Towards enhancing effective communication in North-East Nigeria Conference of Seventh-day Adventist church
Kwa ufupi
Communication is the engine oil that keeps relationships going. It is one of the
special gifts that God gave to mankind from the very beginning. God Himself
communicated first with the other divine Beings of the God head as recorded by
Moses in the very first book of the Bible (Gen 1: 26). Mankind too has engaged in this
art right from time immemorial but the problem has been that most of what is
communicated fall short of effective communication which in turn gives rise to
misunderstanding, distrust and crisis.
Effective Communication which will help the smooth running of the church
machinery is not taken seriously and result has been some members complaining that
they are not usually carried along by the leaders at the helm of affairs in North-East
Nigeria Conference of SDA Church.
The researcher in an attempt to help improve communication, collected
information using questionnaire and personal interaction from pastors and randomly selected church members across the Conference. The profile of respondents include
civil servants, business people, farmers, students applicants of various ages at the
range of between 20 ( at least) and 60 (at most).
The analysis of the data showed that only 27% members have access to cell
phone number of their leaders and only 47% rate flow of information as good. For the
purpose of raising this percentage to 75% in 2012, the writer developed a program on
improving communication and ran it for three days in each of the two centers in the
Conference.
After the successful implementation of the program, the evaluation at the end
of 2012 showed an increase from 47% before the program to 80% after the program
implementation. The researcher, who is a pastor in North-East Nigeria Conference,
advised the conference leaders among other things to interact more with the field
Generals (pastors), ensure Communication Director keep his team in the Churches
abreast of issues and events before they happen, and the Conference to open a
website. In addition, Lay Leaders in the field were encouraged to exchange phone
numbers and e mail addresses with conference leaders, and to encourage computer
literacy. The website project has started and is expected be in operation in a short
time. With all these in place, leaders can now communicate with members freely and
vice versa.