Living Your Purpose Workshop Series Living your Purpose I: Core Values and Mission Thursday, June 26, 2014 10:15 – 11:30 Living Your Purpose.

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Transcript Living Your Purpose Workshop Series Living your Purpose I: Core Values and Mission Thursday, June 26, 2014 10:15 – 11:30 Living Your Purpose.

Living Your Purpose Workshop Series
Living your Purpose I: Core Values and Mission
Thursday, June 26, 2014 10:15 – 11:30
Living Your Purpose II: Aspirational Values and Vision
Thursday, June 26, 2014 2:15 – 3:30
Living Your Purpose III: Making It Stick
Friday, June 27, 2014 10:15 – 11:30
Living Your Purpose I
Core Values & Mission
Workshop #210
Joe Sullivan, UUA New England Regional Staff, [email protected]
Rev. Dr. Frances Sink, Developmental Minister, UU Congregation
in Stamford, CT
Addie Deacon, Lay Leader, UU Congregation of Binghamton, NY
Jo Ann Freer, Lay Leader, UU Congregation of Binghamton, NY
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
“With humility and courage born of our history, we
are called as Unitarian Universalists to build the
beloved community, where all souls are welcomed
as blessings, and the human family lives whole and
reconciled.”
•
UUA Leadership Council, 2008
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Sharing in pairs (2 minutes each):
• Why are you here for this workshop?
• Do you feel your congregation knows or has known
its core values & mission? How can you tell?
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
About this workshop:
• Naming assumptions
• A brief experience of the process – “Experience of
the Holy”
• A case example – The UU Congregation of
Binghamton, NY experience – choice points and
lessons learned
• Q&A
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Why are we, the presenters, here?
Naming Assumptions
Framing Powerful Questions
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
We assume meaning & connection
Ends
Mission
Values
• Mission: As we work to embody our values, what overarching purpose calls
to us? What overarching difference are we here to make in the world and for
whom?
• Core Values: What timeless, transcendent qualities of our religious
community will we carry forward to guide our future?
© Unity Consulting
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
We assume accountability for this work
Whose work is this?
Religious leadership
Central role of trusteeship
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
We assume readiness for this work
When are we ready for this work?
Congregation conditions or circumstances:
• When need for clarity of direction
• Not when in conflict
• Not at the initiation of a ministerial transition
Leadership awareness & preparation:
• When prepared for shared discernment
(expect to renew this work every 5 to 7 years)
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Readiness -- Case Study: UU Congregation of Binghamton, NY
UUCB conditions or circumstances before this work:
• Membership stagnant
• Stuck in Pastoral to Program transition:
– Unclear leadership roles
– Program Council without clear purpose
– Programs/committees operating in silos
• Existing old mission offered no guidance
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Readiness -- Case Study: UU Congregation of Binghamton, NY
UUCB Leadership awareness & preparation:
• Recognized difficult pastoral to program size transition
• Significant lay leadership development
• Strong program staff & lay leadership relationships
• Broadened the circle of leadership awareness & preparation
• Worked closely with UUA/Regional staff:
– Gained “balcony” view of our condition & circumstances
– Helped establish growth plan
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
We assume grounding of this work
Where do we ground this work?
What informs & guides it?
Our UU theology & faith tradition
Personal experience
Our contexts of place & time
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
We assume intentional connection of process to product
How can the process inform the product?
The process as an embodiment of the product:
•
•
•
•
Spiritual practices of leadership
Stories – past & future
The art of listening & speaking from the heart
Reflects & helps define a congregation’s DNA
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
We assume certain overarching purposes for UU
congregations
What is unique and what is shared among UU
congregational missions?
Unique:
– Personal experiences & gifts
– Local context
Common:
– Teach the faith
– Change lives through living Unitarian Universalism
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Naming our Assumptions
We assume meaning & connection
We assume accountability for this work
We assume readiness for this work
We assume grounding of this work
We assume intentional connection of process to product
We assume certain overarching purposes for UU congregations
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Experience of the Holy
Revealing core values through intentional spiritual
conversation
• Reflection
• Speaking from the heart
• Deep listening
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Experience of the Holy
2 minutes
Reflection on your experience of the holy
2 minutes
Tell your partner your experience
2 minutes
Listen to your partner’s experience
5 minutes
Consider & list values
Pick 3 you both want to bring forward
5 minutes
Join another pair & share chosen values
Choose 3 values all four of you want to bring
forward
Experience of the Holy Handout
http://tinyurl.com/p6zval3
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
From Core Values to Mission
Ends
Mission
Values
Core Values: What timeless, transcendent qualities of our religious community
will we carry forward to guide our future?
Mission: As we work to embody our values, what overarching purpose calls to
us? What overarching difference are we here to make in the world and for
whom?
© Unity Consulting
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
From Core Values to Mission
How does Experience of the Holy inform and help us
prepare for Mission work?
•
Through experiencing the intentional process
•
Through clarifying the transcendent qualities to guide our Mission
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Mission discernment
Given we have UU identity to live into and teach
Given we embody the values we have named
Given our particular context of time, location, size, strengths, etc.
Ask: What is different because we are here?
What differences in lives are we here to make and for whom?
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Case study: UU Congregation of Binghamton, NY
UUCB process steps: (year(s) & total duration in months)
1. Board met with UUA-District staff about process
2. Board led Experience of the Holy (EoH) with committees/small
groups
3. Congregational event to distill results of EoH to 3 Core Values
4. Small group of “poets” craft a Mission statement from 3 Values
5. Mission statement revealed as “final” at town hall meetings
6. At Annual Meeting statement not approved. Board charged to
rewrite using same 3 Core Values. Dissenters invited to
participate.
7. Revised Mission statement approved at congregational meeting
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Case study: UU Congregation of Binghamton, NY
UUCB process – Lessons Learned:
+
+
-
-
Intentional Experience of Holy process was profound
Adjusted process when we met resistance
Mission drafting process closed and opaque
Presented the “poets” statement as final rather than seeking
feedback
Full congregation discernment stopped at 3 values rather than
continuing through the creation and acceptance of mission
statement
Could have included a process asking, “How do we and how
should we live these values to change lives?”
Living Your Purpose
Core Values & Mission
Case study: UU Congregation of Binghamton, NY
Core Values & Mission discernment process – Choice Points:
•
•
What if we encounter resistance?
After discerning Core Values, what next in terms of Mission
discernment process?
• How could we involve others beyond members in the
process?