About CBC Community Group Ministry
Chantilly Bible Church (CBC)
started her home shepherding ministry (home groups) in 1990. When Pastor Shane
Symolon joined CBC three years ago (2015), there were seven English-speaking home
groups and ten Chinese-speaking home groups. Today, CBC has thirty community
groups, including twenty English-speaking community groups and ten Chinese-speaking
home groups.
The Vision
Small Group ministry has been a
major part of CBC’s vision. In a recent published CBC mission statement,
Christ-centered community is recognized as essential for spiritual growth. It
says, “God created us to form intentional relationships that deepen our love
for Christ and each other. We prioritize meeting together to encourage, serve,
and submit to one another (Hebrews 10:23-25; 1 Peter 4:8-10).” The small group
ministry as a CBC vision is reiterated and emphasized from time to time from
the pulpit and through annual community group workshops.
Challenges in The Past
Although home shepherding ministry
stayed a CBC vision and continued to grow over the past two decades, it didn’t
start without difficulties. CBC faced many common challenges shared by other
churches, and yet some challenges are very unique to CBC. In the beginning of
the ministry, there were only a handful of home groups among English congregation
and almost all of them were led by pastors or elders. Once they were couple
years into their gathering, it became very hard for pastors to leave or to pass
on to other leaders.
“Three years ago,” said Shane, “English
congregation at CBC were not interested in going to small groups, for those who
went, commitment was also an issue”. Geographic dispersion was a concern.
People who were interested in hosting or leading a home group might not have enough
church families living near-by. “Historically speaking, the Small Group
ministry was not embraced by English congregation. However, Chinese brothers
and sisters liked to go to home groups. It was a cultural thing here”, said
Shane.
Recent Changes
Shane changed the name from “Home
Shepherding” to “Community Group” to reflect the importance of being in a
Biblical community, where people of God came to worship God, read the Scripture,
and share their lives together. For people who were interested in starting a
new community group, Shane gave them a 6-week training program, which was
designed for the whole group, not just for the leaders. Through a constant
announcement on the church bulletin and annual community group workshops, CBC
members started to feel the necessity and enjoyed going to community groups
which had reflected on an increase of attendance, especially among the English
congregation.
According to the “be together”
teaching in the book of Hebrews, community is essential for spiritual growth. Shane
pointed out, “We are not just reading or studying Bible together like what we
did in a book club, we want to grow together spiritually with God and with each
other, that means we touch every corner of our lives like sin, repentance,
struggles, prayers, healing, worshiping, crying, rejoicing, all that messy but
good stuff.”, said Shane.
How Are Small Groups Started? How Are the Leaders Selected?
CBC uses a six-week starter
program to launch a community group. A pastor or a church leader will spend six
weeks with the entire group getting them ready for launching. For new groups
with many potential leaders, a group leader is not needed before the six-week
program starts. “We can naturally let the group decide their own leader at the
end of this six-week period”, said Shane. For smaller groups or groups with no
apparent leaders, however, Shane suggested to have a leader identified before starting
of this six-week program. Usually the leaders were identified through referral
or by knowing them in person from personal contacts.
The role of the small group leaders
has changed. “They don’t have to be teachers or facilitators themselves, but
they need to make sure someone will facilitate the discussions,” said Shane, “Also,
leaders are different from host, leaders make sure things happening.” CBC has a
sign-up sheet on the church website for people to sign up for small groups.
Shane connects them to small group leaders and leaders will call and invite
them to the meetings. When a group is full (reaches to 14-16 adults), then new
people will be introduced to other groups.
Besides signing up on the church
website, people may just call Shane to express their interests in either leading,
hosting or participating in a community group. Through interviews and
conversations, Shane helped them to form the core team in this new community
group and Shane sent out emails to church members in that area asking if anyone
was interested in joining this new community croup. Once seven people were
committed, then it’s the signal to start a new group, which followed by the
six-week starter program.
How are Small Group Leaders Trained?
The six-week launching program is
the first and the fundamental training, not only for leaders, but also for
every participant. CBC also conducts an annual “Community Groups Summit”
planned for current and potential group leaders. Through the teaching,
workshop, and break-out sessions, this annual summit provides opportunities for
leaders to share experiences, obtain visions, and take partnership with other
leaders. Between the launching and the Summit, training materials are widely
available for any training need. Sometimes, the training can be on a personal,
one-on-one level. When a group leader identifies a unique situation or need,
Share keeps a close contact with the group leaders through frequent visitations
and consultations.
Shane identified three things
that are quite different now. First, the way that people get connected has
changed. New technologies are involved. For example, the rolling out of the Realm
software, an online church-wide communication system, gave group leaders a new
venue to communicate with their group members in addition to the traditional
social medias. Second, the leadership in small groups has changed. Church
pastors are no longer leading the community groups. Third, new course materials
are added. People used to obtain or develop their own teaching materials, now
sermon guides are made available for every community group. With these new
changes, leaders are presented to different training needs.
Challenges
While Chinese Pastor Isaac Huang still
oversees Chinese-speaking home groups, Shane oversees CBC’s community group
ministry within the English congregation. Each ministry faces a different set
of challenges, but both ministries are seeing certain common issues. Lack of
sufficient training among group leaders still amounts to the number one
challenge. The need to equip leaders is to make them disciples, which is drastically
different from training them to lead effective Bible studies or to share more
Bible knowledge. What leaders need is to live out a Godly life for others to
follow – a devoted heart to love God, love each other, and love neighbors. “We
need to train our leaders to bring the groups together and to lead the groups
by example, that’s how we grow in our spiritual maturity toward a Christ-like
life”, said Shane.
High turn-over rate is another
problem. Although only one group was completed dissolved since the community group
ministry started three years ago, people had difficulties committing to the
small group gathering. It seems that busyness is the major contributing factor
to the high turn-over rate, especially in the Northern Virginia region. Priorities,
conflicting schedules, and competing activities drew people’s attentions from
faithfully attending community groups. However, “it is still coming back to the
heart issue,” commented Shane.
Cross-cultural interaction between
community groups remains a difficult challenge. Each cultural group (English,
Chinese, Spanish, Indian) has its own unique activities within its own cultural
settings in their own time frames. For example, more than 200 Chinese brothers
and sisters gathered together every year to attend a summer Chinese retreat. Their
shared experiences stay within their own space. As a result, the “be together”
teaching in Hebrews 3 remains superficial and occasional. The vision of “going
deeper” and “growing together spiritually” is still a long way to go across the
cultural line. “Should I send a new English-speaking person to a Chinese home
group? maybe not a good idea,” said Shane.
Advice to Small Group Ministry
“Don’t follow a specific model,
follow what fits in your own small group ministry in your church”, said Shane. He
added, “No two small group ministries are the same, so following a specific
model may not meet the needs of your ministry.” Another advice was given regarding
the starting of a small group ministry. “Don’t start a small group ministry
without a good buy-in,” said Shane, “Get consensus, get inputs from everyone before
making any changes. A good approach and a prayerful preparation before launching
a small group ministry with everyone involved is always a good idea.”
Recommended Reading
Shane strongly recommended to
read and follow the CBC Community Groups Handbook for launching community
groups, which “will help the entire group understand the importance of
discipleship, community covenant, self and group identity, grace and
acceptance, accountability to each other and guide to encourage and support
each other,” said Shane.
Additional books are also
recommended for further readings: “Community is Messy” (Zempel), “Sticky
Church” (Osborne), “Spiritual Multiplication” (McNabb), “Making Small Groups
Work” (Zondervan), “Field Guide for Small Group Leaders” (O’Neal), and “Small
Groups with Purpose” (Gladen).
Additional Questions to Ask
When asked if he has a preference
on an open or close group for CBC’s community ministry, Pastor Shane responded
firmly, “Close groups! so we can go deeper.” Another question was brought up
about whether CBC would launch Interest Groups. Shane also replied with a firm
negation. The third question to Shane was about the relationship between the church
and the small groups regarding which one a new church member should go first.
“Did you think people should go to community groups first, then go to church?
or go to church first and then go to community groups?” “I guess it’s both”,
said Shane. “Chinese brothers and sisters tend to go to small groups first
before they go to church, but English brothers and sisters like to join the
church worship first before going to small groups. Maybe that’s cultural thing
as well,” smiled Shane.