Guide to Mission Groups in Seekers Church

Ninth Edition – January 2010
Washington, DC

Dedication

This guide is dedicated to all those whose experience with Seekers mission groups has taught us how important it is to be clear about what a mission group is and how it functions.

Affirmed by
STEWARDS OF SEEKERS CHURCH

Table of Contents

Introduction

Why Mission Groups?

The Anatomy of a Mission Group

The Call of the Group

The Authority of Mission Groups

Mutual Expectations in Seekers Mission Groups

Balancing Mission and Support

Discerning Spiritual Gifts

Individual Roles and Authority

Discerning Roles in the Group

Servant Leadership

Mission Group Meetings

Confidentiality

Spiritual Practice in a Mission Group

Spiritual Direction or Companionship

Time for Reflection

Joining – and Leaving – a Seekers Mission Group

Preparation for Joining a Mission Group

Visiting an Existing Group

Leaving a Mission Group

The Life Cycle of a Mission Group

Discerning the Call of the Group

Affirming the Call

Sounding the Call

When Group Life Becomes Painful

Ending a Mission Group

Postscript

Appendix A: The Call of Seekers Church

Appendix B: Mission Groups of Seekers Church

Introduction

Mission groups have been a core element of the life of Seekers Church from our beginning in 1976. A decade earlier the Church of the Saviour established mission groups as the place of primary belonging for everyone in the congregation. Today, Seekers mission groups are a primary place where we are living out God‟s call on our lives, the place where we belong most deeply to this small part of the Body of Christ.

This page provides information on –

  • Why we think mission groups are important;
  • How they are structured in Seekers Church;
  • How mission groups support our Christian servanthood in the life of the community and its service to the world;
  • What a mission group and a participant can expect from each other;
  • The significance of a mission group for its members;
  • How to join an existing group;
  • and How we nurture the birth of new groups.

It also includes short descriptions of the different mission groups that were active at the time of writing.

Our mission groups live in the midst of a community that is guided by the Stewards of Seekers Church and supported by our Servant Leadership Team (SLT). Information about Stewards and the SLT can be found in the Guide to Seekers Church and at the Shared Leadership in Seekers page

Why Mission Groups?

For Seekers Church, mission groups are the focal point for living out our commitments to spiritual growth (the journey inward), mission (the journey outward) and community (the life of Seekers Church). For us, mission groups carry the seeds of the destiny of humankind. We believe that the future depends in large part on how God acts through faithful, committed groups like these around the world.

At Seekers Church we believe God calls each of us to an active partnership, to be co-creators of God‟s realm here on Earth. Young or old; regardless of experience, skills or education; despite our past successes or failures – God gives each of us a call. This call comes through a sense of awe and mystery as we live into a growing relationship with Christ. It is a persistent, costly commitment to give ourselves to the task of bringing peace and justice to those in need. At the same time, once we accept God‟s call, God‟s gift to us is that this call leads to a life of love in service. Concretely, God‟s call is a deep, inescapable desire to transform the world and the church. It is a desire placed by God in the heart of each of us, to be servants to others and stewards of God’s creation.

In Seekers Church, we understand that a mission group is an important place to live out God‟s call. It is an expression of the Body of Christ as described in the New Testament. That is, a mission group is a committed group of believers in which Christ is resident and present. Because of this, we believe that the mission group is the place of deepest belonging to the Body of Christ that is available to us in this community. For its members, the mission group has the power to convey God‟s forgiveness. It is our primary structure for spiritual formation.

We sustain the life of our community, and support ministry in the wider world through mission groups. Support for the life of Seekers Church includes core activities like our worship, and spiritual formation of adults and children through education and retreat. Through other mission groups we participate in “corporate” missions that serve the needs of the world and we support individuals who are called into their vocation as ministry.

Once a mission group has been called into being and its call has been affirmed by the Stewards of Seekers Church, the group has both the authority and the responsibility to lead the community in living out its call.

The Call of Seekers Church sets the foundation for our mission group life. Mission groups are key to how we live out the core of our call to be Church: Our call is to be a “Seekers community” which comes together in weekly worship rooted in the Biblical faith, with shared leadership; and disperses with a common commitment to understand and implement Christian servanthood in the structures in which we live our lives. (Find our Call at Appendix A.)

The Anatomy of a Mission Group

A mission group is a place where you can join with a few others who share a commitment to God‟s call on their lives to do some particular kind of transforming work in the world. A mission group is a place of safety in which you can share your inner journey, find forgiveness and understanding, ask and answer hard questions, and discern ever more clearly the ways in which God is calling you to embody Christ in your daily life. A mission group is a place where you can find support and encouragement for your spiritual growth while engaged in a particular work of transforming service. A mission group is a place where both your journey inward to knowing God and your journey outward to service can be held as we journey together in loving community.

The Call of the Group

Like Seekers Church as a whole, each mission group has a written call describing the purpose or mission of the group. This call begins to emerge before a group is formed. The call serves as the framework or skeleton for action by the group. It describes the part of our life together where the mission group will lead the congregation.

The Authority of Mission Groups

Each mission group of Seekers Church holds a part of the life of the community, and is accountable for the way it cares for that part of our life together. Just as the individual members of each mission group have authority for their roles in the group because the mission group as a whole has confirmed their gifts, so mission groups exercise authority at the point of their call as confirmed by the community. In Seekers Church, the Stewards affirm the call of each mission group based on their discernment of how the call of the mission group grows out of and supports the call of the Christ on the Church, and our growing understanding of the needs of the community and the world.

A mission group supports the implementation of the Realm of God. As part of their life together, members of each mission group should be reflecting on how well they are doing in achieving that goal, how they can modify their approach or change their strategy to be more responsive to God‟s call.

Periodically the Stewards invite all members of a mission group to meet with the Stewards for a conversation about the life of the mission group and the role it is playing in the life of the congregation, and its role in bringing about God‟s Realm.

Mutual Expectations in Seekers Mission Groups

Every group should be clear how much time and energy is required of its members, both in and between meetings, for full participation in the group. Groups with corporate missions normally require some commitment of time from participants outside regularly scheduled meetings. Mission groups that support individuals in their vocations encourage a continuing awareness of the presence of Christ in the vocational environment.

Balance is as important for our groups as for ourselves. Each group tries to balance the work of the group with celebrations of birthdays and other special events, retreats, an occasional dinner together, or other play time. Worship is a part of every meeting, and a major part of most mission group retreat activity.

You can expect from your mission group:

  • A clear commitment to live out God‟s call on the mission group;
  • A regular schedule of meetings;
  • Help in offering yourself to the group (calling forth of gifts);
  • A clear understanding of the amount of time/energy involved in group participation;
  • A structure that has room for all participants to share their gifts;
  • Guidelines to nurture personal spiritual growth (common spiritual practices or disciplines);
  • Support as you face the challenges and pain in your life;
  • A spiritual companion who will receive and respond to regular written reflections on your life and spiritual growth;
  • Confidentiality for what you share with the group; and
    Group life that balances work, play and worship.

The mission group will expect from you:

  • Commitment to God’s call on the mission group;
  • Regular attendance at group meetings;
  • Readiness to share your gifts with the group;
  • Commitment of the time and energy needed to belong to the group;
  • Participation in the structured activity of the group;
  • Commitment to follow the spiritual discipline of the group;
  • Honest and open sharing of yourself;
  • Regular written reports to your spiritual companion (accountability);
  • Confidentiality for what others share with you; and
  • Work, play and worship.

Balancing Mission and Support

Mission groups are the structure we have found most helpful in supporting us as we respond to God‟s call on us as individuals and as a community. They are structured to offer support and spiritual accountability for living out God’s claim or call on our lives. Belonging to a mission group will support you as you:

  • Nurture God’s call on you, grow and mature into it, and go out to serve in the name of Christ and the church;
  • Discover and nurture your own gifts in a group that shares God’s call;
  • Offer your gifts in service and witness to others and to the whole of creation;
  • Pursue an interior life of spiritual growth along with others who are similarly called;
  • Deepen your spiritual practices, or disciplines, not only in your individual life but in the life of the group;
  • Deepen your commitment to accountability for who you say you are and what you mean to do;
  • Receive caring feedback to stimulate and support your personal growth; and
  • Shepherd others, as well as allow others to shepherd you.

Discerning Spiritual Gifts

In 1975, Gordon Cosby, founder of the Church of the Saviour, described the evoking of gifts in a way that still rings true for us:

When all is said and done, the discovering and nurturing of the gifts of its members remains the primary work of the mission group. The teaching of St. Paul is clear (1 Corinthians 12:1-31). Each person confessing Christ as Lord, living within the Body of Christ, is given a gift by the Holy Spirit for the upbuilding of the Body. We can even say that the person himself, as his essence unfolds under the power of the Spirit, is gift. He becomes more fully human, more fully Christian. Functions naturally flowing from this new being are recognized. As these gifts are recognized by the member and confirmed by other members, they are employed for the enrichment of the group’s life. If every member has discovered the unique treasure of his or her own being and it is being received by the others, there is tremendous fulfillment and power. The unity of the group consists in the faithful use of the variety of gifts. If even one or two members have not identified their gifts, the problem of envy will be a serious one for the group. (Handbook for Mission Groups. Waco, TX: Word Books, 1975. Pg 60-61. )

When we speak of the authority of each participant at the point of their gift, we mean that as each person in the mission group exercises their gift, every other person in the group will confirm and be obedient to that gift. For example, if you are the worship leader of a mission group, you can expect all participants to enter into worship from the heart. When this process causes disagreement or tension, it is the task of the group to work through the issue with prayer and love until the gift can be confirmed by all in the group. If this confirmation is not possible, the group must enter a period of discernment to reassess where gifts for the group are being given.

Individual Roles and Authority

Every participant should have a part to play in the life or mission of the group — responsibility for some part of the life of the group. Every group needs participants who will take several basic roles. These roles may have different names, or be combined in different ways, but each group needs a moderator, someone for spiritual accountability, and someone to uphold the vision of the group.

  • Moderator / Abbot – The member of the group who structures the group life, develops the agenda, makes sure everyone has a chance to share, saves time for the essentials and helps keep the balance of work, play and worship.
  • Spiritual Companion / Director – The person to whom others in the group are accountable for the faithfulness and richness of their spiritual lives; the one who receives, prays over and provides comments on weekly reports from group members.
  • Vision Keeper / Prophet – The person who takes the longer view of the life of the group; the one who keeps the group in touch with its call; the one who challenges when things get too comfortable.

Other roles that may be combined with those described above, or with each other include:

  • Worship Leader – The one who leads the worship life of the group.
  • Ecumenist – The person who keeps the group in touch with the rest of the church: other groups, the larger Seekers community, the other Church of the Saviour descendants, and the wider church.
  • Activist – The one who leads the group into action. This may be directed toward the corporate mission of the group, or toward the growth and development of the group itself.
  • Celebrant – The person who calls the group to play, and encourages full expression of our joy.

Discerning Roles in the Group

In Seekers mission groups, selecting participants to fill roles requires a process of discernment that allows the group to call forth and confirm God’s special gift to each participant in the group. Sometimes this gift is a skill or talent that the individual has developed outside the group, like administration or accounting, or leading meditation. In the same way, God’s gift is sometimes a desire to learn something new by offering it to the mission group. The important thing is to be open to the quiet voice of God, and honest with one another in the group about what we hear. As long as any participant in a mission group does not feel that his or her gift is essential and making a contribution to living out the call of the group, there will be problems.

Once the gift of each member has been discerned (within the context of the group) and confirmed, roles can be structured to allow each participant to give to the group from a position of authority. This allows authority within the group to be shared by all participants, and gives each person a position of leadership. Discerning the gifts of mission group members should be done for all participants at the same time. As new participants join a group, the distribution of gifts will change. Discernment involves sharing God’s hints, praying together, discussing, claiming what is revealed, and confirming the gifts in the presence of everyone. This can be an important opportunity to ask questions or offer constructive reflection to one another in the context of the call of the mission group. In the end, specific roles are unique to each group.

There are times when God’s gift to a group is through an individual’s pain or weakness: the participant in pain can draw forth the healing love of the entire group by being open and vulnerable in sharing that pain.

There are many processes for clarifying and confirming the gifts of members of a mission group. Typically, the person leading the group will include these elements:

  • Quiet, prayerful reflection by all members of the group about the call of the group and what each member of the group brings to that call;
  • Affirmation of the contributions of each member of the group to group life and group mission;
  • A statement from each member of the group about what God is calling them to bring to the group;
  • Reflection on each member’s sense of call to the group;
  • Confirmation of each person’s call by all members of the group; and
  • Discussion of how the work of the group can be structured to fit the call of each member and remain faithful to the call of the group.

Servant Leadership

The corollary to the authority of gifts is our understanding of servant leadership in Seekers mission groups. We believe that leaders are called to lead in the way Jesus taught. The leader must be the servant of the group. This means being faithful to the call of the mission group and the good of the community in the exercise of gifts. It means not using your role within the mission group to push for a personal agenda, even as you bring your hungers, interests and concerns to the call of the group. It means keeping clearly in mind that every participant has authority at the point of his or her own gift. A member‟s ability to contribute to the health of the mission group and the ability of the group to follow God‟s call flows from each person seeing her- or himself as part of the community rather than a lone individual. Servant leadership underscores a natural tension between the efficient employment of skills, experience and power and true collaboration in service to Christ through the call of the group. Mission groups are one important place where we are learning, from the teaching of Jesus, a way that the world has rejected.

Mission Group Meetings

Regular meetings are important. The frequency of meetings will affect the depth of connections within the group. Seekers mission groups usually meet weekly. Weekly meetings foster a sense of closeness that encourages sharing in depth and mutual support, and allows for visible progress on the work of the group. A few groups choose to meet every other week. This makes it possible for some with full schedules to attend more regularly, but slows the development of intimacy and trust within the group.

Some groups work on their tasks or mission at the group meetings. Others plan task work during meetings and do the work at other times. Groups use some meeting time to evaluate past work and nurture group visions of the future.

Mission group meetings begin with worship, to help bring us consciously into God’s presence. Some groups use a brief reflection on the weekly Lectionary Scriptures or other reading, with time for silence or comments, and prayer. Other groups provide an opportunity to use art materials or other less traditional activities such as dance, or a choral reading of the Lectionary, or singing several hymns, or drumming. There are many ways to come together through worship.

Sharing is an important part of the life of every mission group. Each of us needs to be understood and supported through the challenges and pain of life. Equal participation by all members is particularly important in sharing and support. Mission groups use different structures for personal sharing. Some groups give each person a brief opportunity to share the highlights of the week, then allow one person to share in depth. Others focus the sharing around a question drawn from the weekly Lectionary Scriptures or other readings. Others use non-verbal elements in their sharing such as art or movement.

Confidentiality

We believe that a mission group is the place within the community where we are most intimately known. In order to be open and vulnerable to each other within the mission group it is essential that each participant have the assurance that, when something sensitive is shared in the group it remains there. Members of the mission group agree that each participant’s story remains hers or his to share as desired with others.

Spiritual Practice in a Mission Group

We understand that the personal and group disciplines that come with joining a mission group are demanding. For someone joining a mission group for the first time, the practices/disciplines of the group may feel like an affront, as controlling, or perhaps as unreasonable or unfair. Those who have embraced the practices/disciplines and expectations tend to think of them as gift and freedom. This is not a freedom from constraints but the freedom to invest one‟s life and caring in a group. Such investment encourages personal and group transformation towards God‟s intentions. Living out the common call expresses the ministry entrusted to us in baptism, in communion, and in deep moments of connection to God.

Seekers mission groups include a specific commitment to nurture the spiritual life of each participant in the group. Typical elements of mission group discipline include:

  • Regular attendance and participation in the mission of the group;
  • Commitment to discovery and use of one’s gifts through ongoing reflection and interaction with group members;
  • Prayer, scripture reading and reflection on one’s life in light of the lectionary scripture;
  • Writing a report covering both inward and outward journey, given to the designated spiritual companion at mission group meetings;
  • Regular attendance at Sunday worship, usually with Seekers; and
  • Giving time and money for the missions of Seekers church and to meet other needs.

Spiritual Direction or Companionship

The role of spiritual director or companion is perhaps the most important and least understood function within a mission group. Each participant in the group, as one of the conditions of joining the group, agrees to enter into a spiritual guidance relationship. Each Seekers mission group has at least one member who serves as a spiritual companion or director. Often one member is confirmed in this role, receiving reports from all other members. When one individual is not called to the role of spiritual companion or director, the group determines other arrangements so that each participant is accountable to one other person in the group for her or his spiritual nurture and growth. We believe that the Holy Spirit will provide within each group the gifts necessary to nurture the participants and sustain the life of the group.

Time for Reflection

Most groups find it important to structure regular time to nurture the growth of the group. This may take the form of working with a book that addresses the call of the group; participating together in some outside activity related to the call; or going on retreat together. Many groups schedule longer meetings (weekend retreats or half day meetings) to give them more time to share their stories and build the bonds of community. Longer periods together help deepen the sense of community, and allow extended opportunities for sharing and mission work together. A weekend at Wellspring or Rolling Ridge is nice, but groups also plan an occasional Saturday at someone’s home, at the church, or in a park. The moderator must be sensitive to each participant’s need to share, and provide time for all.

Retreat leadership, to help structure the time and help the process along, can come from within the group, or from outside. Seekers Church is rich in leadership resources that can help plan or lead a group retreat. For example, the Living Water Mission Group is called to help individuals and other mission groups deepen their inner journeys.

Joining – and Leaving – a Seekers Mission Group

Although most members of Seekers Church belong to a mission group, not everyone chooses this path. Participation in a mission group is a balance of giving and receiving. Participants are called to give themselves to the group and its mission. In return, they receive support and affirmation for their unfolding lives as Christians. Membership in a mission group demands a commitment to discerning and living out God‟s call. Learning to embrace this level of commitment must precede membership in a mission group. Joining a mission group requires a commitment to the call and the spiritual practices of the group.

Many mission groups have members who have been involved in the life of the group for years, even decades. There are also members who move in and out of mission groups, sometimes because of a changing sense of call, sometimes to give more energy to other demands in their lives, and sometimes just to regroup and reassess.

Preparation for Joining a Mission Group

As part of the process of joining a Seekers mission group, prospective members are expected to participate in the School of Christian Living for at least two semesters. This gives the prospective member an opportunity to experience a regular midweek meeting with a small group from Seekers and time to get to know other members of Seekers Church. Joining normally begins with a trial period, to help all participants in the process confirm the joining.

Seekers mission groups are generally open to new participants. Some groups are open on a continuing basis, while others receive new members only periodically. The “closed” periods allow group members to deepen their sense of community and develop their gifts in response to the call of the group. Here again are some suggestions to help guide you toward an existing Seekers mission group:

  • Complete two semesters of classes in the School of Christian Living;
  • Find a shepherd to help you clarify God’s call on your life;
  • Pray and listen to God‟s leading. Ask yourself:
    • Where has God burdened your heart with the needs of Creation?
    • Where is your anger, your compassion, your hope?
    • Where does your energy rise in response to this need for transformation?
  • Reflect on the calls of existing mission groups;
  • Talk with members of existing mission groups. Listen to your heart as they talk; and
  • When a direction begins to emerge, talk it over with the moderator of the mission group and arrange a specific schedule for exploring further.

Visiting an Existing Group

One way some Seekers mission groups introduce prospective participants to the group is to invite them to attend part of a group meeting. This visit is a time for the prospective participant to share about his or her call to the group. If this call is not clear, additional possibilities for sharing include parts of the individual’s spiritual journey, or the history of the person with Seekers or similar churches. In many cases, someone from the group will meet with the prospective participant before the initial visit to help clarify the individual’s call.

The group can use this meeting to share the specifics of their life together: when they meet; their weekly tasks and roles; and who fills them. There needs to be a mutual consensus of the fit between the person and the group. This may be reached at the meeting or after further reflection.

This visit usually precedes a trial period of participation in the life of the mission group. The trial period is normally set for six to eight weeks – long enough for the group and the new participant to discern whether the call is right, and short enough to allow the prospective member to move on without undue pain and disruption if it is not. Once the trial period is over and it is clear that the new arrival is called to be part of the mission group, there is a period of discernment as the members consider their roles in light of all those who are now part of the group.

Some groups have also invited recent arrivals at Seekers who express an interest in a mission group to visit for a period of time. Even though preparation for mission group participation normally takes some
time, a visit with an existing mission group provides an opportunity to learn more about the group and may lead to a shepherding relationship with someone from the group.

If you are interested in any of the groups described in this guide we encourage you to contact any of the participants to talk about the current life of the group.

Leaving a Mission Group

When an individual participant in a group no longer feels an internal identification with the call of the group, the participant is expected to discuss this with the group, receive the blessing of the group and leave to seek God’s new call in some other part of the life of Seekers Church.

The Life Cycle of a Mission Group

New mission groups come into being as we discern a fresh call from God to follow Christ in service to the world around us.

Discerning the Call of the Group

The process of giving birth to a new mission group begins when one of the Stewards of Seekers Church hears a new call. This person carries the emerging sense of call, deepening the discernment through prayerful reflection, journaling and conversations with her or his spiritual director and other Stewards. As the call begins to clarify, another Steward is invited to join the discernment, so that there are at least two Stewards carrying the emerging call. Over time others may join this process of initial group discernment.

In recent years several new groups have emerged in the life of Seekers Church as several Seekers join together in a common effort which grows over time into a “call to commitment” and spawns a new mission group.

A valid call will focus on some specific need, some area of brokenness, in the world or the church. This is a place where God‟s Realm is waiting for some co-creator to bring transformation. It may seem too broad or too simple, or simply impossible. But as the initiating group works with the images revealed in prayer and conversation, they will be shown a particular place to start.

Affirming the Call

As the call becomes clarified the initial group will bring it to a meeting of the Stewards of Seekers Church. The Stewards review the call and share their insights with the initiating group. This may lead to further refinement by the initiating group, and a subsequent review of the refined call by the Stewards. After reflection and prayer, if there is a positive sense of the call, the Stewards affirm it.

Since many mission groups in Seekers Church carry core parts of the life of the faith community – worship, lifelong learning, retreat – this affirmation is a sign to all who are part of Seekers Church that this mission group has the authority to act in the name of the church. Mission groups are accountable to the Stewards for the call they have accepted.

Sounding the Call

Once the Stewards have affirmed the call of a new mission group, the initiating group sounds the call, inviting all those in Seekers Church who are ready to join them in the life of the mission group. As others join the new mission group, the group begins regular meetings, evoking, affirming and nurturing gifts of members of the group, and carrying the mission of the group. At this point, the new mission group is on the path described earlier in this guide, following the Holy Spirit, living out God’s call on the group – together.

When Group Life Becomes Painful

When the life of a mission group generates issues or concerns that can not be resolved within the group, the group may invite someone from outside to help facilitate the healing process. The Servant Leadership Team is committed to providing that support or working with members of the mission group to find someone else who can help. If there are issues that cannot be reconciled then it is time to discern the most constructive way to change relationships and possibly dissolve the mission group.

Mission groups pursue a mission and are not simply for sharing or study or personal and spiritual growth. Sharing or study or personal and spiritual growth might dominate from time to time, but the expectation is that they should contribute to mission. When members of a mission group find that they are not following their stated call, they usually take time to redirect their activities, discern how their call has changed, or consider ending the group.

Ending a Mission Group

Mission groups last as long as their calls remain vital. If a group chooses to no longer live out its call, the group should come to an end to free up the energy and attention of members to pursue other visions and callings. It is important when ending comes to honor and celebrate the life of the group and the Good News it has helped to bring into Creation. It is also important to create an opportunity for members of the group to release their own visions, commitment and hopes, so that they can be open to some fresh call from God.

When mission groups end, the members of the group should take time to help each other make a transition to some other way of belonging deeply within the community. The moderator of the group should report to the Stewards of Seekers Church on any unfinished work of the group. The Servant Leadership Team is available to help with this process of grieving and letting go. Members of a mission group that is ending should close with a time of worship and celebration to celebrate the life they have lived together.

Postscript

Like this guide, the mission groups of Seekers Church are not perfect. Our commitment to be faithful to the call of Christ is limited by our humanity. So we try, and sometimes we fail, and then we try again. By God‟s grace, we can sometimes learn from our failures. And as we learn to love and forgive each other, we can also begin to learn from our failures as a community.

This guide describes the mission groups of Seekers Church, but there are many other kinds of groups that come together to address specific needs. The renovation of our new headquarters was guided and supported by several self-organizing teams, where all were invited to focus on some particular element of the work, like building development, decoration and furnishings, community outreach or stewardship. There are regular, informal gatherings for breakfast and conversation, monthly for the women of Seekers and biweekly for the men. A group of musicians provide regular support for music in worship, and one of our members organizes a monthly “sing-along” where we gather in someone‟s home to sing the old favorites.

We also have several “ministry teams,” each with a particular focus:

  • Art Gallery exhibits works by people both within and outside Seekers
  • Bokamoso Career Workshop is for young adults in Winterveldt, South Africa
  • Carroll Café is a roots and folk music concert series
  • Down the Road provides services and resources for older adults
  • Martha’s Mob helps to maintain the building  with a quarterly work party of community volunteers.
  • Men’s Breakfast is an informal gathering of Seekers men on alternate Saturday morning

For more information about these activities, see the Ministry Teams page.

While these groups do not share the commitment to both the inner and outer journeys, and many of their participants are also members of a mission group, they are an important part of our expression of Christian servanthood.

As alternatives to mission groups, Seekers can participate in School for Christian Growth classes and in non-mission group service and fellowship activities. Seekers can gain some of the benefits of mission group involvement and contribute to the common life by practicing the disciplines and reporting to an independent spiritual companion or director, by being conscious and intentional about offering ministry in the context of everyday life, and by sharing in Seeker‟s wide opportunities for fellowship.

Although there are other options for small group experience, we are committed to the mission group structure for as many Seekers as possible. Responding to a mission group‟s call is more a matter of recognition and commitment than of maturity, strength, or skill. In the end, in Seekers Church mission groups are the place to belong.

If you have questions, ask a member of the Servant Leadership Team, or talk to the moderator of one of our current mission groups. They are identified on the mission group page.

Appendix A: The Call of Seekers Church

Our call is to be a “Seekers community” which comes together in weekly worship rooted in the Biblical faith, with shared leadership; and disperses with a common commitment to understand and implement Christian servanthood in the structures in which we live our lives.

By “Seekers community” we mean an intentional body which sees Christ as our true life source. Koinonia with one another and genuine self-giving to the world are the ways we can be in Christ today. Seekers are not persons who have arrived, but persons who are intentionally on the way.

By shared leadership we mean empowering the gifts of women and men to help our worship flow out of and feed into the life of the community. We are committed to evoking and giving space to new gifts of preaching, liturgical leadership, creative worship forms, giving, mission and other acts of faith.

For us, Christian servanthood is based on empowering others within the normal structures of our daily lives (work; family and primary relationships; and citizenship) as well as through special structures for service and witness. We desire and welcome participation in Seekers of women and men of every race and sexual orientation. In Seekers Church we will equip and support each other in all of these areas and seek a balance among them.

Seekers is committed to participation by persons of all ages. We see children, youth and adults of all ages as valuable and valued parts of our community, and desire their inclusion in our care, our ministry, and our life together.

Issued by Seekers Founding Members in July 1976
Revised by Seekers Core Members in November 1989, May 1991

Appendix B: Mission Groups of Seekers Church

Here are brief descriptions of Seekers mission groups. For more information on the activities, disciplines or inner life of any of these groups, just ask.

A MISSION GROUP IS AN OPPORTUNITY –
† TO FOLLOW CHRIST IN SERVICE
† TO LISTEN AND BE HEARD
† TO DISCOVER AND USE GOD’S GIFTS
† TO GROW IN LOVE

 

Editors:
Peter Bankson
Sandra Miller
Deborah Sokolove
Seekers Church
276 Carroll Street, NW
Washington, DC 20012
www.seekerschurch.org