishop. I certainly appreciate your perspective.