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Learning from the work of David Wasdell

Learn from the work of David Wasdell and the Urban Church Project's reports "Let My People Grow" (Oct. 1974) and "Divide and Conquer" (June 1975). Explore the factors influencing evangelism in urban Britain, the role of clergy redeployment, the priority of mission, and the flaws of the Parish System.

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Learning from the work of David Wasdell

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  1. Learning from the work of David Wasdell The Urban Church Project produced two reports Let my people grow Oct. 1974 Divide and Conquer June 1975 Their conclusion was … The Parish System is fatally flawed for its missionary purpose to reach the whole country 1

  2. Consideration of evangelismin urban Britain Factors internal or externalClergy redeployment help? Place of parish missionPriority of mission DW in 2002 2

  3. A bit strong? DW in 2002 ‘We have become involved in the public re-enactment of heresy. We believe and proclaim a gospel of grace available to all but we operate a structure which takes the form of a club with limited membership.’ D. Wasdell, Let My People Grow (London: UCP, 1974) p.7. On what basis? 2

  4. The Sizeof C of E Parishes in 1974 20000 plus 92 15000-19999 202 10000-14999 762 8000-9999 627 6000-7999 1000 4000-5999 1398 2000-3999 1631 1000-1999 1532 500-999 1971 250-499 2314 <250 2893 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 No. of parishes at that size 3

  5. C of E Average Attendance - by parish size 1974 392 20000 plus 265 15000-19999 184 10000-14999 192 8000-9999 191 6000-7999 1 more cleric adds 90, a second adds 81 172 4000-5999 158 2000-3999 1000-1999 116 250 500-999 69 39 250-499 24 <250 0 50 100 150 200 300 350 400 Number of Attenders ‘the single-clergy model church levels off at an average congregation of 175, regardless of parish population.’

  6. More clergy is not the answer • Revd A. B. Miskin (1964) • If you want 10% of population attending • You ‘ll need 27,000 FT clergy • A parish of 15,000 will need 14 clergy No amount of pastoral juggling and redeployment of the clergy can create the needed breakthrough.’ D Wasdell, Let My People Grow p. 8 5

  7. Invisible C of E Penetration of the Parish 1974 1.6 20000 plus 1.8 15000-19999 1.8 10000-14999 2.4 8000-9999 3.2 6000-7999 4.1 4000-5999 6.1 2000-3999 Visible and impact 10.6 1000-1999 12.8 500-999 17.4 250-499 21.4 <250 0 5 10 15 20 25 Percentage of the parish who are attending

  8. No. Parishes Wasdell’s research 1974: Summary Avg Sun Attend % Penetration 400 350 The parish system as a mission disaster 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 <250 250- 500- 1000- 2000- 4000- 6000- 8000- 10000- 15000- 20000 499 999 1999 3999 5999 7999 9999 14999 19999 plus NB Vertical scale adjustments to show trends : The percentages are multiplied x 10 and No of Parishes divided by 10 Parish sizes

  9. C of E parish sizes 1974 and 2011 We have increased the number of the least effective sizes We have reduced the number of the more effective sizes Number at that size

  10. Lack of perception – or willingness? • We have not perceived the need to penetrate a parish area. We have rationalised our decline making ourselves content with fig leaf representative presence. • We have refused the route of needing more parishes of modest size, to reach ‘the pockets of 3-5000 people who are unchurched for all practical purposes’.1 • We have been unable to imagine that a church community for each micro community of 2000 people might be a valuable yardstick. • We have also assumed that the responses to decline should be centrally initiated, and focused upon increasing numbers of clergy. 1 The words of Archdeacon Eddie Shirras, 1992 9

  11. C of E Penetration of the Parish 1974 1.6 20000 plus 1.8 15000-19999 1.8 10000-14999 2.4 8000-9999 3.2 6000-7999 4.1 4000-5999 6.1 2000-3999 10.6 1000-1999 12.8 500-999 17.4 250-499 21.4 <250 0 5 10 15 20 25 Percentage of the parish who are attending

  12. C of E % Penetration of the Parish - 2011 1974 % 0.9 20000 plus 1.6 1.8 1.8 2.4 3.2 4.1 6.1 10.6 12.8 17.4 21.4 1.1 15000-19999 1.3 10000-14999 1.8 8000-9999 1.9 6000-7999 2.4 4000-5999 3.2 2000-3999 4.0 1000-1999 5.1 500-999 6.8 250-499 11.9 <250 0 3 6 9 12 Percentage of the parish who are attending

  13. Population per parish & penetration – by diocese 2013

  14. Does London disprove the case? • Clearly it is an outlier but… Consider recent parish penetration in London diocese Divided into 4 groups from smaller to larger (using ER p. parish population) Source Philip James private paper 2012

  15. A new approach • Gains and drains • Transfer growth- growth and loss • Clergy mission/death and illness • Lay mission/lapse

  16. A new approach • Implications for mission • Increased clergy numbers may maintain but not grow • Holding a mission leads to only short term gains • Only way forward is lay mobilisation in mission and minimise lapse rate. The bigger the church the lower the lay mission role and higher the lapse rate. ‘fundamental priority of mission is the development of a missionary structure for the congregation,.

  17. Divide and conquer • ‘It is a more effective use of manpower to multiply parish units and service each one with a person than to multiply the manpower in a large parish.’ • Danger become atypical and not good at mission • ‘ The explosion of little congregations is the most important factor in the renewal of the church’ • So question is what kind of unit and leader ?

  18. From addition to multiplication • ‘It has become crystal clear that the strategy of growth by addition of new members to existing groups or congregation is itself self defeating.’ • ‘Once we have seen the folly of trying to grow new groups into big groups and big group into church and have the courage to say that sustaining small groups and keeping them as small groups is essential to the life of the church.’

  19. How pay for it? • ‘ a minimum dependence on sacred buildings and full time (paid) ministry and the use of homes, public buildings and part-time, lay or ordained ministry.’

  20. Response to, and by, Wasdell • Let my People Grow went to GS November 1974 • it was noted • Wasdell’s contract for part 2 was terminated • ‘New facts and ideas are often threatening and become buried by defensive reaction – something which may well happen as we grapple with this kind of material.’ • Wasdell, Let My People Grow p. 3 • Divide and Conquer (June 1975) • was unauthorised • Citing factors of resistance1 1 Wasdell, Divide and Conquer, pp 3-5 14

  21. Wasdell’s key messages ‘It has become crystal clear that the strategy of growth by addition of new members to existing groups or congregations is self-defeating. As numbers increase, so the quality of life which sustains the group is destroyed. Opportunities for personal learning, participation and maturation, pastoral care, taking of responsibility and use of gifts, all begin to disappear. Now there would appear to be only one alternative to growth by addition, and that is growth by multiplication … then the most important problem to be solved is the question of what that unit looks like and what kind of leadership is required in the church to enable multiplication to take off and be sustained’’[1] [1] D. Wasdell, Divide and Conquer (London: UCP, 1975) p. 16. 15

  22. Anglican swansong? ‘The forces sustaining the size, lifestyle, organisational form and mission of each of these working units are complex, deeply interwoven and highly resistant to change. Moreover if breakthrough does happen and a particular congregation starts to grow, the dynamically conservative pressures in the rest of the church act in concert with those in the surrounding community to return the ‘rogue’ congregation to pattern. Traditionally ministry involves running the church in its received pattern and passing it on to the next generation as little altered as possible. Changes are only made in so far as institutional survival is threatened and then the strategy of ‘least possible change’ to cope with the threat is followed. The church is superbly organised for survival and brilliantly effective at perpetuating its institutional form. Tragically the form so preserved now stands firmly in the way of the effective mission and ministry of the church in modern England.’ D. Wasdell Tomorrow’s Church:ACE No. 34 (September 1978 ) p. 12. 16

  23. Has this ever happened before or since? Towards the Conversion of England - 1944 John Tanburn’s CPAS book Open House - 1970 The John Tiller report - 1983 Mission Priority areas: Richard Giles et al – 1992 Building Missionary Congregations: Robert Warren, 1995 A New Way of Working: John Holbrook et el, 2001 Add your own 17

  24. Never, ever, think outside the box Reasons to stay in the box • Fear • Loyalty to the past • Lack of trust in the proponent of change • Not allowed time for ideas to sink in • Lack of vision • Loss of position or influence J Hamilton-Brown, Parish and People, 2004

  25. What is the C of E parish based box? Our priest Result - Ceiling of 175 people By the way … ‘Come to us’ [mission] Our worship service – preferably Sunday In rural and poor urban areas the ceiling is lower Our church building

  26. How is the box strengthened? Traditional training & local expectations Priest Liturgical conservatism Parish Boundary Clergy & People client-provider collusive fit Beware poachers ‘Come to us’ Sunday worship Result stay much as we are It’s proper church You’d love our church Public & Heritage Lobby – change? closure? church building

  27. Suppose life beyond the box Pioneer & Lay–led Communities round Jesus We come – to you Where others gather

  28. Questions for you Is it true … that parishes of over 2000 are self limiting? That they do not encourage diverse multiplication? Should we allow the C of E parish box to have the last word? 22

  29. They said it ‘The desire for neatness, as much as the desire for control, is characteristic of … those contemplating office. They are often backed up bureaucracies which are allergic to messiness. But human life and creativity are inherently messy and rebel against the uniformity that accompanies systemic constraints and universal solutions.’ House of Bishops, Who is my neighbour? (London: C of E, 2015) para 55. 23

  30. Suppose life beyond the box Pioneer & Lay–led Communities round Jesus We come – to you Reproduce non-identically Multiply Where others gather

  31. Questions for you Is it true … that parishes of over 2000 are self limiting? That they do not encourage diverse multiplication? Should we allow the C of E parish box to have the last word? Will we dare go with a messy, non-identical future to allow the creation of many more young churches?

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