---
schema_version: "1.0.0"
id: "ddf-church-blueprint:en:chapter-47"
work_id: "urn:systemstheology:book:ddf-church-blueprint:chapter:chapter-47"
book_id: "ddf-church-blueprint"
chapter_id: "appendix-f-contemporary-field-sources-and-their-limits"
chapter_slug: "chapter-47"
title: "Appendix F: Contemporary Field Sources and Their Limits"
book_title: "DDF Church Blueprint"
language: "en"
source_language: "en"
translation_status: "source"
authors: ["Systems Theology"]
editorial_owner: "Systems Theology"
editors: []
review_status: "not_specified"
reviewers: []
content_version: "content-3c49d873f864"
content_hash_sha256: "3c49d873f864ab9ba2a465dfb60c3e039aa5f194d863d7fd91a71431369bd676"
published_at: "2026-07-15T21:14:45.000Z"
modified_at: "2026-07-15T23:50:19.254Z"
canonical_url: "https://systemstheology.com/library/ddf-church-blueprint/chapter-47/"
markdown_url: "https://systemstheology.com/research/books/ddf-church-blueprint/en/chapter-47.md"
license: "All rights reserved; research use subject to the Use Policy"
license_url: "https://systemstheology.com/use-policy/"
correction_url: "https://systemstheology.com/library/ddf-church-blueprint/chapter-47/#chapter-comments"
---

# Appendix F: Contemporary Field Sources and Their Limits

<a id="appendix-f-contemporary-field-sources-and-their-limits"></a>

These sources informed operating boundaries. Within their competence they govern the empirical, clinical, legal, financial, accessibility, and safety claims for which they are cited; none by itself settles Christian doctrine. Every item must be replaced or supplemented with current local law, qualified advice, and the church's actual denominational requirements.

- World Council of Churches, The Church: Towards a Common Vision, for ecumenical convergence and visible disagreement about Trinitarian communion, apostolic faith, sacrament, ministry, and mission: https://www.oikoumene.org/resources/documents/the-church-towards-a-common-vision.
- Lausanne Movement, The Cape Town Commitment, for integrated gospel mission, Bible teaching, theological formation, global mutuality, and warnings about money and cultural domination: https://lausanne.org/statement/ctcommitment.
- Send Network and Acts 29 public planter pathways and competency material, used only as field examples of assessment, observed development, training, coaching, care, context, character, and team readiness: https://www.namb.net/mission/train-church-planters/ and https://www.acts29.com/summary-competencies/.
- U.S. Internal Revenue Service church and religious-organization guidance, used only to demonstrate jurisdiction-specific legal and tax complexity: https://www.irs.gov/charities-non-profits/churches-religious-organizations.
- Charity Commission for England and Wales, internal financial controls and conflict-of-interest guidance, used as detailed public governance examples rather than universal law: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/internal-financial-controls-for-charities-cc8 and https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/identifying-and-managing-conflicts-of-interest-in-a-charity-cc29/conflicts-of-interest-a-guide-for-charity-trustees.
- U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, youth-serving- organization prevention resources, for the layered system of selection, interaction rules, monitoring, safer environments, response, and training: https://www.cdc.gov/child-abuse-neglect/programs/index.html.
- U.S. Child Welfare Information Gateway, clergy mandatory-reporting survey, as an example of why law must be checked by jurisdiction and updated: https://www.childwelfare.gov/resources/clergy-mandatory-reporters-child-abuse-and-neglect/.
- Church of England safeguarding codes, used as a current ecclesial practice witness for first response, independent routes, role-proportionate risk management, records, and distinction among safeguarding, criminal, disciplinary, and pastoral processes: https://www.churchofengland.org/safeguarding/safeguarding-e-manual/reporting-safeguarding-concerns-and-allegations.
- United Kingdom statutory domestic-abuse and coercive-control guidance, used to describe patterns including religious and technological control, not to define the Church's doctrine: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/domestic-abuse-act-2021/domestic-abuse-statutory-guidance-accessible-version.
- SAMHSA trauma-informed and faith-leader resources, used for safety, transparency, collaboration, voice, referral, and community preparation: https://www.samhsa.gov/mental-health/trauma-violence/trauma-informed-approaches-programs and https://www.samhsa.gov/mental-health/what-is-mental-health/how-to-talk/community-and-faith-leaders.
- NICE guidance on obsessive-compulsive disorder, used for the bounded warning against reassurance and confession loops and for referral to cognitive behavioral treatment including exposure and response prevention: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg31/chapter/Recommendations.
- The American Psychiatric Association's 2024 position on conversion therapy and its DSM-5-TR Cultural Formulation Interview, used for the non-pathologizing sexuality and emic-assessment controls in this manual: https://www.psychiatry.org/getattachment/3d23f2f4-1497-4537-b4de-fe32fe8761bf/Position-Conversion-Therapy.pdf and https://www.psychiatry.org/psychiatrists/practice/dsm/educational-resources/assessment-measures.
- Han, Colarelli, and Weed's review of cross-cultural assessment, used for the requirement to establish the needed measurement invariance before comparing survey scores across communities: https://doi.org/10.1037/pas0000731.
- U.S. National Institute of Mental Health, 5 Action Steps to Help Someone Having Thoughts of Suicide, used for a bounded first response that must be localized: https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/5-action-steps-to-help-someone-having-thoughts-of-suicide.
- W3C, Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.2, and NIST Privacy Framework resources, used as technical field controls rather than ecclesial doctrine: https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG22/ and https://www.nist.gov/privacy-framework.
