Title: Connected Through the Ages: Building Multigenerational Community
1Connected Through the AgesBuilding
Multigenerational Community
- Joseph Priestley District
- Annual Spring Conference
- Wilmington, DE
- Presented by Patricia Hall Infante
- Saturday, April 26, 2009
2- I have found a definition of family values
that seems to make sense. I think it means that
we are all family. And that we all have value.
Christopher Reeve
3Clash of Cultures
- Personal Culture
- Institutional Culture
4Congregational Generational Continuum
5Mono-Generational
- Only one Age Group Present
- Most often people between the ages of 45 and 65
- Sunday Morning Worship usually the only main
program - If RE is present it is small and more like a
childcare program
6Generationally Segregated
- There might be 3 to 4 generations present
- RE is the realm of children, youth and their
parents - Sunday worship is the realm of the middle aged
and seniors - Generations rarely mix socially
7Pseudo Integrated
- Looks like the Generationally Segregated Church
- Main differences is specific and limited
intergenerational events like - Yearly youth worship
- Holiday worship
- Children attend first part of service only
8Multigenerational
- There are programs present that are designed to
meet the specific developmental needs of all
generations - There are programs the regularly bring different
generational groups together in meaningful ways - These two are part of an intentional church plan
9Multigenerational Minute
- Where do you think your congregation fits on the
continuum?
10Components of Faith Development
- Learning
- Worship
- Social Justice
- Community
- Leadership
11 - Horizontal
- Vertical Integration
12Path of Faith Development
Mature Faith Development
Transcendent
Relational
13Congregational Factors that Promote Growth and
Faith Maturity
Search Institute Study Found Six Factors
- Effective and formal education program
- Members perceive that their congregation
encourages questions, challenges thinking, and
expects learning. - The congregation successfully recruits members to
volunteer to help people in need. - Members perceive their Sunday worship is of high
quality. - Members see their congregations as warm and
friendly. - Members personally experience other members care
and concern.
14Eight Dimension of Mature Faith(Benson Eklin,
1990)
- Trusts in Gods saving grace and believes firmly
in the humanity and divinity of Jesus. For UUs -
trusts in life and believes in inherent worth,
one love for all. - Experiences a sense of personal well-being,
security and peace. - Integrates faith and life and sees work, family,
social relationships, and political choices as
part of religious life. - Seeks spiritual growth through study, reflection,
prayer and discussion with others.
15Eight Dimension of Mature Faith(Benson Eklin,
1990)
- Seeks to be part of community in which people
witness to their faith and nourish one another. - Holds life affirming values, including a
commitment to racial and gender equality, an
affirmation of cultural and religious diversity
and a personal sense of responsibility for the
welfare of others. - Advocates social and global change to bring about
social justice. - Serves humanity consistently and passionately
through acts of love and justice.
16Multigenerational as a Leadership Issue (Adapted
from Rendle, 2008)
- Train and challenge leaders to look beyond the
preferential - When preferred practice is simply endorsed
leaders have difficulty hearing and responding to
new voices. - The task of a leader is to lead change and learn
new ways. - Congregations mistake strategies for purpose as
if the practice itself were holy and not an
approach to the sacred. - Leaders must learn how choosing a practice will
most faithfully fulfill the purpose of the
congregation. - Multigenerational leadership is a way of seeing.
Leaders need to be prepared to share the
leadership table. - It is an act of radical hospitality which shapes
a new community because of what we see.
17Generational Cohorts
- The GI Generation - born 1901 - 1924 hero
- The Silent Generation - born 1925 - 1942 artist
- The Boom Generation - born 1943 - 1960 prophet
- Generation X - born 1961- 1981 nomad
- The Millennial Generation - born 1982 - 2005 -
hero? - The Homeland Generation - born 2005 - 2025
18Generational Watershed
- Gil Rendle identifies a generational watershed
- Pre 1946
- GI Generation Values
- Post 1946
- Consumer Generation Values
- The Bridge People
19Gil Rendles Four Markers
- Deferred Pleasure v. instant gratification
- Group v. individual orientation
- Assumptions of sameness v. assumptions of
difference - Spirituality of place v. spirituality of
pilgrimage
20Multigenerational Minute
- What side of the generational watershed do you
identify with?
21Building Multigenerational Community
- Start with Intention
- Develop a Plan that addresses 3 Points
- Points of Entry
- Points of Difference
- Points of Connection
22Points of Entry
- Programming
- Fellowship
- Education
23Multigenerational Minute
- Can you identify several points of entry in your
congregation?
24Points of Difference
- Cultural differences
- Identity based differences
- Theological difference
25Multigenerational Minute
- Are there particular differences that you are
already aware of in your congregation?
26Points of Connection
- Friendship
- Mentorship
- Shared Experience
- Sense of community
27Multigenerational Minute
- Are there existing points of connection that are
already part of your congregational culture? - How can you build on them?
28Multicultural Community
29Strategies for Building Multigenerational
Community
- Worship for all, all the time.
- Themed worship and religious education
programming, for all. - Sunday morning religious education, for all.
- Mentorships and relationship building.
30Sharing Stories as a Strategy
- Sharing faith stories between generations is
meaningful and powerful. - It serves to carry the flame forward to a new
generation. - One aspect of spiritual maturity is knowing when
to pass the torch of leadership.
31Resources
- The Worship Workshop Creative Ways to Design
Worship Together by Marcia McFee - Come Into the Circle Worshiping with Children by
Michelle Richards - Worship That Works Theory and Practice for
Unitarian Universalists by Kathleen Rolenz,
Wayne B. Arnason - Hardwired to Connect Report www.americanvalues.org