Leadership Training For The Churches Of Christ In French West Africa
Notes from Meeting of June 8, 1994
Participants: George Akpabli, Andrew Gordon, Anthony Parker, Tod Vogt
George Akpabli has well stated the problem of untrained leadership in the churches of Christ in French
West Africa in his proposal for the Institut International Biblique du B,nin. This meeting was held to
discuss alternative or supplemental approaches to leadership training.
Needs
We agreed that, above all else, leadership training must be accessible and relevant.
Accessibility Leaders must have access to the training offered. This is complicated in West Africa by
the large geographic distribution of the churches of Christ and the relatively few personnel
available to train leaders. To the geographic distance between churches is added cultural
distance. There are hundreds of people groups with different languages and customs in
the region; our prayer is that churches of Christ will be present in many of these. French
is the lingua franca of the entire region, but many potential church leaders have a limited
grasp of French. The cost of travel, food, accommodation, study materials, and family
support limits the accessibility of many to some types of training.
Relevancy Leadership training must address issues relevant to West African church leaders. It must
provide the intellectual and moral base required for church leadership. The curriculum
must be carefully designed to meet these needs. There exists the possibility of "over-training," training leaders in areas with little or no application to their ministry.
Possible Methods
In seeking to address these needs, we discussed three possible approaches.
Media
Various media could be used to reach leaders in West African churches. These could
include the distribution of teaching tapes, literature, correspondence courses, and
advanced leadership training courses. Though media can address the intellectual needs
of church leaders, it lacks the essential personal element. For this reason, the group
decided to table discussion of media approaches, agreeing that, if used, they must be
supplemental to more personal training.
Centralized Training
Training may be centralized on either a national or international level. This approach
involves the establishment of a school. Options include:
--Long term training, requiring the relocation of the student for more than six months
--Short term training
--Academic training
--Practical ministerial training
--Supplemental vocational training
Decentralized Training
This approach consists of training in or near the leader's home area which does not
require long-term displacement and allows the leader to continue to minister in his
home area during the training period. Options include:
--Leadership Training by Extension (LTE)
--Inter-congregational workshops
--Lectureships
--A "traveling school" consisting of a mobile staff conducting localized training
seminars throughout West Africa
Pros and Cons
We next attempted to name the benefits and draw-backs involved in the different forms of centralized and
decentralized training.
Training Option
Advantages
Disadvantages
Supplemental Vocational Training
--Reduced need for support from
local churches following training
--Greater financial security for
leaders
--Logistical complications
--Greater infrastructure required
--Longer program required
--Less Bible study
International School
--Less administration than for
several national schools
--Cross-cultural exposure for
students
--Fewer teachers required
--Fewer physical resources
required than national schools
--Strengthens host church/area
--Wider sphere of influence
--Reduced accessibility
--Fewer students
--Culture shock
--Less context-specific training
--Weakens churches in sending
nations during training period
National School
--More accessible than
international school
--More areas benefit from the
presence of a school
--Limited sphere of influence
--Duplication of resources
Long Term Centralized Training
--Depth of study (intellectual)
--More opportunity for feedback
from supervised ministry,
resulting in more mature leaders
--Greater opportunity to evaluate
character
--Greater cost than decentralized
--Reduced number of students
--Less contact with home
context, weakening sending
churches and isolating student
--Potential hesitancy to return to
home area
--Break in family relationships
and financial hardship for wives,
children
--Potential for over-/irrelevant
training
Decentralized Training This approach can be evaluated by, in most cases, reversing the
advantages and disadvantages of international and national schools
Short-term Training
This approach can be evaluated by, in most cases, reversing the
advantages and disadvantages of long-term training. The group
concluded that in most cases long-term training offers greater depth,
while short-term training offers greater breadth, that is to say, can be
made available to more students.
To help visualize and evaluate the issues raised, we constructed a series of continuums on which we
plotted the three most likely approaches. In the chart that follows, the left-hand column contains a list of
the issues raised. In the right hand column is a line on which the three approaches are represented
(N=National schools; I=International school; D=Decentralized training). A position to the left indicates a
negative assessment, while a position on the right indicates a positive assessment.
Administration/Logistics
-------N------------------------------------D------------------------------------
Number of Students
--------------------I-----------------------------------------------------------N,D
Sphere of Influence
--------------------------------------------D---N------------------------------------
Depth of Knowledge
-------------D-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Context Specificity
---I----------------------------------------------N------------------------------------
Impact on Local Churches
---I----------------------------------------------N------------------------------------
Maturity*
---D-------------------------------------------N------------------I--------------------
Cost of Operation
---N--------------------------------------------I---------------------------------------
Impact on Families*
----------I--------------------------------------N--------------------------------------
Danger of Over-training*
----------------------N,I---------------------------------------------------------------
Impact on Host Church
---D-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Evaluation
Not all of the factors discussed carried the same weight in our minds. We did not consider "Impact on
Host Church," for example, as important as "Number of Students,:" "Cost," "Administration/Logistics,"
etc. Thus, it is not sufficient to merely compare the number of negative and positive characteristics of each
approach. An evaluation of the approaches must assign each criteria its appropriate level of importance.
We agreed that some combination of centralized and decentralized training is needed for the church in
French West Africa. We also agreed that, due to cost, administrative, and personnel restraints, a series of
national schools is not a realistic option for French West Africa at this time.
Decentralized training maximizes accessibility, but this depends on the availability of qualified teachers
throughout the region, which is lacking at this time. In areas where missionaries or other qualified
teachers are available, decentralized training should be encouraged. Efforts should be made in America
and Europe to identify, train, and support missionaries to French West Africa who can conduct such
training.
To supplement this and provide an option for areas in which qualified teachers are not available, a
centralized, international program is needed. The major drawback of such an approach is its
inaccessibility to many church leaders. We discussed various options for minimizing this drawback while
taking advantage of the opportunities this approach offers.
We discussed the possibility of initially establishing a one-year program in order to impact more students
and, hence, more areas, in a shorter period of time. Another suggestion was to increase the number of
students that could be trained in a Cotonou school by encouraging Beninois students to live with family or
friends.
Students who complete a long-term program will likely desire to be full-time church leaders. However,
none of us felt that the school or American churches should be responsible for providing support. We
agreed that students accepted for long-term training should come either with a guarantee of employment
from a national church or with a profession/skill that would allow them to be self-supporting.
George Akpabli raised the question of the participation of the Bohicon missionaries in the centralized
training. While making no guarantees, we discussed the possibility of coming to Cotonou to teach one to
two week intensive classes which meet four to eight hours a day. This raised the possibility of
establishing a school in which one course is taught intensively over a shorter period of time. When this
course is completed, another course can begin. This enables both short- and long- term training to be
conducted by the same institution. Those who come for a prolonged period of study may take continuous
courses. Others, who are able to come for one or two weeks at a time, can take short courses and return to
their home areas.
By reducing the length of each training period (either by reducing the length of the total curriculum or by
offering courses within a shorter time frame), we could reduce the primary disadvantages of an
international school while retaining its advantages.
Accessibility--The school would be tailored to the time constraints of more students and be able to
train more than ten students in three years.
Cost--By shortening the training period, cost is reduced both for the student and for national and
international supporters.
Relevancy--In the end, more students would be trained, only at a lower level, which could reduce the
incidence of irrelevant training.
________________________
We did not have time during this meeting to continue our discussion regarding the relevancy of the
training. This will largely revolve around the curriculum offered at the school. Perhaps we can meet later
to discuss the development of a relevant curriculum.
This meeting was held only to explore options; concrete proposals were not drafted. We hope that the
ideas presented will be of help to those who will structure whatever programs are developed and that the
Lord will give wisdom to all involved.
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