"Recommendations to the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church for the Fiscal Year 1954-1955"
[5 September 1954]
[Montgomery, Ala.]
King presents his vision for the future growth of Dexter and his
plans for accomplishing this growth. The first two paragraphs stress
the importance of pastoral authority, particularly in his interactions
with the deacon board: "It is therefore indispensable to the progress
of the church that the official board and membership cooperate fully
with the leadership of the pastor." King assigns to the Social and Political
Action Committee--"established for the purpose of keeping the congregation
intelligently informed concerning the social, political and economic
situation"--several members of the congregation who, in 1955 and 1956,
will be crucial in initiating and sustaining the Montgomery bus boycott:
JoAnn Robinson, Rufus Lewis, and Mary Fair Burks.
When a minister is called to the pastorate of a church, the main presupposition
is that he is vested with a degree of authority. The source of this authority
is twofold. First of all, his authority originates with God. Inherent
in the call itself is the presupposition that God directed that such a
call be made. This fact makes it crystal clear that the pastor's authority
is not merely humanly conferred, but divinely sanctioned. Secondly, the
pastor's authority stems from the people themselves. Implied in the call
is the unconditional willingness of the people to accept the pastor's
leadership. This means that the leadership never ascends from the pew
to the pulpit, but it invariably descends from the pulpit to the pew.
This does not mean that the pastor is one before whom we must blindly
and ignorantly genuflect, as if he were possessed of some infallible or
superhuman attributes. Nor does it mean that the pastor should needlessly
interfere with the deacons, trustees or workers of the various auxiliaries,
assuming unnecessary dictatorial authority. But it does mean that the
pastor is to be respected and accepted as the central figure around which
the policies and programs of the church revolve. He must never be considered
a mere puppet for the whimsical and capricious mistreatment of those who
wish to show their independence, and "use their liberty for a cloak of
maliciousness." It is therefore indispensable to the progress of the church
that the official board and membership cooperate fully with the leadership
of the pastor. Pursuant of these underlying principles, I respectfully
submit the following recommendations:
1. In order that every member of the church shall be identified with
a smaller and more intimate fellowship of the church, clubs representing
the twelve months of the year shall be organized. Each member of the
church will automatically become a member of the club of the month in
which he or she was born. Those born in January will be members of the
"January" Club. Those born in February will be members of the
"February" Club, etc. Each month club shall choose its own officers.
Each club shall meet once per month, with the exception of the month
for which the club is named. In the month for which the club is named,
each club shall meet weekly. So the December Club, for example, shall
meet once monthly until December. In December it shall meet each week.
Each club shall be asked to make a special contribution to the church
on the last Sunday of the month for which it is named. Also, on the
Church Anniversary each club shall be asked to contribute at least one
hundred dollars ($100.00). All of the money raised by these clubs shall
be placed in a fund known as the building fund. The work of these clubs
shall be to supplement that of the Building Fund Committee. (This committee
will be discussed subsequently). 2. That the church shall begin a four
year renovation and expansion program. Immediate renovations for 1954-55
shall include: carpeting the main auditorium; public speaking system;
electric cold water fountain; new pulpit furniture; Communion table;
and painting the basement. Renovations for 1955-56 shall include: new
pews; and a new heating and cooling system. Improvements for 1956-57
shall include: new baptistry, and a general improvement of the basement.
The remaining year of this four year program shall be spent adding large
sums of money to the Building Fund for the construction of a religious
education building. It is hoped that by 1959 a religious education building
will be under construction. Obviously many emergency renovations will
arise which are not included in the present list. 3. That a Building
Fund Committee be formed consisting of the following persons Mr.
J. H. Gilchrist and Mr. M. F. Moore, co-chairmen; the chairman of both
boards; the clerk of the church; the superintendent of the Sunday School;
all members of the Finance Committee; Mrs. E. M. Arrington; Mrs. Thelma
Anderson; Miss Verdie Davie; Mr. Roscoe Williams; Mr. R. W. Brown, Mr.
J. T. Brooks, and Dr. W. D. Pettus. Dr. H. C. Trenholm shall serve as
advisor to this committee. The responsibility of this committee shall
be twofold: (1) To seek to determine the advisability of expanding on
this particular spot; (2) To formulate a systematic approach to the
problem of raising the necessary funds for expansion of the church plant.
This committee shall be requested to report its results to the pastor
within six months. After the findings of this committee shall have been
reported, the trustees under the sanction of the church, will be on
the lookout for the purchasing of property necessary for the expansion
program. 4. That a New Member Committee be formed consisting
of the following persons: Mrs. B. P. Brewer, chairman; Mr. Julius Alexander,
co-chairman; Mrs. R. E. Harris, secretary; Mrs. Mary Morgan, Mrs. E.
M. Arrington, Mr. Epreval Davie, Sr., and Mrs. J. T. Alexander. The
following shall be the duties of this committee:
a. To welcome all new members into the Church on the Sunday that
they join. b. To interview all new members concerning their particular
areas of interest in the church. If they have no particular interest,
be sure to give them one. Place them in the particular department
or circle of the church where they can exercise their maximum spiritual
and intellectual potentialities. Also ascertain the month of the new
member's birth, and assign him to his proper Month Club. c. Explain
the financial system to each new member. See that each new member
has a box of church envelopes. d. All names and vital statistics should
be written plainly and turned over to the office secretary the following
week in order that she may make an orderly transfer of such information
to the permanent files of the church. e. Request the chairman of the
deacon board to assign a sufficient number of deacons to visit all
new members within a week after they have united with this church.
The president of the Month Club receiving new members shall also be
requested to make a visit of welcome or assign some qualified member
of the club to do so.
5. In order that there may be a reliable and orderly record of the
church's origin, growth and future development, a Committee on the
History of Dexter shall be organized consisting of the following
persons: Mrs. Leila Barlow, chairman; Mr. N. W. Walton, Mrs. Mary Moore,
Mr. C. J. Dunn, Mr. John Fulgham. This committee shall be requested
to present a summary of the history of Dexter each year at the church
anniversary. This committee shall also be requested to keep on file
at least three weekly church bulletins, and look into the possibility
of having them bound at the end of each church year. These records shall
be carefully preserved by members of the committee until it is possible
to develop a church library. 6. A Scholarship Fund Committee
shall be established consisting of the following persons: Mrs. Thelma
Morris, chairman; Mr. P. M. Blair, co-chairman; Mrs. Ive Pettus, Dr.
Edward Maxwell, and Dr. H. L. Van Dyke. It shall be the responsibility
of this committee to choose each year for a scholarship award the high
school graduate of Dexter possessing the highest scholastic rating as
well as unusual possibilities for service to humanity; one who has been
actively engaged in some phase of church life and one who plans to attend
college. The scholarship award for this year shall be one hundred dollars
($100.00). The awards may be increased in proportion as the church may
grow and prosper. 7. A Cultural Committee shall be established
consisting of the following persons: Mr. J. T. Brooks, chairman; Mrs.
Coretta King, co-chairman; Mrs. C. K. Taylor, Miss Agnes Jette, Mr.
Cleveland Dennard, Miss Grace Jackson. This committee shall invite two
big cultural events to Dexter per year, one in the spring and one in
the fall. They should seek to make one a group event (a school or church
chorus) and present an individual artist in the other. Such an undertaking
will have a fourfold purpose:
a. To lift the general cultural appreciation of our church and community
b. To give encouragement to our school groups c. To give encouragement
to promising artists d. To give financial aid to the church
8. In order to coordinate the efforts and aims of the musical units
of the church a Department of Music shall be established. Mr.
J. T. Brooks will serve as head of this department. The directors of
all musical units shall be members. Other members will include: Miss
Grace Jackson, Mrs. Coretta S. King, and Mrs. Edna King. The members
of this department shall meet with the pastor once quarterly to discuss
ways to implement the technical, artistic, and worship aims of the master.
9. In order to implement the program of religious education, a Board
of Religious Education shall be organized. This board shall consist
of the following members: Mrs. E. M. Arrington, chairman; Dr. W. E.
Anderson, co-chairman; Mr. C. C. Beverly, Mrs. JoAnn Robinson, Mrs.
Sadie Brooks, Mrs. Queen Tarver, Miss Dean (Olivet), Mr. William Thompson,
and Mr. Cleveland Dennard. The immediate work of this committee shall
be to study the need for the revitalization and reorganization of the
B.T.U. and the Sunday School. Findings of this study are to be submitted
to the pastor. This board will also plan for a two or three week Daily
Vacation Bible School next summer. Obviously this should be one of the
strongest boards in the church. 10. A Social Service Committee
shall be established consisting of the following persons: Miss Marguerite
Moore, chairman; Mrs. Verdie Davie, co-chairman; Mrs. Sallie Madison,
Mrs. J. H. Gilchrist, Mrs. R. E. Harris, Mr. S. W. Wilson, Mr. Julius
Alexander, Mrs. Mary Moore, Mrs. S. S. Austin. The duties of this committee
shall be as follows: The care and visitation of the sick and needy.
All appeals for help will come before this committee. This does not
mean that the missionaries and deacons will be freed of their responsibility
to visit the sick. It simply means that all financial aid to the
sick and needy will be made through this committee by official checks
of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church. This system of helping the
needy will discourage unbusiness-like practices, and prevent much duplication.
11. Since the gospel of Jesus is a social gospel as well as a personal
gospel seeking to save the whole man, a Social and Political Action
Committee shall be established for the purpose of keeping the congregation
intelligently informed concerning the social, political and economic
situation. This committee shall keep before the congregation the importance
of the N.A.A.C.P. The membership should unite with this great organization
in a solid block. This committee shall also keep before the congregation
the necessity of being registered voters. Every member of Dexter must
be a registered voter. During elections, both state and national, this
committee will sponsor forums and mass meetings to discuss the relative
merits of candidates and the major issues involved. This committee shall
consist of the following persons: Mrs. Mary Burks, chairman; Mrs. JoAnn
Robinson, co-chairman; Dr. R. T. Adair, Mr. F. W. Taylor, Sr., Dr. W.
D. Pettus, and Mr. Rufus Lewis 12. Mrs. W. E. Anderson and Mrs. Zelia
Evans shall comprise a committee to organize a strong and dynamic Women's
Council. All the women in the church will automatically become members
of this organization. Although this organization will have the liberty
to elect its own officers, the pastor is recommending that Mrs. Anderson
and Mrs. Evans become President and Vice-president, respectively, for
the first year. Literature and suggestions for organization can be obtained
from the pastor. 13. Mr. P. M. Blair and Mr. J. H. Gilchrist shall comprise
a committee to organize an active and dynamic Brotherhood. This
organization will include every man in the church. Mr. Blair and Mr.
Gilchrist shall serve as President and Vice-president respectively for
at least the first year. Literature and suggestions for organization
can be obtained from the pastor. 14. Mr. Cleveland Dennard, Reverend
Porter, and Mrs. Athalstein Adair shall comprise a committee to organize
a strong and functional Youth Council. This Council will have
three divisions: (1) Children, (2) Youth, and (3) Young Adults. The
organization of a Young Married Couples Club shall grow out of
this Council. The pastor will meet with this committee to make suggestions.
15. In order to increase the feeling of real fellowship in the church
and make the visitors feel a hearty welcome, a Courtesy Committee
shall be organized. It will be the purpose of this committee to make
its way to the visitors on Sunday and give them a sense of real welcome.
Also, this committee shall sponsor coffee hours at least once monthly
immediately after the morning service. At this time both visitors and
members shall be invited to the basement of the church for a moment
of fellowship and getting acquainted. This committee shall consist of
the following persons: Mrs. C. K. Taylor, chairman; Mrs. Fressie Maxwell,
co-chairman; Mrs. C. D. Alexander, Mrs. L. H. Whitted, Mrs. Roscoe Williams,
Mrs. Verdie Davie, Mrs. Clarene Sankey, Mrs. Fannie Motley, Mrs. Thelma
Morris, Mrs. Fannie Doak, and Mrs. Rosa Dawson. 16. That a Sunday
Nursery be established in the basement of the church, which will
take care of the children of parents who wish to worship in the morning
service. The following persons shall serve as a committee to set up
this nursery: Mrs. Fressie Maxwell, chairman; Mrs. Sadie Brooks, co-chairman;
Mrs. Rebecca Nesbitt, Mrs. Thelma Morris. This committee should also
pursue the possibility of opening a Day Nursery. 17. That the following
annual special days and events be enacted in the church calendar:
a. Church Anniversary Second Sunday in December b. Youth Day Second
Sunday in March c. Spring Lecture Series Week after Fourth Sunday
in April d. Men's Day Second Sunday in July e. Women's Day Fourth
Sunday in September
It is hoped that a week of activities shall lead to each of these special
days. Speakers for each of these events will be secured by the pastor.
This, however, does not mean that suggestions cannot come from members.
18. That at a very early date all officers of the Missionary Society
will meet with the pastor to discuss ways and means of revitalizing
the Missionary Society. 19. The chairman of the Deacon Board
shall call a meeting of the deacons once monthly. The purpose of this
meeting will be to discuss and seek ways to help the pastor improve
the spiritual life of the church. Also the chairman should lead the
deacons in a course on the major doctrines of Christianity and the duties
of deaconship. The Deacon Board shall not be a legislative body. All
legislation shall come through the official body, composed of deacons
and trustees, called only by the pastor. 20. That all members and
officers of the official board, and all officers of the various auxiliaries
of the church will be recommended annually by the pastor. 21. That the
Church Membership Roll shall be divided into an active and an inactive
list. Those members who fail to register for the year and who contribute
nothing to the financial upkeep of the church, shall be placed on the
roll as an inactive member, unless some satisfactory explanation be
given to the officers. An inactive member shall have no voting privileges
in the church. 22. The membership shall be divided into groups of twenty-five
persons, and each deacon will be responsible for the spiritual care
of one of these groups. As far as possible this division will be worked
out on the basis of geographical convenience. It will be the duty of
the deacons to constantly call and visit members in his group. Members
that are slack in church attendance and general church responsibilities
should be persuaded to improve. At the end of every two months each
deacon shall receive from the office secretary the names of members
in his group who might be behind in their pledges. It shall be the duty
of the deacon to persuade the member to catch up his or her pledge.
23. In order to revamp the financial system of the church, a Unified
Budget Plan shall be established. This plan will do away with all
rallies. Instead of giving haphazardly to this or that collection and
to this and that auxiliary the individual, through this method, pledges
a simple weekly contribution to the Unified Budget of the church. At
the beginning of the church year, each member will receive a pledge
card on which he states the amount of his weekly pledge toward the overall
budget of the church. Each registered member will in turn be given a
box of envelopes covering the fifty-two Sundays in the year in which
he will place his weekly contribution. With the enactment of this plan,
only one collection will be taken in the church. This plan will be explained
more fully when we come to a discussion of the budget. 24. In order
to implement the above financial plan as well as any business like plan,
it is imperative that we have a Central Treasury. Therefore,
I recommend that all money in the treasury of each auxiliary be turned
over to the general church treasurer by November 1, 1954. The budget
for each of these auxiliaries will then be incorporated in the Unified
Budget of the church. 25. All bills shall be paid in checks. 26. All
checks will be made out by the Financial secretary. 27. No checks will
be paid out without the O.K. of the pastor. 28. The honorarium for guest
speakers will be left to the discretion of the pastor. 29. In addition
to the two check signers, there shall be a third signer in the person
of the chairman of the Finance Committee. 30. All money shall be deposited
on the day that it is raised, and the deposit slip shall be returned
to the church office on the following day so that an accurate record
can be kept at all times of the money on hand. 31. All money will be
counted in the secretary's office in the basement of the church. 32.
An accurate record of receipts and disbursements as well as financial
statement of each individual contributor shall be placed in the
hands of every member at the end of each quarter of the church year.
33. That the fiscal year of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church shall be
from October 1, to September 30. Although the present recommendations
if accepted, will not be enacted until around November 1, 1954, this
change in fiscal policy will be retroactive to October 1. Elections
will be held as usual the last of December. But it means that those
elected will occupy their offices only nine months or until September
30, 1955. Elections should be held sometime during the first two weeks
in September and those elected shall assume their office on the first
of October. The annual meeting shall be held on Wednesday Night before
the First Sunday in October and the Installation of Officers shall take
place on the First Sunday in October at 3:30 P.M. 34. In order to implement
this overall program, a full time Office Secretary shall be hired.
The job of this person would be: (1) to mimeograph all programs and
bulletins for the church; (2) to keep an accurate record of the financial
standing of each member and of all receipts and disbursements; (3) to
make out all checks and mail them if necessary by the O.K. of the pastor;
(4) to be responsible for all correspondence for the pastor and church,
(5) to receive money from members who desire paying pledges during the
week or desire mailing them in; (6) to present a quarterly statement
to each member of the church concerning its financial status; (7) to
be on hand for calls into the church and for the giving of information
to all in need of such, etc. This person should be a member of Dexter,
having a familiarity with the overall program of the church or willing
to be trained in such. In order to have a stable and well organized
church, this office is indispensable.
This ends my recommendations. If every member will assume an equal
responsibility in the implementation of this program, success will
be as inevitable as the rising sun. It is quite true that there
can be no great followship without great leadership, but it is equally
true that there can be no great leadership without great followship.
There must be mutuality on every hand. With this persistent reciprocity
and the determination to keep God in the forefront, Dexter will
rise to such heights as will stagger the imagination of generations
yet unborn, and which even God himself will smile upon. This is
our profound challenge. This is our overwhelming responsibility.
TD. MLKP-MBU:
Box 117, folder 1.
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