The last post was on Urban Solutions: Creating Strategic Ministry Partnerships. If you have read our mission and vision statement, you already understand that our focus is on helping small businesses, churches and other nonprofits improve their capacity to serve others. Our premise is that employees and members must improve their own resilience in order to improve sustainability. We cannot afford to operate in isolation. Instead we need to transition to a model of healthy interdependence.
So let’s
breathe some life into this by understanding the big picture. Once church leadership teams help their members understand how to implement this simple concept in their neighborhood, the steps are repeatable.
Try to imagine this. Oregon has 36 counties, 471 zip codes and 1,349 profiles
on populated areas. In the City of Portland alone there are over 1,200
Christian churches. By building on the work of the US Postal Service, internet
maps and databases, coordination and measuring
outcomes at the neighborhood is both realistic and necessary. Here is an
example of what how to bring this idea down to the neighborhood level.
First, figure out which of
neighborhoods are in your zip code. Then find a map of the neighborhood and
identify your location on the neighborhood map. The last step is to dentify several
homes and make a commitment to develop some level of relationship with someone
in each household. Since that represents such a diverse area, divide the
neighborhood into ten sections with the goal of developing a relationship with
at least one person in each of the ten sections. If this seems like a daunting task, enlist the help of ministry partners by using entering "nonprofit organization lookup". Melissa Data allows users to enter a zip code to identify all nonprofits within that zip code. This allows church leadership teams to build strategic partnerships closest to them and build out thir resource list in concentric circles.
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