The North Georgia Conference is excited to share a new resource: The Lighthouse Congregation Movement.
"Lighthouse Congregation" is a designation for churches devoted to Christian hospitality and the welcome and care of people who've been displaced from their church home by disruption, disaffiliation, or closure. Lighthouse Congregations will be equipped to offer an assurance of calm, comfort, and stability. Good candidates are those churches that are:
This movement was born in partnership between the Western North Carolina and North Carolina Conferences of The United Methodist Church. It is now rolling out in Western Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Virginia, Holston, and here in North Georgia.
What's required of a Lighthouse Congregation?
1. Commitment to the UMC. This is a promise of stability to those who were displaced because they want to remain United Methodist Their trust is likely damaged by their recent experience with church conflict.
2. Commitment to providing a welcoming space to belong during this time of grief and transition, which might be for a season or for a lifetime. This includes all forms of pastoral and lay-driven care and compassion. This may also include providing physical space for “remnant” groups to gather as they consider what it looks like to stay together.
3. Offering ministry opportunities without any immediate pressure to join, give, or lead.
4. Organizing efforts to reach out to individuals and groups who have expressed a desire to remain United Methodist.
5. Connecting with other congregations, your District, and the Center for Congregational Excellence to help displaced individuals and groups figure out their best next steps.
Learn More
The Lighthouse Congregation Movement is meant to enhance the work of our entire connectional church. To learn more about the movement, and the steps to becoming this kind of church, visit www.ngumc.org/lighthouse.