|
The leadership of the laity has a long history in The United Methodist Church. While Methodist pastors rode the circuits, it was the leadership of the lay members of the societies that kept the congregational ministry going.
Beginning Steps A good beginning step, if you feel you may be experiencing a call to serve, is to complete a spiritual gifts inventory. Study and reflect upon how your gifts, talents, and strengths, may be used in ministry, and/or in your daily life, community, and church. Take some time to consider your passion. What inspires you? What areas of mission or ministry excite you? What issues in the church or community bring you the deepest concern? When you use your spiritual gifts in conjunction with an area of ministry that you are passionate about wonderful things can and do happen.
Another step is critically important as you explore and prepare yourself for any form of ministry. Remain steadfast in the basic Christian practices or spiritual disciplines which John Wesley called means of grace. These means of grace include prayer, Bible study, the sacrament of Holy Communion, worship, fasting, and Christian conferencing. You may join or form a small group that will help you grow spiritually and stay faithful in your spiritual practices. One group of this kind is a Covenant Discipleship Group. Small groups for support and accountability are a rich part of our Wesleyan heritage and continue today in many churches with a renewed vitality and relevance for growing in discipleship. Today’s Covenant Discipleship Groups help their members witness to Jesus Christ in the world and follow his teachings through acts of compassion, justice, worship, and devotion under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. They focus on a balanced discipleship through works of piety (personal devotions and public worship), and works of mercy (acts of compassion and acts of justice).
Steps to Get Started with a Covenant Discipleship Group
Opportunities and Steps for Servant LeadershipClass Leaders Class leaders led the laity of the early Methodist church in developing their discipleship. Today, class leaders may be commissioned and classes may be organized to help form faithful disciples of Jesus Christ. Classes may organize as Bible studies or small groups. If you feel called to use your gifts in this way:
Ministry Area or Committee Chair Leading within the congregation as part of a ministry team, committee member or committee chair is another form of servant ministry or servant leadership for lay people. Resources to help you in this way:
Lay Member to Annual Conference Lay members to annual conference have the responsibility to represent their congregation at annual conference and help interpret the actions and activities of the annual conference to their congregations. To consider this servant leadership position:
Lay Leader Lay leaders function as the primary representatives of the laity in the local church, district, or annual conference to which they are elected. The role of lay leader is not only to represent the laity, but also to support the pastor. In correlating positions, the district lay leader supports the district superintendent, while the conference lay leader supports the bishop. Laity in these roles can be prayer partners and share in mutual ministry with the clergy leaders. Steps to take include:
Lay Speaker Exhorters in the early Methodist societies challenged and encouraged the members in their spiritual growth. After a sermon by the pastor an exhorter would give practical applications of the sermon to the society members. The term exhorter has been replaced by lay speaker in today’s UMC.
A lay speaker is a professing member of a local church or charge who is ready and desirous to serve the Church and who is well informed on and committed to the Scriptures and the doctrine, heritage, organization, and life of the United Methodist Church and who has received specific training to develop skills in witnessing to the Christian faith through spoken communication, church and community leadership, and care-giving ministries. (¶267, 2008 Book of Discipline) Lay speakers serve in their local church, or with additional training, serve beyond their local church in other churches, the district or the annual conference. Lay speaker training is not just about preaching. In fact, there are many more courses on other areas of ministry. Training to become a lay speaker:
Lay Missioner
Lay missioners are committed lay persons, mostly volunteers, who are willing to be trained and work in a team with a pastor-mentor to develop faith communities, establish community ministries, develop church school extension programs, and engage in congregational development. All lay missioners must follow the guidelines established by the National Committee on Hispanic Ministries of the National Plan for Hispanic Ministries and may be certified by their annual conference. (¶270, 2008 Book of Discipline) Lay missioners may be either Hispanic or non-Hispanic and must follow the guidelines found in the National Plan for Hispanic Ministry. Steps to become a lay missioner:
Certified Lay Minister
A certified lay speaker may be trained, approved, and assigned by the district superintendent to pastor a small local congregation or charge. There is now a format for equipping lay people for this role as certified lay minister (CLM). Completion of the training modules and approval by the district superintendent and district committee on ordained ministry are required before certification is granted. (See ¶271, 2008 Book of Discipline.) Steps to Become a Certified Lay Minister:
Certified Professional Lay Ministry
Leaders at any level set an example for others to follow. People will look to you as a leader, whether you are lay or clergy, for an example of how to live out their faith. |
- Ministry
Explore Ministry
- Lay & Ordained
- Explore Calling
- Ordained & Licensed Ministry
- Certification Studies
- Glossary of Candidacy Terms
Ministry Candidates
- Beginning Candidacy
- Continuing Candidacy
- Provisional Membership
- Licensing & Course of Study
Clergy
- Boards of Ordained Ministry
- Campus Ministry
- Chaplains & Pastoral Counselors
- Deacons & Diaconal Ministers
- District Superintendents
- Elders & Local Pastors
Seminaries
- Overview
- Seminarians
- University Senate-Approved Seminaries
- United Methodist Theological Schools
- Ministerial Education Fund
- Global Theological Education
- Young Adult Seminarians Network
Continuing Education
- Overview of Continuing Education
- Online Continuing Education Consortium
- Standards & Guidelines for Use of CEUs
- Policies & Guidelines
- Annual Conference Continuing Educators
- Seminaries and Independent Centers of Continuing Education
- Recommended Readings for Continuing Education
- Spiritual Formation
- Education
Schools, Colleges & Universities
- Students and Families
- Educational Leaders
- Church Leaders
- Education & Methodism
- The UM Historically Black Colleges
- Education News Archive
Continuing Education
- Overview of Continuing Education
On Campus
- Campus Ministry
- United Methodist Student Movement
- Orientation Magazine
Funds
- Black College Fund
- Africa University Fund
- Methodist Global Education Fund
- Ministerial Education Fund
- Loans & Scholarships
- Networking
Networking
- Boards of Ordained Ministry
- Campus Ministry
- Chaplains & Pastoral Counselors
- Clergywomen
- Clergywoman Profile
- News for Clergywomen
- Support the African Clergywomen's Consultation
- WellSprings 2012
- A Walk to Remember
- Salary Study
- Sister Strength: Grace, Growth, and Wit
- Trusting the God Who is Ever Faithful
- Passionate Leadership
- Leadership - Micah-Style
- Creativity and Learning
- The Ministry of Presence: The Importance of Building Capacity Among the Laity
- Accountability, Responsibility, and the Clergywomen
- Guaranteed Appointment
- Book Review: Leading on Empty: Refilling Your Tank and Renewing Your Passion, by Wayne Cordeiro
- Leading from Your Authentic Self
- About the Next Issue
- WellSprings 2011
- Wellsprings: Encountering Otherness
- The Widow of Zarephath: A Story of Empowerment in Marginality
- Renewal: A New Thing of God in an Age of Decline
- Spirit Brush Arts
- The Ministry of Presence: The Importance of Building Capacity among the Laity
- A Gift as Old as Time . . . Stitching for a New Day
- The “One Million Dream Project”
- To Places Unknown
- Imaginative Upcycling and Rebirth
- I Am Making All Things New by Mending My Old Self
- God Is Doing a New Thing in Worship
- WellSprings 2010
- Wellsprings: Seasons of Hope and Grace for United Methodist Clergywomen
- "Say It Loud": Speaking Truth Powerfully with Grace
- Creating with Words: Using Our Voices With Vision
- Prophet or Pastor?
- A Graceful Struggle: The Lead Women Pastors Project
- Tools for Change and a Whacking Wardrobe
- Believing!
- The Future United Methodist Clergywomen's Consultation in a Global Context
- The Struggle to Leap in Faith
- The (Mis)Understood Deacon
- Drink Before You Are Thirsty
- About the Next Issue
- Future of The United Methodist Clergywomen’s Consultation
- Lead Women Pastors Project
- Racial-Ethnic Clergywomen Alliance
- Georgia Harkness Scholarship Award
- History
- 50th Anniversary
- Study of Ministry Commission
- Deacons & Diaconal Ministers
- District Superintendents
- Elders & Local Pastors
- United Methodist Student Movement
- Young Adult Seminarians Network
- Women of Color


A good beginning step, if you feel you may be experiencing a call to serve, is to complete a spiritual gifts inventory. Study and reflect upon how your gifts, talents, and strengths, may be used in ministry, and/or in your daily life, community, and church. Take some time to consider your passion. What inspires you? What areas of mission or ministry excite you? What issues in the church or community bring you the deepest concern? When you use your spiritual gifts in conjunction with an area of ministry that you are passionate about wonderful things can and do happen.
Lay people serving in the church can enhance their learning and increase their knowledge and skills to become more effective workers in their areas of service. Certification in various areas of ministry within the church is available. These include Christian education, youth ministry, music, evangelism, camp/retreat ministry, spiritual formation, and older adult ministry.
