MA Missional Leadership Modules Core Modules ML1 – The Contemporary Culture of the Challenge of Mission ML2 – Missional Leadership – Theory & Practice Specialist Modules ML3 – Engaging Our Local Context for Mission ML4 – Forming Communities for Mission Module Descriptors Title Contemporary Culture & the Challenge of Mission Code ML1 Faculty Education & Theology Cost Centre Level FHEQ 7 YSJU M Credits 30 Total Learning Hours 300 Barred Combinations None Pre-requisites None Learning and Teaching Type of Learning Activity comprises hours weeks Timetabled Contact: Block learning (+ regional networks) 30 16 Independent Study: Reading primary and secondary sources, accessing and completing verbatim, researching and preparing assignments 270 16 300 16 Total: Rationale and Aims The term ‘missional’ is now widely used but not necessarily well understood. This module explores the historical, theological, and contemporary contexts for this concept, with particular reference to how mission can relate to contemporary Western culture. Aims: 1. To critically engage with and appreciate the nature of cultural theory and its relevance for missional work 2. To critically explore how Western culture has changed in recent years and gain advanced knowledge of the historical background to these changes 3. To examine and analyse the elements of a culturally-attuned approach to mission in the West (including evangelism, social action and church planting) 4. To identify and critically examine both historical and more recent expressions of ‘missional church’ and evaluate them in the light of contemporary culture. Learning Outcomes Upon successful completion of the module students will be able to: 1. Critically analyse concepts of Western culture and develop greater awareness and appreciation of the need for a ‘missional’ approach to evaluate contemporary mission 2. Critically analyse the ways in which churches and/or faith-based organisations can engage in a variety of forms of mission relevant to contemporary culture 3. Critically reflect on the application of missional thinking to their own ministry setting and apply robust, reflective and contextually-appropriate approaches to their ministry Assessment (please include expected word length (for text-based assessment)) # description weighting learning outcomes 1 5000 word essay 80% 1, 2, 3 2 Personal development task 20% 3 Qualified Failures: in order to pass the module, students must achieve at least: (for modules with more than one summative assessment component please delete as applicable) A mark of 20 in each component and an overall pass mark Indicative Content Students will: 1. Explore theories of culture, particularly the influence of secularisation, post modernity, (and their epistemological assumption) and the waning influence of Christendom within Western societies 2. Explore contemporary challenges to mission, including philosophical (e.g. science and the new atheism), cultural (e.g. consumerism, individualism) and theological challenges (including that of Islam and other major world faiths), and how these may be overcome. 3. Examine examples of mission in the West since the Enlightenment, including an assessment of contemporary missional movements and reflect on the development of the ‘missional conversation’. 4. Assess the different ways in which evangelism, social action and church planting can be undertaken in the context of the West as components of Christian mission. Library Resources Indicative essential book provision (5 examples): 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Smith, J.K.A., Who's Afraid of Postmodernism? (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2012) Van Gelder, C. & Zscheile, D., The Missional Church in Perspective. Mapping Trends and Shaping the Conversation (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2011) Day, A. and Lövheim, M. (eds.), Modernities, Memory and Mutations: Grace Davie and the Study of Religion (Ashgate, 2015) Barker, C., Cultural Studies: Theory and Practice, (London: SAGE, 2011) Murray, S., Post-Christendom: Church and Mission in a Strange New World (After Christendom) (Bletchley: Paternoster, 2011) Indicative journals / periodicals (3 examples from current subscriptions): 1. Missiology - An International Review (American Society of Missiology) 2. Journal of Missional Practice (The Missional Network) 3. International Review of Mission (WCC) Audio-visual / non-printed material: None ICT Resources Hardware N/A Specialist software Moodle (online VLE) ATLA database and e-library Media Resources AV equipment Data projectors, DVD player Title Missional Leadership –Theory & Practice Code ML2 Faculty Education & Theology Cost Centre Level FHEQ 7 YSJU M Credits 30 Total Learning Hours 300 Barred Combinations None Pre-requisites None Learning and Teaching Type of Learning Activity comprises hours weeks Timetabled Contact: Block learning (+ regional networks for p/t study) 30 16 Independent Study: Reading primary and secondary sources, accessing and completing verbatim, researching and preparing assignments 270 16 300 16 Total: Rationale and Aims The Church in the West is undergoing profound change as it adjusts to a new context for mission. Students will study the core leadership attributes and skills required to lead Christian communities (including mission organisations and churches) in this changing landscape. Effective leadership encompasses the use of particular skills to shape organisations and these skills are similar for faith and non-faith based organisations. Yet Christian leadership cannot be studied from the perspectives of theory and skills alone and the role of personal formation is a central aspect of leadership development. The impact that a leader him/herself has on others also depends in large part on the development of character and an understanding of their personality. Selfawareness is, therefore, another important factor in leading effectively. Aims: 1. To critically evaluate the theory and processes of leadership in churches and mission organisations 2. To critically explore models of managing change and conflict and the concepts of imagination and innovation in organisations 3. To enhance self-awareness in order to enable students to improve their interpersonal leadership skills 4. To enable students to critically engage with the major academic and critical issues in the fields of personality theory and communication theory as they impact upon missional work Learning Outcomes Upon successful completion of the module students will be able to: 1. Critically analyse the elements involved in effective Christian leadership in different contexts 2. Critically evaluate the various approaches to self-awareness and personal formation in the development of missional leaders 3. Engage in critical personal reflection around the development of their identity as Christian leaders Assessment (please include expected word length (for text-based assessment)) # description weighting learning outcomes 1 3500 word essay 55% 1, 2, 3 2 Personal development task 20% 1, 3 3 1500 word critical review of a key published academic book or article 25% 2 Qualified Failures: in order to pass the module, students must achieve at least: (for modules with more than one summative assessment component please delete as applicable) A mark of 20 in each component and an overall pass mark Indicative Content Students will: 1. Evaluate and critique the task of leadership and its challenges in our current cultural context 2. Critically assess key skills for Christian mission and leadership in a time of societal change, including the management of transitions 3. Evaluate the concept of ‘character’ and critique its importance to Christian leadership within missional situations with reference to issues such as the use of power, servanthood and accountability 4. Critically assess the importance of self-awareness to effective leadership especially within missional contexts: including critical analysis of a range of approaches (phenomenological, narrative, psychometric testing etc.) Library Resources Indicative essential book provision (5 examples): 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Francis L. J., Faith and Psychology: Personality, Religion and the Individual, (London: DLT, 2008) Roxburgh, A., & Romanuk, F., The Missional Leader: Equipping your Church to Reach a Changing World (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2011) Wheatley M.J., Leadership and the New Science - Discovering Order in a Chaotic World (San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler, 2010) Collins, J. and Hansen, M. T., Great by Choice: Uncertainty, Chaos and Luck - Why Some Thrive Despite Them All (Random House Business, 2011) Guder, D., Hirsch, A., Catchim, T., & Breen, M., The Permanent Revolution: Apostolic Imagination and Practice for the 21st Century Church, (San Francisco: Jossey Bass, 2012) Indicative journals / periodicals (3 examples from current subscriptions): 1. Missiology - An International Review (American Society of Missiology) 2. International Review of Mission (WCC) 3. International Journal for the Study of the Christian Church (Routledge) Audio-visual / non-printed material: None ICT Resources Hardware N/A Specialist software Moodle (online VLE) ATLA database and e-library Media Resources AV equipment Data projectors, DVD player Title Engaging Our Local Context for Mission Code ML3 Faculty Education & Theology Cost Centre Level FHEQ 7 YSJU M Credits 30 Total Learning Hours 300 Barred Combinations CM3, UM3, MS3 Pre-requisites None Learning and Teaching Type of Learning Activity comprises hours weeks Timetabled Contact: Block learning (+ regional networks) 30 16 Independent Study: Reading primary and secondary sources, accessing and completing verbatim, researching and preparing assignments 270 16 300 16 Total: Rationale and Aims Many leaders in churches and faith-based organisations have been initially trained in the skills of managing the internal life of a church/organisation. Missional leadership implies leading the church in external mission activity beyond the church community. One of the key skills and capacities of missional leadership, therefore, is the ability to lead churches into an engagement with their local communities and contexts. Aims: 1. To develop critical understandings of how readings of the biblical narrative inspire local culturallyappropriate expressions of mission 2. To explore and critique various approaches to the study of local community 3. To facilitate imagination for mission within their local content 4. To evaluate and critique the concepts and practice of contextual theology 5. To critically reflect on the importance of place and to engage with recent theologies of place Learning Outcomes Upon successful completion of the module students will be able to: 1. Critically examine ways in which context affects Christian mission 2. Apply advanced skills and critical imagination in missional leadership within their communities 3. Critique the ministry practice of their church or organisation in terms of its sensitivity and appropriateness to context Assessment (please include expected word length (for text-based assessment)) # description weighting learning outcomes 1 3000 word research project 50% 1, 3 2 Presentation 30% 1, 2, 3 3 Personal development task 20% 2, 3 Qualified Failures: in order to pass the module, students must achieve at least: (for modules with more than one summative assessment component please delete as applicable) A mark of 20 in each component and an overall pass mark Indicative Content Students will: 1. Explore approaches to the theory and practice of contextual theology 2. Address and evaluate the nature of the Christian gospel in relation to practical contextual issues 3. Examine ways in which churches can relate to other local community bodies and political structures to outwork their commitment to justice 4. Research and critically evaluate methodologies suited to the analysis of local contexts Library Resources Indicative essential book provision (5 examples): 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Gilchrist, A. and Taylor, M. The Short Guide to Community Development (Bristol: Policy Press, 2011) Bevans, S.B., and Tahaafe-Williams, K., Contextual Theology for the 21st Century (Maryknoll: Orbis, 2011) Hiebert, P., The Gospel in Human Contexts: Anthropological Explorations for Contemporary Missions (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2009) Inge J., A Christian Theology of Place (Aldershot: Ashgate , 2004) Sparks, P., The New Parish, How Neighbourhood Churches are Transforming Mission (Downers Grove: IVP, 2014) Indicative journals / periodicals (3 examples from current subscriptions): 1. Journal of Contemporary Religion (Carfax) 2. Cultural Encounters — A Journal for the Theology of Culture (Multnomah University) 3. Transformation – an International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies (Sage) Audio-visual / non-printed material: None ICT Resources Hardware N/A Specialist software Moodle (online VLE) ATLA database and e-library Media Resources AV equipment Data projectors, DVD player Title Forming Communities for Mission Code ML4 Faculty Education & Theology Cost Centre Level FHEQ 7 YSJU M Credits 30 Total Learning Hours 300 Barred Combinations CM4, UM4, MS4 Pre-requisites None Learning and Teaching Type of Learning Activity comprises hours weeks Timetabled Contact: Block learning (+ regional networks) 30 16 Independent Study: Reading primary and secondary sources, accessing and completing verbatim, researching and preparing assignments 270 16 300 16 Total: Rationale and Aims The concept of community is central to Trinitarian theology, as well as to the notion of missio Dei. This module explores what is distinctive about faith communities nurtured by the Christian narrative, and how such communities can be formed in practice. Leadership of such communities needs to cultivate imagination for mission alongside creating effective structures for discipleship. Specific skills include resolving conflict and the development of small group contexts for effective discipleship. Aims: 1. 2. 3. To critically evaluate definitions of community and formulate appropriate Christian definitions of the concept of community To critically explore the place of small groups in a missional ecclesiology To critically evaluate approaches to interpersonal tra nsactions that contribute to community formation, including the practices of mentoring and conflict management Learning Outcomes Upon successful completion of the module students will be able to: 1. Critically examine notions of Christian community in terms of their distinctiveness and theological construction and practice 2. Critically evaluate practices and structures within the life of the Church that contribute to the development of community 3. Critically analyse theoretical and theological insights to the Christian community of which they are a part Assessment (please include expected word length (for text-based assessment)) # description weighting learning outcomes 1 5000 research project 80% 1, 2, 3 2 Personal development task 20% 2, 3 Qualified Failures: in order to pass the module, students must achieve at least: (for modules with more than one summative assessment component please delete as applicable) A mark of 20 in each component and an overall pass mark Indicative Content Students will: 1. Explore a range of sources that attempt to identify a distinctively Christian concept of ‘community’ 2. Examine historical and contemporary ways in which small groups have featured in the development of Christian community and mission 3. Discuss and critically evaluate theoretical and practical approaches to the management of conflict 4. Explore a range of spiritual disciplines by which persons are formed in community Library Resources Indicative essential book provision (5 examples): 1. Block, P., Community: The Structure of Belonging (San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler, 2009) 2. Gibbs E., Churchmorph: How Megatrends are Shaping Christian Communities (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2009) 3. Lewis, R., Mentoring Matters: Identifying and Promoting the Work of God’s Spirit in the Lives of Christian Leaders (Oxford: Monarch, 2009) 4. Savage S., and Boyd-MacMillan E., Conflict in Relationships: At home, At Work, In Life: Understand it, Overcome it (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 2010) 5. Vanier J., Community and Growth, Rev. ed., (Dartman: Longford & Todd, 2006) Indicative journals / periodicals (3 examples from current subscriptions): 1. Practical Theology (Equinox) 2. Anvil – An Anglican Evangelical Journey for Theology and Mission 3. International Journal of Mentoring and Coaching Audio-visual / non-printed material: None ICT Resources Hardware N/A Specialist software Moodle (online VLE) ATLA database and e-library Media Resources AV equipment Data projectors, DVD player