Circuit mission planning
There are many helpful ways in which you might go about producing a circuit mission plan. This simple four-step process has been specifically devised to help Methodist circuits that are making discernments about possible church mergers. It includes a consideration of New Places for New People (NPNP) and Church at the Margins (CaM). The Methodist Church's Strategy for Evangelism and Growth, received by Conference in 2020, commits significant resources to beginning new Christian communities for unaffiliated people. Every Methodist circuit is encouraged to imagine, begin and sustain a New Place for New People or Church at the Margins - and circuit mission planning is a great way to begin.
A circuit mission planning process will be led by a group of people that will include the Superintendent. This could be the Circuit Leadership Team, if this group has the capacity. Alternatively, a group of lay and ordained people who are not necessarily all on the Circuit Leadership Team could be commissioned to undertake this substantial but time-limited project. There may be church members with experience of leading change processes in their working lives; Supernumerary ministers with considerable experience and leadership skills; perhaps a District Mission Enabler who is able to give some time to help facilitate this work. There will be Learning Network staff who could be approached to offer support in this process. A list of the support available can be found on the 'Pastoral' pages.
A: Community audit
Circuits are encouraged to begin mission planning by considering their local community. By starting with the community, we make a conscious decision to focus on the world that desperately needs the good news, rather than focusing on the needs of the church. Depending on the size and geographical spread of the circuit, there could be many overlapping, diverse communities through which the churches are located. For this reason, ideally each church would do their own community audit, drawing on the guidance in the mission planning toolkit.
If your churches need support in producing community audits, suggest that they follow the simple process on the 'Community audit in a nutshell' page.
Once you have a community audit from each church, combine this information and prayerfully ask yourselves: where are the most significant mission opportunities? You may wish to use the five NPNP priorities to help you in this discernment:
- New housing
- Families with kids
- Students and young adults
- Church at the Margins
- Replanting (i.e. beginning a new Christian community using an existing church building)
See below for a more detailed consideration of NPNP and CaM.
B: Review of churches for mission potential
Once you have a sense of the profile and needs of the communities which make up your circuit, and the mission opportunities, consider the mission potential of your churches.
For each church, ask:
- Are there people with a passion for God’s mission, even if they haven’t been able to translate this passion into action? Consider committed volunteers, lay workers and ministerial staff. People are the most important factor here. Even a tiny group of people on fire for God can make a difference. And these people do not need to be part of the Methodist worshipping community: consider partnerships with other churches, charities, community groups and passionate individuals that share the church's love for its community.
- Is there a fruitful church activity that involves sharing the love of God in Christ with unaffiliated people – or a vision for one?
- Finally, what resources (buildings and finances) are there for God’s mission? You can reallocate resources; passionate people and inspiring vision are harder to come by.
Once you have the answers to these questions, ask: what’s the mission potential of this church?
Not: is this church valuable? Of course it is – all churches are gatherings of people loved by God, founded by a vision from God – all churches are valuable.
Not: is this church failing? Language of failure is unhelpful here. People do the best they can with the resources they have.
But: does this church have the potential to share the love of God in Christ with others?
- Are there passionate people with a desire to share the love of God in Christ with others? How could these people best be supported to turn passion into action?
- Is there a flourishing missional activity – or the vision for one – that the circuit could support – with training, staffing, by recruiting volunteers from other parts of the circuit, with money?
- Is there a building that is in a strategically significant location (for example, which would lend itself to a NPNP or CaM)?
- Are there resources to be released for mission elsewhere (and the people lovingly offered an alternative spiritual home)?
C: Look for matches between mission potential and community audit (including NPNP/CaM discernment)
You now have a picture of the communities within your circuit, and the potential of your churches to reach those communities. Now consider how the needs of the communities and the potential of your churches match up.
- Where there are passionate people, inspiring vision and sufficient resources, what could you do as a circuit to translate all this into action, or to support the action that is already taking place?
- Do you have passionate people in different parts of the circuit whom you could bring together in some way?
- Is there a fruitful activity - or an inspiring vision for one - which lacks people to make it happen? How might you bring together people and vision?
- Are there fruitful activities or inspiring vision that could flourish with greater resources, e.g. financial resources, building space, staff time?
As well as looking for ways to support existing activities and existing vision, consider where God might be giving you a fresh vision for a New Place for New People or Church at the Margins. A NPNP or CaM could start alongside existing, more traditional churches, perhaps meeting in a community hall in the same area, but reaching a group of people not currently being reached by existing churches. Alternatively, a NPNP or CaM could begin in a geographical area not covered by your existing churches. There may already be a flourishing ministry which could become an NPNP or CaM with support. You may have buildings strategically placed for a NPNP or CaM, even if the congregation is currently not in a position to realise this potential.
Keep in mind the five priority NPNP categories, asking yourselves the following questions:
1. New housing
- Are there areas of new housing in your circuit?
- Are there areas where new housing is planned?
- What Methodist presence/other church presence is there in these areas?
All local authorities have a ‘Local Plan’ detailing the areas where new housing needs to be developed. Ensure you are aware of any new housing being planned, if your churches' community audits have not already identified it. You may have church buildings which are ideally situated to begin engaging with people moving into the circuit.
2. Students/young adults
- Are there any universities or Further Education colleges in your circuit?
- What Methodist presence/other church presence is there nearby?
- Are there any Methodist chaplains?
3. Families with kids
- What’s the age profile of different parts of your circuit?
- What does parenthood look like in your circuit? What proportion of families are headed up by a lone parent? What percentage of children receive free school meals?
4. Church at the Margins
- Where are you experiencing or noticing the impact of economic poverty in your circuit?
- How might you become a circuit that receives and values the gifts of people experiencing poverty?
- How might you create spaces where people truly encounter one another?
- Could nurturing a new community at the economic margins be part of God’s invitation to you?
You will find a definition of Church at the Margins here.
5. Replanting
Are there chapels in your circuit which are strategically placed for mission, but where the existing congregation is not in a position to grasp these opportunities? These may be near an area where new housing is planned, for example, or in an area where many people experience poverty, but where there is no other Christian presence. As part of your mission planning process, consider whether God is calling a church to offer its building so that a NPNP could begin.
6. Do you have a sense that the Spirit is calling you?
Maybe you sense a call to a group of people or a type of mission that doesn't fit any of the above categories. That's fine - listen to the call prayerfully together.
D: Allocate resources (including merging churches and releasing buildings)
Now that you have a sense of the mission potential in your circuit - the missional possibilities and the passionate people who could make them a reality - consider how best to allocate resources.
- What governance structure do you need to serve the mission you have identified? How many Local Churches are necessary? Be radical: start with one, circuit-wide Local Church and justify, from a missional point of view, why you really think you need more.
- Are there passionate people whose building is not fit for purpose, who could carry out the mission to which God has called them from a hired room, or even from someone’s home?
- Are there buildings in strategically significant locations, where the congregation could be supported with extra ministerial or lay worker time, in order to fulfil the mission potential?
- Are there buildings which are not strategically significant, or not fit for purpose, which could be sold to release funds for mission elsewhere?
See the 'Buildings' page for a more detailed consideration of buildings.