Monday Morning in North Georgia for August 9, 2010

August 9, 2010

Conflict is often a crisis, but it is also an opportunity

I was sitting at a traffic light behind several cars when I heard a horn blow from the next car back. I assumed that he was impatient with the automobile at the front of the line because it was not moving quickly enough. I was wrong.

After we passed through the intersection the car behind passed me. The driver blew his horn again and waved at me. At least I wanted to think that it was a wave.

At the next intersection the light was red and the traffic going straight ahead was stopped. As I turned right, the driver of my horn blowing friend gave me another hand gesture. What a friendly driver.

Actually I could see on the face of this anonymous motorist that he was not happy with me. I suspect I was not the only person (thing) with which he was unhappy.

Without warning and with a total stranger I encountered conflict. I didn’t see it coming and I had no clue what caused it. That’s the way conflict is sometimes. At other times conflict is anticipated and the causes are well understood.

There was not a lot I could do about the angry motorist. I could not engage him in conversation to discover what I had done to “make him mad.” There was not an opportunity to “resolve the issue.” But much of the conflict we experience can be turned into opportunity for constructive change and growth.

Leading Ideas (http://www.churchleadership.com/resources/leading_ideas.asp), the e-newsletter of the Lewis Center for Church Leadership, recently offered some suggestions about managing conflict. The information is an excerpt from Dr. David R. Brubaker’s book Promise and Peril: Understanding and Managing Change and Conflict in Congregations.

First, leaders need to move towards conflict, not away from it. This provides opportunities to reach resolution before the matter gets out of control. A small brush fire can be extinguished by stomping it with one’s foot or using a garden hose, but if it is allowed to expand into the forest it may become unmanageable.

Second, the identified issue is almost never the real issue. The presenting issues may be compelling, but they are often masks for the real causes of concern. This might be because people do “not know how to exercise their voice other than through ‘murmuring’."

Third, involve the "complainers" in solving their identified problems. Rather than trying to solve the problem alone, involving the folks with complaints often leads to a better conclusion.

Dr. Brubaker says, “Conflict is often a crisis, but it is also an opportunity. Much depends on our attitude towards conflict. If we expect it will be destructive and awful, it probably will be. But if we anticipate that the conflict may instead be an opportunity for genuine change, we may experience transformation. As Ron Kraybill, the founding director of Mennonite Conciliation Service, has said, conflict may be ‘an arena of revelation,’ a time when we hear God’s voice as we never have before.”

God help us as we experience conflict in our personal and corporate life.

Jamie Jenkins, jjenkins@ngumc.org

Another helpful resource for “engaging conflict constructively” is the JUSTPEACE Center for Mediation and Conflict Transformation at www.JUSTPEACEumc.org.

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North Georgia Conference Event Spotlight

Worship Workshop: Planning and Creativity with Marcia McFee
August 23, 25 or 26 | 9am | See various locations below
Registration Cost: $15-$30

Join 2008 General Conference worship designer, Marcia McFee, as she comes to the North Georgia Conference to share her knowledge around worship and liturgy. Dates and locations for this event are as follows: August 23 Bethlehem First UMC, August 25 Sam Jones UMC (Cartersville), August 26 Cornerstone UMC (Newnan). Cost is $15 for one person; $25 for two people; or $30 for three to five people. Find more information and register at http://www.ngumc.org/pages/detail/745. For questions, please contact Sybil Davidson via email at sybil@ngumc.org.

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Upcoming Events this Week from the Conference Calendar

Monday, August 9
Atlanta Emory District Set-Up Meeting
LaGrange District Welcome Dinner & Set Up Meeting

Tuesday, August 10
Athens Elberton District Board of Laity

Thursday, August 12
Athens Elberton District Connectional Ministries
Gainesville District Set Up Meeting
Great Start: Senior Pastor and Associate Pastor

Sunday, August 15
Athens District Committee Training for New Committees


View the Entire Conference Calendar

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North Georgia Conference Links of Interest

Subscribe to North Georgia Conference E-newsletters
North Georgia Conference Employment Listings
North Georgia Conference Resource Listings
Subscribe to the North Georgia Advocate
Read the Bible in a Year
Join the North Georgia Conference on Facebook

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Lectionary Scriptures for August 15, 2010

Isaiah 5:1-7
Psalm 80:1-2, 8-19 (UMH 801)
Hebrews 11:29–12:2
Luke 12:49-56

Visit the General Board of Discipleship website for lectionary planning helps

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Open hearts. Open minds. Open doors.