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The Conversation Before the Conversation

The Conversation Before the Conversation. The Practice of Behavioral Covenants. Connecting…. Name Name and location of church Role at church How many years have you served there? What is one expectation you have for this workshop? Do you have any pets?. The challenge before us.

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The Conversation Before the Conversation

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  1. The Conversation Before the Conversation The Practice of Behavioral Covenants

  2. Connecting… • Name • Name and location of church • Role at church • How many years have you served there? • What is one expectation you have for this workshop? • Do you have any pets?

  3. The challenge before us The journey of vitality is both adventurous and treacherous.

  4. The Physics of Vitality vitality = change change = movement movement = friction friction = heat

  5. Don’t get suckered into the myth We can grow without change. We can change without pain.

  6. Conflict is normal and natural In leading your church to becoming healthy and missional, you are going to have some challenging conversations.

  7. Values of Vitality Vitality may often come with conflict and opposition. Preparing for this challenge requires courage, hope, perseverance, wisdom, graciousness and training.

  8. Values of Vitality Vitality is not just about rebirth; it's about reality - a current reality that requires an accurate and honest assessment. There is no vitality without reality.

  9. Values of Vitality Vitality takes longer than planned, is messier than expected, costs more than originally figured and requires greater determination than once thought.

  10. What happens when the church begins to grow?

  11. Entropy Organizations tend to lose vitality rather than gain it as time passes. They also tend to give greater attention to what they “were” rather than what they are “becoming”. It is easier to look back into the past and smile on yesterday’s accomplishments than it is to look ahead into the future and think about tomorrow’s possibilities. Chuck Swindoll

  12. 2 Kinds of Spaces Reactive Space Balcony Space Source: Ron Heifetz

  13. What is a Behavioral Covenant? • The conversation before the conversation. • The conversation about how you are going to have the conversation on vitality. • These conversations need to be civil, compassionate and Christ-honoring.

  14. Midwest Conference video toolbox:

  15. What is a Behavioral Covenant? • The conversation before the conversation. • The conversation about how you are going to have the conversation on vitality. • These conversations need to be civil, compassionate and Christ-honoring.

  16. Conversation • Conversation implies back-and-forthness, several voices engaged in considering, exploring, discussing, and enjoying not only the subject matter but also one another’s company. Eugene Peterson, Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places

  17. Name that picture

  18. The components of a simple conversation

  19. Behavioral CovenantsHoly Manners for a Faith Community A behavioral covenant is a written document developed by leaders, agreed to and owned by its creators and practiced on a daily basis as a spiritual discipline. The Covenant answers the question, “How will we behave (how will we live together?) when we don’t understand each other and when we don’t agree?” Gil Rendle Behavioral Covenants in Congregations

  20. Good Behavioral Covenants are Based in Scripture Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity. Colossians 3:12-14

  21. Guidelines for Loving Relationships and Values to Guide Our Interaction Colossians 3:12-14 At the Evangelical Covenant Church… We seek to build each other up and not tear down. We respect and honor the office of pastor and other lay leaders. We seek to communicate clearly, completely, and directly. We offer our opinions with charity and humility.

  22. Guidelines for Loving Relationships and Values to Guide Our Interaction • We make positive investments in each others lives. • We believe the best in each other and give each other the benefit of the doubt. • We seek to discover what is best for our church as a whole, not what may be best for us or for some small group in the church. • We accept disagreement, conflict and evaluation as normal and natural. • We are committed to being inconvenienced for the sake of the gospel. Question: What do you like about this Behavioral Covenant?

  23. “As we communicate, so shall we be.” Lee O. Thayer Communication Theorist

  24. In the various arenas of our life, we strive to be productive, to be responsible, to do the right thing, but in the midst of the demands of daily living, have we lost sight of how we treat each other, how we interact with those who disagree with us, how we understand our place in community? The hard work of learning to practice civility with each other is where others will most likely see our Christian witness, and through that witness, for better or for worse, they will decide the worth of what we profess. Daniel de Roulet, Covenant Companion, May 2010

  25. Staff Behavioral CovenantFirst Covenant Church of River Falls, WI Let us hold unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful. And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds. Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching. --Hebrews 10:23-25 In seeking to follow and serve Christ together we will… 1. Make our weekly staff meeting a priority. 2. Not attack or embarrass one another. In public, we will support each other (criticism is private and praise is public). 3. Practice, as well as encourage & respect each other’s Rest & Rejuvenation times (i.e. phone calls, e-mails, scheduling, etc.). 4. Pray for each other whether in times of sorrow or joy, want or plenty, challenge or celebration.

  26. Staff Behavioral CovenantFirst Covenant Church of River Falls, WI 5. Encourage one another to cultivate Christian courtesy in all our relationships, supporting and encouraging redemptive and Christ-honoring actions when wrongs occur with those we serve and serve with. 6. Keep short accounts with one another. We will take the initiative to talk to one another when there are misunderstandings or conflicts. 7. Seek to make communication a priority with one another by responding in a timely manner to each other’s requests and being informed with each other’s ministries. 8. Celebrate the work God is doing in and through us by mutual encouragement. 9. Proactively seek training and equipping individually and as a team. 10. Close staff meetings with agreement on next actions, persons accountable for those actions and the time frame in which they are to be completed. ____________________________________________ Staff Signature On the Journey: Sharing Christ, Growing Together

  27. Benefits • Creates a foundation for civil, compassionate and Christ-honoring conversations. • Generates momentum. • Creates an early win on the pathway of vitality. • Establishes a common language. • Creates some measure of unity. • Promotes a culture of candor and a climate of trust.

  28. Benefits • Provides a teachable moment. • Helps people reflect on their own family of origin. • Creates a mentality before the reality. • Improves the tenor of meetings. • How do you measure what prevention prevents? • Helps deal with seen but unnamed issues.

  29. Benefits Provides an opportunity for people to stop and think about how they are treating others. Gives people an opportunity to repent. Synthesizes grace and truth. Promotes healing of old wounds. Invites others into compelling Christian community. Witnesses to the love of Jesus.

  30. How to… • How do you create a Behavioral Covenant and keep it before the people?

  31. Anticipating resistance • What are some reasons people will give not to have a Behavioral Covenant? • We are all Christians here; we don’t need a Behavioral Covenant.

  32. Anticipating resistance • What are some reasons people will give not to have a Behavioral Covenant? • We are all Christians here; we don’t need a Behavioral Covenant. • All of this is in the Bible. • We already wrote this into the Constitution and By-laws back in 1950. • We don’t have time to do this.

  33. Anticipating resistance • Why would people not want a Behavioral Covenant? • The gig is up! • Passive aggressive behaviors. • Attacks from naysayers.

  34. Passive aggressive behavior is the MO in many churches • Passive-aggressive behavior is a pattern of expressing your negative feelings in an indirect way — instead of openly addressing them. Dr. Daniel K. Hall-Flavin, M.D. Mayo Clinic psychiatrist

  35. Signs and Symptoms of Passive Aggressive Behavior A constant display of… • Resentment and opposition to the demands of others • Complaining about feeling underappreciated or cheated • Procrastination • Stubbornness • Inefficiency • Memory lapses • Sullenness • Irritability • Cynical attitude • Obstructionism • Victimization • Blaming • Ambiguity

  36. Passive Aggressive Behavior • Passive Aggressive behavior is a form of covert abuse. When someone hits you or yells at you, you know that you've been abused. It is obvious and easily identified. Covert abuse is subtle and veiled or disguised by actions that appear to be normal, at times loving and caring. The passive aggressive person is a master at covert abuse. Cathy Meyer

  37. Passive aggressive behavior stems from an inability to express anger in a healthy way. A person's feelings may be so repressed that they don't even realize they are angry or feeling resentment. A passive aggressive can drive people around him/her crazy and seem sincerely dismayed when confronted with their behavior. Due to their own lack of insight into their feelings the passive aggressive often feels that others misunderstand them or, are holding them to unreasonable standards if they are confronted about their behavior.

  38. Passive Aggressive Behavior

  39. Attack Strategies used by Naysayers • Fear mongering Fear mongering involves creating infectious anxiety, scaring others into believing that a good idea is far too risky to pursue. John Kotter and Lorne Whitehead, 4 Ways to Kill a Good Idea

  40. Attack Strategies used by Naysayers • Death by delay Death by delay entails stalling an idea with never-ending questions, straw polls, and meetings—until the idea eventually loses momentum and peters out. John Kotter and Lorne Whitehead, 4 Ways to Kill a Good Idea

  41. Attack Strategies used by Naysayers • Confusion Confusion consists of peppering a conversation with a stream of irrelevant facts and convoluted questions, making it nearly impossible for the innovator to keep the discussion on track. John Kotter and Lorne Whitehead, 4 Ways to Kill a Good Idea

  42. Attack Strategies used by Naysayers • Ridicule Ridicule is a direct attack on the character of the person who proposed the idea, creating indirect doubts about the idea itself. John Kotter and Lorne Whitehead, 4 Ways to Kill a Good Idea.

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