Log In
GMHC
Get Started
Missions
About Healthcare Missions
Short Term Missions
Long Term Missions
Market Place Worker
Medical Education
Domestic Missions
Resources
Blog
Resource Library
Virtual Events
Courses
Interest Areas
Job Board
Store
Community
Challenges
Directory of Organizations
Directory of Members
Stories
Groups
Log In
Developing Christian Leaders for Community Health and Development
Blog
Developing Christian Leaders for Community Health and Development
Share
Share
Gil Odendaal
0
0
Dec 19, 2011
Learn how to identify, recruit, mobilize, and empower the Christian leader of the 21st Century who can lead community health and development ministries in this age of globalization. Learn why this is one of the five key components of the PEACE Plan.
Comments
To leave a comment,
login
or
sign up
.
Related Content
0
The Changing Role of the Pastor and the Church in Healthcare Missions
The Changing Role of the Pastor and the Church in Healthcare Missions.This session will equip pastors and church leaders to be able to lead and implement effective medical missions engagement in the changing missiological landscape of the 21st century. You will learn practical and biblical sound ways of changing your church members from being spectators into participators, from consumers into contributors and how to guide agencies and NGOs to work through your church and not just with your church.. Emphasis will be on how God wants to use ordinary people and how you as church leader can fuel this reformation of deeds that is going on by launching church initiated interventions and trips. This will also apply to how to see this become a reality in the global south whether through short term trips of your church members or through individual participation
0
The Role of the Pastor and Church (civil society) Members in Community Based Healthcare
This is a NEW EMERGING model of empowering the local church to care for the most vulnerable. Globally there has been a growing realization that the church (called civil society in government and UN circles) in its manifold expressions has been under-utilized in developing countries in community development in general and specifically in the fight against HIV and AIDS, especially with the drastic reduction of bilateral aid for HIV and AIDS related projects in developing countries. In addition, the less than successful results of the majority of educational programs promoting prevention has led to the understanding that a corrective pedagogy may be necessary since the content of the material that presented in the various events are sound. In this presentation, the mobilization of the church/civil society in a community in South Africa as well as one in Rwanda which resulted in highly clinical effectiveness will be presented. The Rwanda project has grown from regional to national in scope and focuses on the mobilization of the church/civil society for prevention and care for those infected and affected by the AIDS pandemic with special emphasis on appropriate pedagogical principles. The model, also known as the “Clinical Church” will be presented. Meaningful segments of data that will be discussed includes: Biomedical - Knowledge concerning HIV/AIDS of the stakeholders; Cultural assumptions - Knowledge of and belief in HIV/AIDS related myths among the stakeholders; Responses (affective) - Affective responses of the stakeholders to the AIDS pandemic; analyses of the pedagogical methodology of the trainers in this community as perceived by the major stakeholders. A detailed descriptive analysis of the pedagogical strategy and context of a pilot project in Rwanda, which includes private and public sector cooperation as well as government participation, will be used to demonstrate the role of the pastor and the church in community based healthcare.
Comments