Our mission is to foster renewed imagination, will, and ability among clergy, congregations, and communities as we journey together, becoming agents of thriving.

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We root our mission in the scriptural calling of shalom, love of neighbor, and our hope for God's final consummation of the whole creation.

We accomplish our mission by walking alongside our neighbors, developing innovative solutions that address barriers to thriving; seeking peace, justice, and prosperity in the communities that we share.

 
Congregations and Communities Come Together at Ormond Center Animation

We envision churches and communities that are equipped to work for thriving amidst times of enormous disruption and transformation. 

 

How We Imagine Congregations

We imagine congregations as both community anchors and community citizenry.

Community Anchors
The Church Gathered

Christian congregations have always acted as anchor institutions to their local communities through the use of their physical property and buildings, their ministries and missions work, corporate worship, and through their preaching and teaching.

Community Citizenry
The Church Scattered

Christian people have always worked at the forefront of community leadership, advocacy, and service motivated by their faith and inspired by their vocational callings and occupational positions.


How We Imagine Communities

We imagine communities as people, places, institutions, and resources.

Communities are living ecosystems where place, neighbors, and institutions intersect.

Communities are also fields of practice or professions (i.e. β€œcommunities of practice”).


How We Imagine Thriving

We imagine thriving as shalom.

We ground our understanding of thrivingβ€”and our questβ€”in the scriptural concept of shalom. Thriving in this sense is right relationship with God, self, others, and creation.

Part of this thriving is transforming growth. Thriving means growing into the fullness of who we were created to be as persons, families, and communities. It does not mean happiness or endless consumption and economic growth. Rather, thriving is an active, often challenging, journey of personal and communal growth and transformation.


Three fundamental questions animate our mission to reimagine what thriving can be.

 
Question 1 Leaf Icon

Empirically,

what does it take for congregations and communities to thrive in today’s worldβ€”and crucially, who does and does not get to thrive? 

Question 2 Sun Icon

Normatively,

how can communities of faith draw on their distinctive traditions and histories to contribute to our collective understanding of what thriving can be in our time?

Question 3 House Icon

Practically,

how can congregations and their communities work together to create the conditions of a faithful and just thriving for all?

Our Guiding Principles


Wonder 

Holistically understanding reality and wondering a new future.


Humility

Listening, learning, and trusting other point of views.


Honesty

Seeking and communicating truth in everything we do.


Mutuality

Building right relations with ourselves, others, and creation.

 

Pioneering

Seeking new expressions of
thriving.


Pragmatic

Finishing what we start, working hard, and staying connected.


Prayer

Posturing our mission, work, and lives in prayer.


Rootedness

Rooted in our faith and rooted in our place.

Our Team

The Ormond Center aims to embody its understanding that communities thrive when they learn to live well across differences. As such, our team is comprised of practitioners, researchers, pastors, writers, entrepreneurs, and many others who contribute to our common thriving through their own unique skills, background, insights, and experience.

 

Our Core Team

Dr. Linda Silver Coley
Executive Director

Rev. Elizabeth Howze
Director of Teaching, Training, and Learning

Dr. Katie Comeau
Translational Research Lead

Kyle McManamy
Design and Training Lead

 

Lindsey Nugent
Program Coordinator

 
 

Our Interns

Allie Hargrove
Operations & Placemaking Lab Intern

Chris West
Pathways of Repair Intern

TJ Bryant
Shalom Fellow

Stephanie Cassell
Pathways of Repair Intern

Our Home & Anchor Partner

We are founded by the Duke Divinity School, which means we have access to a deep network of trusted scholars, cutting-edge research, and tested theories and frameworks that support and guide our work.

 

We are supported by The Duke Endowment in a grant to Duke Divinity School to bolster the leadership that it provides across the church, in academia and in the communities served by the school.