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4 ways your parish can avoid a long slow death

January 24, 2022

The Parish Pastoral Council and Strategic Planning

Most parish pastoral councils operate on a year-to-year basis with little focus on the long-term future.  Many are unaware of the community trends which are impacting the parish or the changing patterns of membership, sacramental practice, and finances.  Few see the need for a strategy for the future, instead placing their hopes on a return to the “good old days.” Around the country, parishes are dying slow deaths because there is no intentional or organized attempt to change their trajectories.  The smaller a parish becomes, the more difficult it is to overcome the forces of decline.

Long-range planning is not something that can be done every year.  For parishes who regularly long-range plan, they usually do so every decade.  It takes time to develop a plan, organize the implementation, and then get results.  That is why it is essential to use the services of someone who has experience in parish or pastoral planning as a consultant.  Objectivity is critical in an effective planning effort.  Community and parish data need to be analyzed and any recommendations must be grounded in these objective realities.  If a parish wants to build a building, they will not proceed without the services of an architect or a design-builder.  The same is true if a parish wants to conduct a large capital campaign. They will hire a fund-raiser to determine the financial potential for the campaign as well as conduct the campaign itself.  As important as the future is to the parish, why would a planning consultant not be hired?

Here are several important understandings to know before you begin a long-range planning effort.

  • It is easier to plan something quantitatively than qualitatively. For example, a number of parishes primary planning experience has been with a building project.  Parishes can identify the cost, raise the money, and then watch the building being constructed.  These efforts are visible to parishioners and not every parishioner needs to contribute to the project to make it happen.  People can see the results of the effort develop right before their eyes.
  • Qualitative goals are more challenging to achieve. There are few parishes in the country – although I have run into some – who would not welcome new members, especially young adults.  If only all that had to be done was to hang out a sign saying, “new members welcome” or “young adults welcome here.”  It takes coordinated effort, resources, formation, and time for parishes to reach out to those who not currently worshiping with them.  The level of difficulty also applies if the parish is trying to improve the quality of ministerial programs, such as the academic or formation program in the school or faith formation program.
  • Set reasonable and measurable goals. Parishes tend to either establish no metrics to determine whether they are getting results or metrics that are unreasonable.  If a parish sets a goal of increasing young adult membership and then does not track those members or see any increase, the strategy which was devised is likely flawed and should be rethought.  A parish that wants a 100% increase in young adult involvement in the parish is setting itself up for disappointment.  Achievable goals are preferable to “pie-in-the-sky” ones.  A future blog will address some of the metrics which parishes should be monitoring and trying to improve.
  • A qualified consultant will form the parish pastoral council to monitor and guide the implementation of a pastoral plan. Since “planning for pastoral activity” is the primary role of the council, the members will assist the groups which will directly implement the goals and will conduct the ongoing evaluation of the progress of the implementation.

Most parishes are formed or were formed by some significant population event or events.  In most cases, the establishment of a parish followed the population growth in a specific geographical area.  In most cases, this was a one-time event as the area was eventually “built out.”.  Parishes in metro and city areas thrived, then experienced decline, and now are seeing people return to the cities.  Suburban and ex-urban parishes are also experiencing transitions as their populations' age and economic makeup change.  Rural parishes have been especially hard hit as the agricultural economy has moved from the small farm to agribusiness leaving few jobs for the young to afford to stay in the area. All these trends and transitions can be addressed by a comprehensive planning process led by a qualified consultant.

Is it time for your parish to develop a strategic plan for the future?

 

Mark Kemmeter

 

 

Meitler Minute

January 18, 2022

Most clients never meet our project coordinators in person, but they are a vital part of the Meitler Way. Tina Heding explains how she and her colleagues help support each client’s project and mission behind the scenes.

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Meitler at 50: A Glance Back…

December 31, 2021

Thank you for joining us as we look back over our first 50 years. Here is to the next 50!

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Meitler Minute

December 28, 2021

As we wrap up 2021, we have so much to be grateful for! We have seen amazing growth in school, parish, and diocesan data studies across the country, which points to a bright future. We wish everyone blessings and success in 2022!

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Turning the corner in this holy season

December 15, 2021

Sunday, December 12th we celebrated the third Sunday in Advent. This week is often a turning point in this holy season of waiting and preparation. The tree goes up in many homes, the cookie baking begins in anticipation of Christmas celebrations, the hallways and classrooms at our Catholic schools are adorned with signs of two holy seasons evidenced by the juxtaposition of an Advent wreath alongside a Christmas tree. Our holy yet impatient waiting.

For those of us who mark Advent and make our final preparations in anticipation of Christmas our hearts and minds pause to praise God for the gift of life, the gift of our church, the outreach, the children in Catholic schools and religious education and all those who serve as missionary disciples. Our Savior came to us as a small child. In our Catholic schools we are privileged to experience Christ over and over again in the face of a child, to see the myriad ways in which Christ is present to us in their beautiful faces. In our churches we are privileged to experience Christ in the ways in which we serve the last, the lost, the least and the lonely. And together we experience Christ in one another. And, at this holy time of year, mindful of the deep heartache of many in our nation and world, we pause in a spirit of gratitude.  Gratitude for the gift of Christ Jesus as a child and for the many ways we are able to experience the Christ child.

As a faith-based organization, it is a privilege to serve in a setting where the joy of the Gospel is at the heart of our work. Thank you for trusting us, the Meitler team, to accompany you and your school, parish and diocesan communities as your chart the best way to educate, nurture and share the love of Christ with all those your serve.

"May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope" (Romans 15:13)

Jackie Lichter, Ph.D.

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