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NCD in Sweden
goes back to the year 2000 when a national NCD ministry was established by
a Swedish denomination. Today NCD is being utilized by all denominations.
eNCDine talked to Klas Eriksson and Tomas Arvidson representing the NCD
National Partner in Sweden. Read more on the characteristics of this
national ministry and how local churches benefit from NCD.
eNCDine: How was the NCD ministry in
your country started?
NCD Sweden: Many denominations in
Sweden started in the middle of the 90s to develop programs for church
development. At the end of the 90s the Baptist Union started to work with
coaches and was looking for good tools. In 1999 one of our coaches visited
Great Britain and brought back home a copy of the NCD book. Directly after
reading the book we adopted the 8 quality characteristics in our program,
and in 2000 we developed a national norm and became NCD National Partner.
From the beginning it has been an ecumenical process in Sweden. The
national norm was created from churches of all denominations. Today the
Baptist Union is still the national partner but the work is led by an
ecumenical group.
eNCDine: How does NCD work in your
country currently?
NCD Sweden: The work is going well
and growing slowly in all denominations. So far about 250 churches and
about 300 profiles have been completed.
eNCDine: In your opinion, what are
the key ingredients of making NCD work in churches?
NCD Sweden: There are many reasons,
perhaps the most important are:
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the holistic and biotic way to look at church development,
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to work in a long-term process with a coach, and
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the focus on principles and quality instead of models and
quantity.
eNCDine: Do you train coaches and
pastors? How?
NCD Sweden: On a national base the
coaches are trained on a basic level with a one day seminar and at least
one visit to an NCD church with an experienced coach. The national partner
invites all coaches to an annual two-day training. The responsibility for
coach training and the training of pastors is delegated to every
denomination. All coaches are contracted and must take part in yearly
training courses.
In the Baptist Union (together with the
Methodist church) we have two additional annual seminars for our coaches.
We also have annual training for pastors in NCD churches and once a year a
seminar for the local NCD teams, both led by all our coaches together.
eNCDine: How do Swedish pastors
benefit from your full time NCD ministry? What challenges do you face?
NCD Sweden: The greatest benefit is
that we help the pastor find a good coach. You cannot do an NCD Survey
without a coach in Sweden! We also invite them to annual seminars, some
together with the NCD team from their churches. We also provide NCD
resources. Our main challenges are:
eNCDine: Are you going to implement
anything new based on what you learned during the NCD World Summit back in
October 2004?
NCD Sweden: We were very inspired and
encouraged because we felt that NCD in Sweden is on the right track. We
did not find anything dramatically new, but there were interesting tools
from many countries that we probably will use in the future. The
Nordic/Baltic cooperation has been developed and deepened during the
conference.
Petr Činčala (PhD) lives in the Czech
Republic and works as Research Manager for NCD International |