Here's a leadership structure for campus ministry with purpose statements and leadership roles.
Leadership Structure:
Petey Crowder, Oregon State University
1. Intention and Rules
2. Helo: Spiritual Formation – Rhythm
Core Values
Weekly meetings
Universitas
Fellowship groups
Accountability
Other events/process
Missions
Mexico
Local
Fundraising
Conferences
Monastic Retreats
Theology Classes
3. Matchbox: - Leadership – Initiative
Student Leadership
HD Guides
The E:team
Staff
Director
Enablers (missionaries, associate staff)
Leadership forum
Overall Intention:
- The overall intention of the ministry is transformation:
- To
see students pass from death to Life, to see them transformed from a
life of selfishness and sin to a life of Worship and Love in the way of
Jesus. This is a never-ending process known as Discipleship. We’ll
always be learning, seeking, serving, loving, and sharing our faith.
- Our
transformation will take the focus off ourselves and onto other people
in all we do – especially in our everyday decisions, thoughts, actions,
and conversations. We will become “intentional ministers” intentional
human beings who live for the Glory of God. We’ll keep our eyes
constantly peeled for God’s moving and working in the world.
- Students will be transformed from being consumers to being lovers of God and others and life.
- Evangelism?
It’s a part of everything We do. Fellowship? As a way of life.
Missions? We’re always on mission. Worship? It’s how we live and
breathe and move. Leadership? If you’re not setting an example, then
you’re not paying attention.
- Think about the early church:
- They
met together multiple times each week for fellowship, to celebrate what
God had been doing among them, for teaching, praise, eating together,
and prayer. That’s what our weekly meetings will be centered around –
transforming students to understand that their faith involves community
and seeking God together.
- We’ll
be congregational – working as a part of the larger body of the church,
united in mission with local bodies and the world-wide community of
believers.
Rules for Creating Ministry:
- NCM isn’t a weekly meeting, but a movement of students in the way of Jesus to bring hope to the world-Good News, if you will.
- *Focus
(weekly worship gathering) isn’t our focus, it’s not all we’re about.
It can be an entry point or introduction, but its intent is to be a
gathering time of fellowship and sending out.
- We (staff) can’t make students do anything!
- Being
a student-led organization, students must be in charge of our planning
so that we’re not making plans they can’t and won’t keep. While it can
be dangerous to turn over so much leadership, it seems required if our
desire is to turn students into ministers and missionaries and not
consumers of a religious system.
- The best thing we can do is to live life as we’re intended – as one in love.
- Like Jesus (one with the Father, one with creation), we’ll be about sharing life. Our lives are no longer about ourselves.
- The worst thing we can do is to keep the blessing to ourselves.
- Which means we’re naturally a sending agency.
- We will live to reveal that God is concerned with every moment and aspect of our lives.
- Learn to see things through the eyes (lens) of Jesus
- There’s no such thing as a sideline Christian or a consumer Christian.
- If
you’re “sitting this one out” or your faith is about you, then you’re
probably revealing that you’re faith isn’t in God, but in yourself.
- NCM Isn’t a baby-sitting service for college students.
- It’s an expression of the church in students on campus (see rule 1)
- Our method for effective ministry is to connect students to other students (instead of just to staff).
- The priority is to see students working with other students, though we realize a connection with staff is natural.
Core Values:
- Beauty:
We desire to see the World as it was created, to dream of a world
that’s good. We want to embrace worship as a way of life-because, like
Jesus, we see the goodness in Creation and we see people for what God
intends for them to live like. In this we are people of prayer, who
embrace the presence of God in all things, all persons, and all moments
of life.
- Justice: If
there's any underrated word found in the scriptures, it's the word
Justice. Often misused in liberal theologies, we believe that justice
sums up the reason Christ came. With man's ways, there is no room for
justice. Justice requires humility and selflessness, and men naturally
tend to take care of self first. It's only in serving the world do we
put ourselves aside and learn to live the call of Jesus : to love God
and love others.
- Authenticity:
We often talk about community in such an abstract way that we know it's
desirable but don't have the means of actually providing it. It's our
greatest desire to see the community of believers unite, and that
begins with being genuine, real, transparent...some would say
authentic. You can't be humble (and embrace justice) by being
self-dependent. Our students wrestle with the theologies of being
"ekklesia," (the church) a community set apart yet bound together for
the call of Christ to be world-changers.
- Initiative:
So often our faith becomes about us, about self-help, consumerism
Christianity. But it shouldn't be that way - our faith should be about
liberating us to take initiative for God, living in the mold of Jesus,
reconciling the earth to its Creator. We encourage students to take the
necessary steps to change the world because of their faith, and do
everything we can to provide the means of doing so.
- Love:
Love is the primary characteristic of God. It is from the attribute of
true, selfless, unabased love that all other aspects of God's character
flow. It connects with the message taught by Jesus and the life he
commands us to live. We desire that Love is what compels us to action
and guides our lives.
Leadership:
- Student Leadership
- HD (Hopes and Dreams) Guides
- A
small number of students with experience in NCM who are responsible for
meeting weekly with NCM staff to dream, plan, and discuss about the
upcoming weeks and terms of ministry based around three of our core
values: authenticity, justice, and beauty.
- The E:Team
- A
limitless team of NCM students who covenant to serve and support our
functions and meetings in various capacities at least twice a month.
Opportunities vary from setting up for *Focus to planning for retreats.
The E:team will be student led and staff accountable.
- Staff Leadership
- Director:
- Responsible
for vision casting and organization for NCM. Connects with the local
church, local association, and state convention. Responsible for
managing the budget, mentoring leadership team students, and giving
direction to interns and other staff members.
- Associate staff/interns
- Responsible
for mentoring students, being involved in fellowship groups, recruiting
new students, building relationships on campus and in the community,
helping with all aspects of students leadership and the coordination of
all weekly and annual events such as Bible studies, mission trips,
church, worship, fellowships, etc.
- Associate
staff will help us spread our influence among the campus with students.
They’re also responsible for weekly duties as the director assigns.
Weekly Meetings:
- Weekly corporate gathering (Universitas):
- A
once a week gathering time for corporate fellowship and worship. The
time will include scriptural-based teaching (usually systematically
walking through a book of the Bible), share-discussion time (what’s God
been doing among us?), communal praise and worship, announcements and
organization, a prayer experience, and fellowship time afterwards.
- Fellowship groups
- The
idea of small groups but centered around a common interest or activity.
These groups are focused on producing natural interaction between NCM
students and not-yet Christian friends and fellow students. It’s a part
of us focusing on the spiritual in all aspects of life and taking
advantage of a transformed life.
- Bible study/Theology seminars
- Led
by staff and for the purpose of intellectual edification, discussion,
and seeking through the scriptures and theological concepts.
Selectively offered throughout the week. Can be large or small.
- Accountability cells
- Within
our fellowship groups, NCM students sign covenants that include the
commitment to meet once a week with 1-3 students outside of fellowship
groups for spiritual accountability and discussion.