William Vanderbloemen
William Vanderbloemen | |
---|---|
Pastor William Vanderbloemen | |
Born | December 20, 1969 |
Nationality | American |
Education | Wake Forest, B.A. Religion Major, Philosophy Minor; Princeton Theological Seminary, M. Div. |
Occupation | Entrepreneur, Pastor, Speaker, Author, Vanderbloemen Search Group (Founder and President) |
William Vanderbloemen (born 1969, Taylorsville, North Carolina) is an entrepreneur, pastor, speaker, author, and CEO and Founder of Vanderbloemen Search Group, an executive search firm serving churches, ministries and faith-based organizations.[1]
History
Vanderbloemen was a senior pastor in a ministry for 15 years, and has studied the issue of pastoral “succession planning” as a means to help churches and ministries continue beyond the term of a main spiritual leader. Through his research and experience, he has become a consultant on the topic of church succession planning and compensation analysis for churches and ministries.[2][3] He also works with relief organizations, such as World Vision International and Living Water International. Among the issues he explores is the turnover in church leadership and a discovery that about one of four church and ministry leaders would be looking to move for another opportunity.[4] His suggestion to these churches is to "take really good care of them,"[4] referring to the people a church wishes to keep.
William has been seen in mainstream and religious media as a commentator on the issues surrounding Mars Hill Church and its former pastor Mark Driscoll,[5][6] Christianity Today and Gospel Herald.[7] The tenor of his comments were focused on the importance of emergency and long-term pastoral succession planning through various examples.
Vanderbloemen uses the phrase, “all pastors are interim pastors,[8]“ and talks about a “hyper-connected world,[9]“ rendering the needs for churches to plan well ahead - as all churches will face transition issues.[7][10][11]
Beyond church and ministry work, Vanderbloemen is sought for his thought leadership on the job market in general and best practices for helping anyone find meaningful work.[12][13]
He is also the co-author of Next: Pastoral Succession That Works published through Baker Publishing Group in September 2014.[5][14][15]
Vanderbloemen Search Group
Based in Houston, TX, Vanderbloemen Search Group opened in 2009.[5][16] The executive search firm, which also conducts compensation analysis and consulting services for organizations, specializes in a mix of domestic and international placement of faith-based leaders within churches and ministries, as well as Christian organizations.[2][3][17]
It works with churches all over the world, and of every denomination. It has worked with over 60 different denominations/types of churches and ministries, including churches LifeChurch.tv, Granger Community Church, and Willow Creek Community Church[11][14][18][19]
Vanderbloemen Search Group acquired the search firm Help Staff Me in 2011 with the intent of expanding its networks of relationships within the pastoral search firm space.[18] In November 2012, It was accepted into the Association of Executive Search Consultants (AESC), the professional body representing retained executive search consulting firms around the world.[20]
Ministry
After graduating from Wake Forest University and Princeton Theological Seminary, Vanderbloemen took a post as the Associate Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Hendersonville, NC. At 27, he accepted his first Senior Pastorate at the 450-member Memorial Presbyterian Church of Montgomery in Alabama.[21] In less than four years there, the membership tripled and they completed a $5.5 million building program.[22] In 2001, William was a Guest Chaplain for the U.S. House of Representatives.[21]
At 31, he was elected Senior Pastor for the First Presbyterian Church of Houston. It is reported that he was at the time, the youngest senior pastor ever to be elected to Houston’s oldest church.[23] In 2006, he presided over the funeral of former U.S. House Representative, Senator and Treasury Secretary Senator Lloyd Bentsen.[24]
Corporate career
Vanderbloemen served as a human resources manager at Anadarko Petroleum Corporation, an American oil and gas exploration company based in The Woodlands, TX. In 2008, William was the Senior Vice President/Ministry Practice Leader at FaithSearch Partners,[25] an executive search firm focused on faith-based hospitals, healthcare systems and ministries.
Author
William is author to the book "Next: Pastoral Succession That Works",[14] which was published through Baker Publishing Group in September 2014. He co-wrote the book with Warren Bird, Head Researcher at Leadership Network.[2][11][26]
The book highlights the process of pastoral succession planning through real-time research and over 200 conversations with pastors and various case studies discussing insider stories of succession successes and failures from dozens of churches, including some of the nation’s most influential like the Crystal Cathedral in Orange County, CA.[2][11][15]
Personal Life and Education
William, his wife Adrienne, and their seven children live in Houston.
Education
William received a B.A. in Philosophy/Religion from Wake Forest University (1992) and later earned an M.Div from Princeton Theological Seminary (1995).
Speaking Engagements
William speaks at churches and conferences as a preacher and also as a resource on teamwork, staffing, and leadership. He has participated in The Nines/Culture Crash (2014) conference in Nashville, TN[27] and Collyde Summit[28]
References
- ↑ Hallowell, Billy (19 Dec 2014). "I’ve Never Seen Anything Quite Like This’: Chaotic Situation That Led to Famed Pastor’s Resignation Has Prominent Church Expert Issuing a Major Warning". The Blaze.
- 1 2 3 4 Banks, Adelle (17 Sep 2014). "Book on pastoral succession: ëAll pastors are interim pastors’". Religion News Service.
- 1 2 Rainer, Thom S. (31 Oct 2014). "Trends in Pastoral Job Searches and Succession ñ Rainer on Leadership #078". Rainder on Leadership (LifeWay Christian Resources).
- 1 2 Bumpas, Bill (2 Feb 2015). "Survey of fast-growing churches studied their leadership". One News Now.
- 1 2 3 Ross, Dave. ""Christian Headhunter" William Vanderbloemen on finding the new head of Mars Hill Church". KIRO Radio. Bonneville International. Retrieved 22 Oct 2014.
- ↑ Pulliam Bailey, Sarah (5 Nov 2014). "Why Mark Driscoll’s fall and Mars Hill’s breakup issues a warning for megastar pastors". Religion News Service.
- 1 2 Marieann Klett, Leah (20 Oct 2014). "Mark Driscoll, Mars Hill May Recover 'If They Take Time to Heal,' Says Church Succession Expert". Ministries (The Gospel Herald).
- ↑ Banks, Adelle M. (17 September 2014). "Book on pastoral succession: All pastors are interim pastors". Washington Post.
- ↑ Vanderbloemen, William. "Three Reasons Why Mark Driscoll’s Resignation Changes Everything" (16 October 2014). New York Observer.
- ↑ Pulliam Bailey, Sarah. "Why Mark Driscoll's Fall Signals Warning For Megachurches" (6 November 2014). Huffington Post. Religion News Service.
- 1 2 3 4 Bird, Warren (18 Nov 2014). "How Pastors Are Passing the Leadership Baton". Christianity Today.
- ↑ Fallon, Nicole (2 Mar 2015). "7 Things You Can Do Every Day to Become a Better Leader". Business News Daily.
- ↑ Knight, Rebecca (19 Mar 2015). "Convincing Skeptical Employees to Adopt New Technology". Harvard Business Review.
- 1 2 3 Vanderbloemen, William; Bird, Warren (2014). Next Pastoral Succession That Works. Baker Pub Group. p. 224. ISBN 9780801016479.
- 1 2 Rosa, Amy. "Conversations: William Vanderbloemen on NEXT ñ Pastoral Successions that Work!". 4 Sep 2014 (Leadership Network).
- ↑ Lescalleet, David. "Profile: Vanderbloemen Search Group". Transition. David Lescalleet.
- ↑ Jenkins, Charles. "Charles Jenkins Partners With Vanderbloemen Search Group". Fellowship Chicago. Fellowship Chicago.
- 1 2 Staff, Writer (14 Feb 2011). "An Interview with the Vanderbloemen Group About Church Staffing". Pastors.com.
- ↑ Stevens, Tim (3 Sep 2011). "Interview with William Vanderbloemen & Justin Lathrop". ChurchLeaders.com.
- ↑ "AESC Accepts Six New Firms into Membership". Association of Executive Search Consultants.
- 1 2 Burr, (R-NC), Rep. Richard (19 Jul 2001). "Reverend B. William Vanderbloemen, Jr.". One Minute Speech Given in Recognition of the Guest Chaplain: (Chaplain, U.S. House of Representatives).
- ↑ Vara, Richard (12 November 2001). "Minister elected to lead First Presbyterian Church". Houston Chronicle.
- ↑ Vara, Richard (3 Feb 2007). "Vanderbloemen resigns senior pastorate of Houston's First Presbyterian Church". Houston Chronicle.
- ↑ Grant, Alexis (30 May 2006). "Houston church prepares for Bentsen memorial". Houston Chronicle.
- ↑ Writer, Staff. "Vanderbloemen to Leave FaithSearch". Faithsearchpartners.com. FaithSearch Partners, Inc.
- ↑ Gryboski, Michael (4 Nov 2014). "Pastoral Succession Plan 'More Urgent Than You Think,' Say Authors of Book 'Next'". The Christian Post.
- ↑ "When Church and Culture Collide". http://thenines.tv. Leadership Network. External link in
|website=
(help) - ↑ "Collyde Summit Speakers 2014". Collyde Summit. 10times.com.
External links
Published Work
- Vanderbloemen, William (2014). Next: Pastoral Succession That Works. Baker. ISBN 978-0801016479.