Rendle, The Multigenerational Congregation

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Gilbert R. Rendle, The Multigenerational Congregation: Meeting the Leadership Challenge. Alban Institute, 2002.

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Referenced in: Generational Issues in Churches

See also: Church Conflict – Guides to Communication and Healthy Behavior

LifeandLeadership.com Summary

Rendle provides the most helpful guide available to equip generations for intentional conversations with each other, and to help leaders facilitate appreciative and productive intergenerational relationships on a congregational scale.

Perhaps Rendle’s greatest contribution is his four-part approach for multigenerational understanding:

  • Move to the balcony – take time to reflect
  • Work descriptively – describe the situation neutrally instead of blaming
  • Seek common space – identify values shared by the generations
  • Install civility – be willing to put the other side first.

The essential point is not avoid the issues, but to provide settings where generations hear each other, respectfully, on tough issues.

From the Publisher

Congregations need to learn new cultural languages and practices in order to speak to and be heard by new generations of people. But how do congregations enter the wilderness of ministry with these new generations when many of those in the entourage do not appreciate the trip?

In contrast to many writers about church growth, Rendle works with three important observations:

  • Most congregations are not “pure markets,” discrete groups with uniform values and behaviors, that can be targeted to the exclusion of all other audiences; 
  • Some of the differences and discomforts experienced in the congregation are based on the members’ tenure, or length of membership, rather than their age;
  • Leadership in congregations is not a matter of marketplace savvy but of spiritual authenticity in which we continue to shape our faith tradition to be heard and understood by a changing culture.

About the Author

Gil Rendle is a Senior Consultant with the Alban Institute. He is an ordained Methodist minister and consults with congregations and judicatories using his background in organizational development and systems theory. His other Alban titles include Leading Change in the Congregation and Behavioral Covenants in Congregations. He is the co-author of Holy Conversations: Strategic Planning as a Spiritual Practice for Congregations.


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