The following information is from UMC.org. In addition to the member committees listed below, the Lovely Lane Administrative Council also includes many other committees of the church including, but not limited to, Education, Music, Children's Council, Missions, Hospitality, Health and Wholeness and others.
Introduction / Background:
The purpose of the church council is to plan a program of nurture,
outreach, and witness; implement the plan; provide an administrative
infrastructure; align the plan with the mission of the church; evaluate
the effectiveness of the plan; act as the administrative agency of the
charge conference.
The church council exists to create and supervise the strategic plan
for your local congregation so that the congregation fulfills its
mission of making disciples of Jesus Christ. This twofold function
includes both leadership and management. Leadership is the visionary,
"big picture" work that assesses critically where your congregation is
at the present moment, where God is calling it to be in the future, and
what resources will be required to move from your current reality into
the desired future. Management is the essential "detail work" that must
be accomplished on a daily basis to make the congregation effective.
The church council model reflects and continues a historic tradition
within the Church. Jesus called twelve disciples to be together in the
leadership of the early Christian movement (Luke 5:1-11, 27-32;
6:12-16). Following the resurrection and ascension of Jesus, leaders of
"the Way" often convened in groups to make decisions and to support each
other in the work of mission and disciple- making. Acts 15 describes
the Council formed at Jerusalem. Throughout the letters of Paul,
especially in Romans 12 and 1 Corinthians 12, leadership in the
congregation is described as the shared work of spiritually graced men
and women-the body of Christ. A church council is greater than the sum
of its parts. Gifted individuals-knit together in faith, love, and
commitment and empowered and guided by the Holy Spirit-can accomplish
much more than any individual. We honor and glorify God best when we
become the body of Christ together.
The charge conference determines how many members will be on the
church council. The committee is made of representatives from the
program ministries of the church. Certain positions are required by the
Discipline, but the charge conference can add additional members to make
sure that the council membership is inclusive.
Members of the committee should include the following persons:
the chairperson of the church council;
the lay leader;
the chairperson and/or a representative of the pastor-parish relations committee;
the chairperson and/or a representative of the committee on finance;
chairperson and/or a representative of the board of trustees;
the church treasurer;
a lay member to annual conference;
the president and/or a representative of the United Methodist Men;
the president and/or a representative of the United Methodist Women;
a representative of the United Methodist Youth;
the pastor(s).
Relationship to other committees
The church council works cooperatively with the other committees of
the church. The council works particularly closely with the four main
church committees that are required by the Book of Discipline --Staff/Pastor-Parish Relations, Trustees, Finance, and Lay Leadership.