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Ruth
& Naomi Project
Mentoring Future Leaders
Just
as Jesus discipled others, we must help others to grow in their
spiritual lives and in their service to Christ and others. Through
the Ruth & Naomi Project we can encourage young women and
girls to become all that God has created them to be. We must
equip them to take up the cause of Christ's mission, to reach
out to a lost and hurting world and minister in His name. As
our foremothers in Virginia accepted the challenge, "The
World for Christ...Hallelujah!" we must also accept the
challenge to do what Christ calls us to do in this century!
Why
Should I Be Involved?
The Ruth and Naomi Project is both
a structure and process intended to create one-to-one relationships
between experienced missions leaders and young potential leaders
within a church.
These relationships have two complementary
purposes. They will provide older, more experienced leaders
an opportunity to pass on to the next generation their love
for missions, experience through Woman's Missionary Union, leadership
skills and abilities developed and honed over the years plus
their joyful commitment as obedient Christ-Followers. At the
same time, young potential leaders will have an opportunity
to develop systematically the skills and leadership abilities,
commitment to missions and dedication to God toward a missions
lifestyle.
This project offers young potential
leaders the opportunity to reflect on how leadership has developed
in individuals, providing a missions portfolio for the future.
Personal growth and "who am I?" processes such as
assessment inventories (spiritual gifts, leadership style, personality
style, and work world skills and leisure pursuits/ hobbies) will
help them discern their calling. They will also be able to communicate
their personal mission statement. The Ruth and Naomi Project
completes the circle as mentoring leaders share what they have
learned with the next generation and young potential leaders
share their dreams and visions for the future.
Characteristics
of a Young Potential Leader
Someone who has potential
for growth as a leader, with natural leadership traits and
abilities and is teachable, willing to listen, learn and
grow in Christ
Young women and girls who are searching and seeking
to be used by God, with a readiness or calling to serve
Women and girls looking for ways to be involved and
wanting to develop the inner resources so they will not
experience burnout
Young potential leaders wanting to achieve balance
and wholeness as well as fulfill the mission God has for
their lives
Characteristics
of a Mentoring Leader
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Someone with strong interpersonal
skills who is caring, genuine, spiritually growing, sensitive
to others and has a heart for missions
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A person with knowledge of
the organization and its aims
Someone with supervisory skills
(planning, appraising, giving feedback, coaching, modeling,
delegating)
-
Women with technical competence
about how the missions programs and projects are implemented
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Someone with personal power
and charisma who seeks opinions from and regards others
-
Women with status and prestige
who are natural influencers
-
Persons willing to be responsible
for the growth of someone else, willing to invest herself
in the life of another, without guarantee
-
Someone with the ability to
share credit and empower others
-
Persons will to be transparent,
practice patience and have the capacity to take risks
-
Women who are the type of women
found throughout the Bible, the kind of woman Naomi was to
Ruth
Why
Focus on Mentoring?
The story of Ruth and Naomi in the
Bible is an excellent example of mentoring. Think about Naomi,
the older, more experienced woman. Naomi was uprooted from her
native home when she married and had suffered the loss of her
husband and two sons. Old and helpless and in a foreign land,
she was left with her daughters-in-law to shelter. She became
one of the three widows whom Paul describes as being "desolate."
Naomi felt she must somehow retrieve the past. If she could go
back home to the Bethlehem soil, maybe there she could find favor
with God and meaning in her life.
Think about Ruth, the young daughter-in-law, who had been robbed
by the death of her husband. Naomi did not want her daughter-in-law
to face uncertainty in a strange land. But Ruth was bound to her
mother-in-law by cords of love and friendship. She no doubt also
wanted to move forward. Ruth still believed in the future, could
dream about tomorrow and exude hope to Naomi. Both women benefited
from the covenant relationship expressed in Ruth 1:16 and throughout
the story.
Entreat
me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee:
for wither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest I will
lodge;
Thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God. (Ruth 1:16)
In an age like ours with its ever
growing number of strained relationships and surface friendships,
establishing a mentoring connection with a loyal confidant can
provide a safe place for spiritual development and the emergence
of leadership potential.
Steps
to Designing Your Church Project
Selection of a Church Project Coordinator
Identification and selection of potential leaders
Identification and selection of mentoring leaders
and matching potential and mentoring leaders
Design of the Leadership Development Plan
Orientation of mentoring leaders and potential leaders
and launch of the cycle
Negotiating the Covenant Relationship
Implementation of the Leadership Development Plan
Closure and celebration
Evaluation of the project
Resources
· Ruth & Naomi Training
Consultants. Available from WMUV.
· Ruth & Naomi Project Guide with suggestions
for youth and children adaptations. Available from WMUV.
· A Garden Path to Mentoring: Planting Your life
in Another and Releasing the Fragrance of Christ, by Esther
Burroughs, New Hope Publishers, 1997
· Woman to Woman: Preparing Yourself to Mentor, by
Edna Ellison and Tricia Scribner, New Hope Publishers, 1999
· Gifted by God: Leading, Loving and Teaching with
Your Life, audiocassette, Andrea Mullins, Margaret Perkins,
Laura Savage, New Hope Publishers,
1997
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