IGRC Central District

IGRC Central District Welcome to the Central District of the Illinois Great Rivers Conference!

03/17/2026

NEW THIS SUMMER!!! đŸ€©

We’re excited to launch Mission Service Camps at Little Grassy!

These experiences are designed for youth groups, church groups, and organized teams who want to serve, grow in faith, and make a meaningful impact together.

đŸ› ïž Serve others
đŸŒ± Grow in faith
đŸ€ Build community

đŸš« Please note: These camps are designed for groups and are not intended for individual registrations.

📌 Check out the flyer for full details, dates, and registration information!

👉 Ready to bring your group or have questions? Contact us at [email protected]

💛 Serve boldly. Love fully. Lead courageously.

03/11/2026
03/11/2026

A lot of pastors feel like they are trying to shepherd a congregation through three storms at the same time — deep political division, the slow decline of the church as we’ve known it, and the everyday griefs and crises that have always been part of ministry.

Any one of those is hard. All three at once can drain the life right out of you if you’re not careful.

Resilience, at least for clergy, isn’t about being tougher. It isn’t about pretending things don’t hurt. It’s about learning how to care for your soul while you keep doing work that asks a lot from you.

The church, over the centuries, has learned some practices that help. None of these are quick fixes, but they do keep people alive in the long run.

Here are a few that seem to matter most.

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1. Keep a daily time with God that isn’t sermon prep

One of the strange things about ministry is that you can spend all day in Scripture and still feel far from God.

You read the Bible to prepare lessons. You pray in meetings. You study for sermons. But that’s not the same thing as just being with God.

Resilient pastors usually have some kind of daily rhythm where the Bible isn’t a tool for ministry — it’s food for their own soul.

For some it’s Lectio Divina.
For some it’s the Daily Office.
For some it’s just sitting in silence for a few minutes before the day starts.

Psalm 46 says, “Be still, and know that I am God.”

Dallas Willard used to warn that ministry can become a substitute for intimacy with God.
If we’re not careful, we talk about God all day and forget to actually be with God.

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2. Take a real Sabbath — not a pretend one

Most pastors believe in Sabbath. Truth is, most of us just don’t practice it very well.

There’s always one more email. One more phone call. One more problem that feels like it can’t wait. Are there is the sermon that needs a little more polish.

But a real Sabbath means stopping. No sermon writing. No church business. No trying to fix people.

Just rest. Family. Joy. Things that make you feel human again.

Walter Brueggemann calls Sabbath an act of resistance in a world that thinks your worth comes from what you produce.

For clergy, Sabbath isn’t optional.
It’s survival.

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3. Don’t try to do this alone

Ministry can be lonely in ways people don’t see.

You can be surrounded by people all week and still feel like there’s nobody you can really be honest with.

Every pastor needs a few people who know the truth — not parishioners, not people you supervise — but friends who understand the work and let you be real.

That might be a clergy group. A spiritual director. A therapist. A couple of trusted colleagues.

Sometimes we need someone else to hold faith for us when ours feels worn thin.

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4. Learn that you don’t have to carry everything

A lot of us were trained to care for everyone, but nobody taught us how to set limits.

You don’t have to solve every problem.
You don’t have to absorb every complaint.
You don’t have to meet every expectation.

Jesus didn’t.

There’s a moment in Mark’s Gospel where the crowds want more from him, and instead of staying, he goes off to pray and says he has other places to go.

Not every demand is a calling. Not every expectation is obedience.

Sometimes faithfulness means saying,
“I can’t do that.”

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5. Remember that you are not the Savior

This may be the hardest one.

When attendance drops, we feel like we failed. When people leave, we take it personally. When the church struggles, it feels like it’s on our shoulders.

But the church never belonged to us. Our job is faithfulness. The results belong to God.

Always have. Always will!

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6. Remember your call

When ministry turns into survival mode, it’s easy to forget why you started.

It helps to remember the moment you first felt called.The people who believed in you. The reason you said yes in the first place.

Paul told Timothy,
“Fan into flame the gift of God that is in you.”

Not force it. Not fake it.
Fan it.

Sometimes the fire is still there — it just needs air.

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7. Have a life that isn’t the church

You are not only a pastor. You’re a human being. You need something in your life that has nothing to do with sermons, meetings, or conflict.

Gardening.
Walking.
Music.
Working with your hands.
Time with family.
Exercise.
Anything that reminds your body and your mind that the world is bigger than the church.

Those things don’t distract from ministry. They make it possible.

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8. Notice the small good things

When you’re tired, all you can see is what’s going wrong. But ministry is full of quiet moments that matter.

Henri Nouwen once said that ministry is mostly walking with people and reminding them they are loved by God.

That may not look impressive, but it is holy work.

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A Final word

If you feel tired, it doesn’t mean you’re failing. It may mean you’re carrying a lot in a hard season.

The goal isn’t to become invincible. The goal is to stay rooted
 and human
 and hopeful.

These are stormy times. The storms may not stop.

But resilience means your soul learns how to stay anchored
 even while the wind is still blowing.

————

From the CcNet FORUM team

03/11/2026

Join us in prayer for those impacted by at least three tornadoes on Friday, March 6, in Branch, Cass and St. Joseph counties in Michigan. We pray especially for the families of the four people who lost their lives and for those who have lost their homes and livelihoods.

UMCOR is responding to this disaster through a solidarity grant to the Michigan Conference of The United Methodist Church, which will provide immediate relief to those in need, including Early Response Team deployment assistance, debris removal and the distribution of food and water.

How you can help:
🛐 Continue to pray for those impacted as they walk the long road to recovery.
👐 Give to support our U.S. relief and recovery efforts: https://bit.ly/umcorusdr.
đŸ“Č Share this post to encourage others to pray and give.

03/05/2026
02/20/2026

Lent also invites us to remember the wideness of God’s mercy. In a world often marked by division, harshness, and fear, we are called to be signs of God’s reconciling grace. We are called to forgive as we have been forgiven, to love as we have been loved, and to extend compassion even when it is...

02/20/2026

The Council of Bishops of The United Methodist Church has released the list of participants for the 2026 Leadership Gathering in Calgary, Canada, highlighting worldwide and intergenerational representation and access supports.

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5900 S. 2nd Street
Springfield, IL
62711

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Monday 9am - 4pm
Tuesday 9am - 4pm
Wednesday 9am - 4pm
Thursday 9am - 4pm
Friday 9am - 4pm

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