Missional Leadership Cohort

New Cohort beginning 1/13/2013 in Pasadena, CA
(Online Component begins August 2012)

Extended Deadline! Applications due by July 10, 2012  Apply Here 

 Overview 

"What the church urgently needs are men and women capable of leading others toward missional transformation for a future church which has not yet been imagined." - Alan Roxburgh, DMin, The Missional Network

Today’s global culture is experiencing rapid, tumultuous change that is affecting the very structure and significance of church leadership. As ministry professionals, we find ourselves in the center of this transition, facing the challenge of how to re-vision church leadership to meet the uncharted requirements of being a faithful church in a postmodern world. With the widening quest for a spiritual dimension to life––yet a greater breach between the church and society––church professionals need Spirit-empowered, missional leadership that has a dynamic impact on the church as well as their local communities. Through the Missional Leadership Cohort, ministry professionals become equipped to engage today’s rich diversity of cultures with broadened perspectives and cutting-edge practices that are grounded in the biblical narratives.
Major Themes Covered… 

Year 1 

The initial phase is focused on leadership and our socio-cultural context and include assessment processes that use frameworks designed to evaluate students' readiness for engaging systems in missional transformation and covers the following:   

* Developing missional leaders

* Missional leadership assessment process

* Change, transition, systems and leadership

* Theological basis for missional leadership

Year 2 

Phase two focuses on ecclesiology and works with the processes for developing missional leaders:   

* Forming missional systems

* Assessing church readiness for missional change

* Research methods in studying missional congregations

* Missional ecclesiology in the North American context

Year 3 

 Phase three focuses on missiology with attention to developing the frameworks and skills for cultivating missional change in students' actual ministry context.   

* Engaging missional contexts

* Assessing primary themes and issues with organizational systems related to innovative transformation

* Constructing local theologies in a pluralist culture

Years 4-7 

The final project phase is focused on the development of innovative initiatives toward missional engagements.  

* Developing a missional action plan

* Peer evaluation and engagement

* Personal leadership evaluation and “next steps”

Please contact the DMin office  for more information on applying: email: dmin@fuller.edu   phone: 800.999.9578.

 Instructors 

Alan RoxburghAlan Roxburgh, D.Min, one of the founders of the Missional Leadership Network, is a teacher and consultant in pastoral leadership, denominational transformation and seminary education. He has been involved in the successful redevelopment of both urban and small community churches and teaches in several seminaries as an adjunct professor. Al served as a leader in the Gospel and Our Culture Network and is the author of several books, including Leadership, Liminality and the Missional Church; Reaching a New Generation; The Missional Leader (with Fred Romanuk); Introducing the Missional Church (with Scott Boren); Misional Map-Making: Skils for Leading in Times of Transition; and Missional: Joining God in the Neighborhood, and contributed chapters to Missional Church: A Vision for the Sending of the Church in North America (Darell Guder & Lois Barrett, eds.) and The Missional Church and Denominations: Helping Congregations Develop a Missional Identity (Craig Van Gelder, ed.).

Mark BransonMark Lau Branson, Ed.D., is the Homer L. Goddard Associate Professor of Ministry of the Laity at Fuller Theological Seminary. He has served in United Methodist and Presbyterian Churches. His ordination is from an African-American Pentecostal church, and he brings numerous experiences in community organizing, economic development, consulting and teaching. His focus is on forming congregations in which all God’s people become a learning, worshiping, missional community that values intergenerational and multicultural life and a full engagement with the people, cultures, and structures of the surrounding society. His publications include Churches, Cultures and Leadership: A Practical Theology of Congregations and Ethnicities (with Juan Martinez); Conflict and Context: Hermeneutics in the Americas (ed., with Rene Padilla); Memories, Hopes, and Conversations: Appreciative Inquiry and Congregational Change; and chapters in The Missional Church in Context (Craig Van Gelder, ed.); The Three Tasks of Leadership (Eric Jacobsen, ed.); and Leadership in Congregations (Richard Bass, ed.).