Renewal Works

from Forward Movement

Our Brochure

RenewalWorks Brochure

Sample Materials

Facilitator Guide - PDF Preview

Explore a sample of the guide the workshop team facilitator will use to plan and lead each of the four workshops. The full version is a downloadable PDF included with the purchase of RenewalWorks.

Participant Workbook - PDF Preview

Review the workbook each workshop team member will use as a participant in RenewalWorks workshops. The full version is a downloadable PDF included with the purchase of RenewalWorks.

Footsteps - PDF Preview

Footsteps is a short booklet written by RenewalWorks founder, Jay Sidebotham. This booklet explains the concepts behind RenewalWorks. Hard copies of the full version may be purchased here through Forward Movement. Three (3) hard copies are included with the purchase of RenewalWorks.


Our Best Practice Principles

Researchers in our line of work have studied thousands of congregations—across multiple denominations, demographics, sizes, and setting (urban vs. rural, for example). Despite this diversity of sample size, basic themes have emerged, leading researchers to identify Five Best Practice Principles common to these congregations:

#1 | The Heart of the Leader
It’s the key, the critical element. The leader—we’re talking primarily about the clergy leader (or rector, if you have one), but also other clergy and lay leaders, like wardens, vestry members, and others—must single-mindedly champion spiritual growth as the priority for the parish.

Ideas to help:

#2 | Get People Moving
This, of course, suggests welcoming and incorporating newcomers. But it means much more. It’s about communicating to everyone in the congregation, new and not so new, that that person is on a spiritual journey. It’s an invitation, a call, and a challenge to take the next step, wherever a person may be in that journey.

Ideas to help:

#3 | Embed the Bible in Everything

In the same way that scripture is woven throughout The Book of Common Prayer, so the Bible should be woven throughout the life of the congregation, providing guidance, comfort, and challenge. The leader teaches and preaches, but each parishioner is called to discover scripture’s rich meaning for his or her own personal spiritual journey.

Ideas to help:

#4 | Create Ownership
Life in the church is not a spectator sport. It is not entertainment. It is not a product to be consumed. Everyone has both the freedom and the responsibility to pursue his or her own spiritual growth. Leaders assist this process by establishing the expectation that every individual in the community will grow in their relationship with the church, in their personal spiritual practice, and in service.

Ideas to help:

#5 | Pastor the Community
Jesus came to serve, and a relationship with him is deepened through commitment to service in the church and the neighborhood. He calls his disciples to go out into the world, proclaiming good news by word and example. A big part of that is knowing what God is up to in the neighborhood already, listening to the voices encountered there, entering into dialogue with those of other faiths. And it’s about working for justice and peace wherever you encounter the suffering and need of others.

Ideas to help:


An offering from

Forward Movement
412 Sycamore Street
Cincinnati, OH 45202

© 2025 Forward Movement