[Q&A] How do you conduct an effective and useful home visit?
I know what you mean Alex, the visits are pretty shallow and guarded.I have never been a Elder but from the visits I have endured there is not much communication or trust.
We need to restructure the eldership indeed and should build more flexibility in the church order.
There is clearly a need to distinguish between pastoral elders and administrive elders.
Effective personal support and relationships often exemplifies the positive interdepence that characterizes the healthy church
Healthy churches are made up of needy people. To think otherwise is to misunderstand the nature and mission of the church
To see why this is true, let's take a look at the mission of Christ " God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world,but that the world through Him might be saved. Followers of Christ are called to the mission of those who what is means to be broken ,loved,and forgiven.
Our new pastoral care ministry is the result of restructuring the visits, building relationships and more
Pastoral Care Ministry is a New ministry of our local CRC church which aims at fulfilling the everyday, friendly, dropping by to see how you are doing caring ministry of the church.
This Ministry aims at ensuring that no one is forgotten in the daily life of the church.
Does not replace other pastoral care ministries, rather it works in concert with and supplements the existing pastoral ministry of our Church.
Pastoral Care Worker (PCW)
Pastoral Care Workers (PCW) are professing members of our church recognized for their pastoral gifts and sensitivity with people and situations, and are appointed by council for a terms of service among the people of our church.
Council will appoint the PCWs forming the Pastoral Care Team
Council will inform the congregation of their appointment
Council will commission the PCWs during a worship service with appropriate prayers and scripture
The Pastoral Care Worker
1. is assigned by the Pastoral Elder and Pastor
2. Engages in prayer, visits, calls, encouragement, deeds of compassion.
Prayer
(1) the congregation is divided among the care givers for prayer
(2) the ministries of the congregation are divided
(3) any special needs of those under your care
Visits
(1) within the first month, the PCW should introduce self to those within their care
(2) use cards, email, texting, coffee whatever would be appropriate to the situation
(3) make visits whenever appropriate such as, new members, new comers, shut-ins,
widows, widowers, sick - major illnesses and hospital, and so on (but do inform
the pastor if you come to know of illness, impending surgery and so on)
Encouragement and communication
(1) as you discover special events of families and individuals, and with the permission of
the individual(s), feel free to post these item on a bulletin board which will be
provided. Also communicate these events in a timely manner to the pastor for Sunday
Worship and the Admin for inclusion in the Newsletter
(2) help people address their concerns or ideas or express them in helpful ways so that
these can addressed by the Pastoral Team or Council.
(3) come along side people and encourage them in the daily walk of following Christ.
Communicate directly and as soon as possible with the pastor concerning
a. serious or critical needs and circumstances of pastoral issues – or if you believe that a visit
by the pastor would be helpful in the situation
b. or when there are questions you don’t feel comfortable answering, or you can’t
answer–don’t guess, don’t just offer your opinion or bias, just make the promise, I don’t
know but will find out.
Report suspected abuse to APARC (part of the Abuse prevention effort of our church).
The pastoral Care Elder and Pastor will pray for and encourage each PCW
The Pastoral Care Team
1. is a team and should work as a team and so should meet often for prayer, encouragement,sharing at times and places organized by the Pastoral Elder.
2. meet twice a year or as often as necessary to assess and coordinate needs and strategy
3. The Pastoral Care Team is accountable to Council and is overseen by the assigned Elder and
Pastor
4. Call the pastor or pastoral elder in difficult situations
5. Confidentially is encouraged, it is not secrecy. Confidentiality means that only those who should know will know. APARC will explain this, and the limits of confidentiality.
For the PCW, confidentiality means that what is shared with you stays with you and is not to be gossiped around.
Neil, thank you for starting the "Home Visit" forum. We're currently in the process of conducting Home Visits. This renewed initiative comes after numerous failed attempts over the past twenty years. A review of Council Minutes going back to the mid-1970's (shortly after the our church became formally Organized), documents a very vibrant Home Visit program. This trend continued into the mid-1980's when, for whatever reason, this time-honored custom became a thing of the past....until September 2010. What changed? Our church has entered a "Season of Transition" with the pending 2011 retirement of our pastor of 17 years. We purpose to use this transition time well and with God leading us accomplish a Home Visit with each family. Each of our 5 Elders has approximately 20 families within their District. Where to start? We began with prayer asking God for courage, strength, guidance and wisdom. We got our nose into "the Elder's handbook", Part 3: Moving amoung God's People. We learned the tradition of Home Visits has ancient roots. Paul visited believers from house to house (Act 20:20), and churches that practice regular pastoral visits are the richer for it. We've continued to pray seeking God's guidance and continued to receive training from the handbook. Reaching out in faith, we have started making Home Visits once again to the members of our church family with a focus on "building relationships". I've heard it said, "Do your best and let God do the rest". Knowing God loves us, God is for us and God is with us, we'll continue to improve. Blessings to All.



The church order requires that we do a Home Visit (Art 65). Yet how we conduct a visit, how effective it is, and whether this is a useful strategy is constantly debated. In this forum we want you to share your thoughts, suggestions and encouragements. After all, we need to support each other. I waiting to hear from you.
Neil